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Charles Walter “Charley” Adams

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Charles Walter “Charley” Adams Veteran

Birth
Ripley, Payne County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
30 Aug 2000 (aged 88)
Texas, USA
Burial
Van Vleck, Matagorda County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
A1-116
Memorial ID
View Source
In 1920 he and his parents and three siblings lived in a place they were renting in Bay City, TX. His father worked as a laborer in a rice mill.

In 1930 he and his parents, five siblings, and his niece Emma Jarrell lived in a house they owned at 2810 Sycamore Avenue in Bay City. Their home was valued at $800, and they did not have a radio. His father worked as a fireman at a rice mill.

In 1940 he and his parents and three siblings lived in a house they owned at 1617 Sycamore Avenue in Bay City. Their home was valued at $600. His father worked as a laborer, with an income in 1939 of $108 for nine weeks of work, and he worked as a laborer at W.R. Lumberyard, with an income in 1939 of $780 for 52 weeks of work.
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From a newspaper:

A resident of Bay City, he was a retired gauger with Getty Oil and a Pentecostal. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II.

Survivors included daughters, Rosalie Talafuse of Bay City, Eva Lois Stansberry of Angleton and Pat Munson of Van Vleck; son, Virgel K. Taylor of Leona; sister, Willie May Hutchins of Dallas; brother, Ed Adams of Rye; 18 grandchildren; 36 great-grandchildren and 17 great-great-grandchildren.
In 1920 he and his parents and three siblings lived in a place they were renting in Bay City, TX. His father worked as a laborer in a rice mill.

In 1930 he and his parents, five siblings, and his niece Emma Jarrell lived in a house they owned at 2810 Sycamore Avenue in Bay City. Their home was valued at $800, and they did not have a radio. His father worked as a fireman at a rice mill.

In 1940 he and his parents and three siblings lived in a house they owned at 1617 Sycamore Avenue in Bay City. Their home was valued at $600. His father worked as a laborer, with an income in 1939 of $108 for nine weeks of work, and he worked as a laborer at W.R. Lumberyard, with an income in 1939 of $780 for 52 weeks of work.
--------------------
From a newspaper:

A resident of Bay City, he was a retired gauger with Getty Oil and a Pentecostal. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II.

Survivors included daughters, Rosalie Talafuse of Bay City, Eva Lois Stansberry of Angleton and Pat Munson of Van Vleck; son, Virgel K. Taylor of Leona; sister, Willie May Hutchins of Dallas; brother, Ed Adams of Rye; 18 grandchildren; 36 great-grandchildren and 17 great-great-grandchildren.


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