When he married Charlotte "Lottie" Marenholtz on December 2, 1906 in Barry County, Missouri; they both stated they were residents of the town of Viola. In 1910, Ranzo was railroading and boarding in Everett, Washington state, where his parents were living. Meanwhile Lottie and their two sons were staying with her parents back in Viola, Missouri. The census indicated that he had been married four years. Their third and final child was born five months later.
Lottie's family stated that Ranzo stayed on the west coast and Lottie divorced him, keeping the boys with her. By 1920, Ronzo was living with his second wife, Dorothy, in Seattle. Four years later on June 29, 1924, he passed away in St. Mark's Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah from electrical burns suffered in an industrial mining accident a day earlier. He had been employed as an electrician with the Utah Copper Company. He was buried in Mt. Olivet Cemetery in Salt Lake City.
When he married Charlotte "Lottie" Marenholtz on December 2, 1906 in Barry County, Missouri; they both stated they were residents of the town of Viola. In 1910, Ranzo was railroading and boarding in Everett, Washington state, where his parents were living. Meanwhile Lottie and their two sons were staying with her parents back in Viola, Missouri. The census indicated that he had been married four years. Their third and final child was born five months later.
Lottie's family stated that Ranzo stayed on the west coast and Lottie divorced him, keeping the boys with her. By 1920, Ronzo was living with his second wife, Dorothy, in Seattle. Four years later on June 29, 1924, he passed away in St. Mark's Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah from electrical burns suffered in an industrial mining accident a day earlier. He had been employed as an electrician with the Utah Copper Company. He was buried in Mt. Olivet Cemetery in Salt Lake City.
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