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Opal Mozelle <I>Looney</I> Bannister

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Opal Mozelle Looney Bannister

Birth
Rosebud, Falls County, Texas, USA
Death
17 Jun 2006 (aged 83)
Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas, USA
Burial
Rosebud, Falls County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Graduated from Rosebud High School in 1942. Worked at the Glass Plant at Waco, Texas for many years.
1st husband was Donald Dwight Bacher.
They were married May 9, 1943 in Waco, TX, after two children were born and raised they divorced and Opal went through several failed marriages before finally settling down in Burleson, TX with husband, Thomas P. Bannister.

Everyone while growing up should have an Aunt like my Aunt Opal. She had a kind heart, a good sole and she lived life to its fullest. I remember she played softball for the glass plant team. She partied and danced, she took us swimming, taught us how to fish, drive a boat and how to water ski, she showed us how to make spending money by picking up pop bottles, she hauled us back and forth to the country so we could shoot guns and go hunting. When I was younger, about five, we lived a couple of blocks from Aunt Opal at Waco, TX and during the middle of the night we would sneak out and go climb in a window to spend the night at our Aunt Opal's house. Aunt Opal was always fun to be around. LWJ
Graduated from Rosebud High School in 1942. Worked at the Glass Plant at Waco, Texas for many years.
1st husband was Donald Dwight Bacher.
They were married May 9, 1943 in Waco, TX, after two children were born and raised they divorced and Opal went through several failed marriages before finally settling down in Burleson, TX with husband, Thomas P. Bannister.

Everyone while growing up should have an Aunt like my Aunt Opal. She had a kind heart, a good sole and she lived life to its fullest. I remember she played softball for the glass plant team. She partied and danced, she took us swimming, taught us how to fish, drive a boat and how to water ski, she showed us how to make spending money by picking up pop bottles, she hauled us back and forth to the country so we could shoot guns and go hunting. When I was younger, about five, we lived a couple of blocks from Aunt Opal at Waco, TX and during the middle of the night we would sneak out and go climb in a window to spend the night at our Aunt Opal's house. Aunt Opal was always fun to be around. LWJ


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