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Benjamin Rush

Birth
Burr Oak Township, Lincoln County, Missouri, USA
Death
9 Mar 1915 (aged 44)
Fulton, Callaway County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Fulton, Callaway County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Missouri Death Certificate#7657:

Ben Rush, 40 years old, of Lincoln County, Missouri died at 10:00am on March 9, 1915 at Fulton State Hospital.

Dr. Edwin C. Ewing, a physician of the hospital, pronounced death caused by Pulmonary Teberculosis contributed to by insanity. The information was obtained from Fulton State Hospital.

Ben was born 1870, the son of Joseph and Virginia (Morris) Rush. He was single and was a laborer.

Arrangements were under the care of J.J. Tibbs, undertaker for the hospital. Burial was in the hospital cemetery.

Ben Rush was born July 1870, in Lincoln County, Missouri, the youngest of seven children of Joseph and Virginia (Morris) Rush. His siblings were: Jane Ellen, Mary Ann, Hannah Elizabeth, Georgia Bell, Francis Patrick and Margaret.

Ben never married. In 1898, he enlisted in the United States Army at St. Louis, Missouri. He contracted Typhoid Fever while serving in the auxillery.
Missouri Death Certificate#7657:

Ben Rush, 40 years old, of Lincoln County, Missouri died at 10:00am on March 9, 1915 at Fulton State Hospital.

Dr. Edwin C. Ewing, a physician of the hospital, pronounced death caused by Pulmonary Teberculosis contributed to by insanity. The information was obtained from Fulton State Hospital.

Ben was born 1870, the son of Joseph and Virginia (Morris) Rush. He was single and was a laborer.

Arrangements were under the care of J.J. Tibbs, undertaker for the hospital. Burial was in the hospital cemetery.

Ben Rush was born July 1870, in Lincoln County, Missouri, the youngest of seven children of Joseph and Virginia (Morris) Rush. His siblings were: Jane Ellen, Mary Ann, Hannah Elizabeth, Georgia Bell, Francis Patrick and Margaret.

Ben never married. In 1898, he enlisted in the United States Army at St. Louis, Missouri. He contracted Typhoid Fever while serving in the auxillery.


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