Miss Robinson had just completed her junior year at Howard University, Washington, where she was majoring in education.
Born in Long Branch, she was a lifelong shore resident and was a graduate of Red Bank High School. In 1967, she was scholarship queen of the Monmouth County Cotillion.
Miss Robinson was a communicant of St. Thomas Episcopal Church, a teacher in the church's sunday school and active in the sunday school Parents-Teachers Association, a member of the church's Senior Young Fellowship and the Junior and Senior Episcopal Young Churchmen.
Her father was the late Charles B. Robinson Jr.
Surviving are his mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jones; two brothers, Charles and Stephen Robinson, at home and her maternal grandmother, Mrs. Virginia Collins of Cleveland, Ohio.
The Childs Funeral Home, Red Bank, is in charge of arrangements.
Red Bank Register, Mon., June 1, 1970
Miss Robinson had just completed her junior year at Howard University, Washington, where she was majoring in education.
Born in Long Branch, she was a lifelong shore resident and was a graduate of Red Bank High School. In 1967, she was scholarship queen of the Monmouth County Cotillion.
Miss Robinson was a communicant of St. Thomas Episcopal Church, a teacher in the church's sunday school and active in the sunday school Parents-Teachers Association, a member of the church's Senior Young Fellowship and the Junior and Senior Episcopal Young Churchmen.
Her father was the late Charles B. Robinson Jr.
Surviving are his mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jones; two brothers, Charles and Stephen Robinson, at home and her maternal grandmother, Mrs. Virginia Collins of Cleveland, Ohio.
The Childs Funeral Home, Red Bank, is in charge of arrangements.
Red Bank Register, Mon., June 1, 1970
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