He and his family were living on St. Rte. 42 in the southern part of Xenia, Ohio, on the day the tornado struck that city in 1974, and Lloyd and Mary Ruth watched the tornado go by from their front porch. After their son graduated from Xenia high school (he was in the 1974 class), Lloyd and Mary Ruth moved back to Highland Co., and Lloyd started working one of Doc's farms down close to Sinking Springs, which he continued to do until the late 1980s, when he retired from farming. Then he and Mary Ruth moved back up to the Xenia area, where he lived the remainder of his life.
He and his family were living on St. Rte. 42 in the southern part of Xenia, Ohio, on the day the tornado struck that city in 1974, and Lloyd and Mary Ruth watched the tornado go by from their front porch. After their son graduated from Xenia high school (he was in the 1974 class), Lloyd and Mary Ruth moved back to Highland Co., and Lloyd started working one of Doc's farms down close to Sinking Springs, which he continued to do until the late 1980s, when he retired from farming. Then he and Mary Ruth moved back up to the Xenia area, where he lived the remainder of his life.
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