Advertisement

Christopher Andrew Jones

Advertisement

Christopher Andrew Jones

Birth
Claverack, Columbia County, New York, USA
Death
21 Dec 1988 (aged 20)
Lockerbie, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland
Burial
Rowley, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Chris had two passions in life. Wodehouse and T.C. Boyle, his love of the Boston Red Sox, his enjoyment of sports as fun and games: i.e. the intramural logo from a Syracuse t-shirt for his intramural team, a photo of him with his sister, Jennifer, who died the same year, but in Ecuador, a photo of Chris with his curly locks, explaining his nickname, "Shrub", toys (he collected toys and went to toy stores wherever he went in Europe) because he, like the lost boys, didn't really want to grow up, he enjoyed being a kid and he knew it, and finally, ants: he left, as his calling card, little plastic ants in people's clothes, drinks, food, bed, etc. etc. You get the picture. He just enjoyed the fun and games of childhood which he embraced with exuberance.

Killed in the terrorist bombing of Pam Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie Scotland on December 21, 1988.
Chris had two passions in life. Wodehouse and T.C. Boyle, his love of the Boston Red Sox, his enjoyment of sports as fun and games: i.e. the intramural logo from a Syracuse t-shirt for his intramural team, a photo of him with his sister, Jennifer, who died the same year, but in Ecuador, a photo of Chris with his curly locks, explaining his nickname, "Shrub", toys (he collected toys and went to toy stores wherever he went in Europe) because he, like the lost boys, didn't really want to grow up, he enjoyed being a kid and he knew it, and finally, ants: he left, as his calling card, little plastic ants in people's clothes, drinks, food, bed, etc. etc. You get the picture. He just enjoyed the fun and games of childhood which he embraced with exuberance.

Killed in the terrorist bombing of Pam Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie Scotland on December 21, 1988.

Bio by: JL


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement