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Charles Giles Lamberson

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Charles Giles Lamberson

Birth
Camillus, Onondaga County, New York, USA
Death
9 Jul 1865 (aged 36–37)
Monrovia, Atchison County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Effingham, Atchison County, Kansas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
37yrs3mo
Hotelier, Monrovia.

C. G. Lamberson was born in Onondago county, New York, the son of Lawrence and Clarissa Stephens Lamberson. His children with his first first wife were Clarrissa A., Charles G., William L., and Harriet A. Lamberson. He later married Roda A. Lamberson, their children were Allen Warner Lamberson, Bolivar Gill Lamberson and Roda Ann Carder, wife of John W. Carder.

Giles Lamberson died accidentally at Monrovia when he took his little boys to a pond to teach them to swim.

The New Leaf, Effingham Kansas, 30 Oct 1896, Fri, Page 10
Monrovia Items
Mr. and Mrs M. H. Lamberson were called to St. Joseph to attend the funeral of the widow of Giles Lamberson. She is his survivor for some 30 years. The accident occurred in the spring of 1866. He took his little boys to the pond to learn them to swim and was suppossed the water was too cold. There were several others in at the same time, John Hipple and Bluff Rhodes being two names we can recall.
37yrs3mo
Hotelier, Monrovia.

C. G. Lamberson was born in Onondago county, New York, the son of Lawrence and Clarissa Stephens Lamberson. His children with his first first wife were Clarrissa A., Charles G., William L., and Harriet A. Lamberson. He later married Roda A. Lamberson, their children were Allen Warner Lamberson, Bolivar Gill Lamberson and Roda Ann Carder, wife of John W. Carder.

Giles Lamberson died accidentally at Monrovia when he took his little boys to a pond to teach them to swim.

The New Leaf, Effingham Kansas, 30 Oct 1896, Fri, Page 10
Monrovia Items
Mr. and Mrs M. H. Lamberson were called to St. Joseph to attend the funeral of the widow of Giles Lamberson. She is his survivor for some 30 years. The accident occurred in the spring of 1866. He took his little boys to the pond to learn them to swim and was suppossed the water was too cold. There were several others in at the same time, John Hipple and Bluff Rhodes being two names we can recall.


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