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James Bouchee

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James Bouchee

Birth
Montreal Region, Quebec, Canada
Death
3 Apr 1939 (aged 61)
Livingston, Park County, Montana, USA
Burial
Livingston, Park County, Montana, USA Add to Map
Plot
Old B3 L1 W1/2 G7
Memorial ID
View Source
James Bouchee, 64 long-time resident of Livingston and an employee of the A. W. Miles Lumber and Coal Company, died suddenly about four o’clock Monday afternoon of a heart attack, on business to the Thompson Yards on North B Street. Mr. Bouchee was sudden stricken and passed away within a few minutes.

Mr. Bouchee was born March 17, 1878, in Three Rivers, Canada. He went from Canada to the Black Hills of South Dakota when he was eleven years of age, later going to Colorado, into Wyoming and coming to Montana in 1888.

He belonged to the United States cavalry stationed in Yellowstone Park from 1898 to 1900 and was also a pony express rider in the Shields River country for some time. For the past 14 years he had been employed by the A. W. Miles Lumber and Coal Company.

He was united in marriage in 1902 to Mamie Palmer.

In addition to his widow, Mr. Bouchee is survived by four sons, Rodney, Harry, Henry, and William, all of Livingston, one daughter, Mary Strub, also of this city, eleven grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs. William Ebert of Clyde Park and Mrs. A. E. Tecca of Livingston, two brothers, Charles Bouchee and Fred Bouchee of Anaconda, and several nieces and nephews.

Note: The evidence the family has indicates that his wife had the head stone carved with an older birth year.
James Bouchee, 64 long-time resident of Livingston and an employee of the A. W. Miles Lumber and Coal Company, died suddenly about four o’clock Monday afternoon of a heart attack, on business to the Thompson Yards on North B Street. Mr. Bouchee was sudden stricken and passed away within a few minutes.

Mr. Bouchee was born March 17, 1878, in Three Rivers, Canada. He went from Canada to the Black Hills of South Dakota when he was eleven years of age, later going to Colorado, into Wyoming and coming to Montana in 1888.

He belonged to the United States cavalry stationed in Yellowstone Park from 1898 to 1900 and was also a pony express rider in the Shields River country for some time. For the past 14 years he had been employed by the A. W. Miles Lumber and Coal Company.

He was united in marriage in 1902 to Mamie Palmer.

In addition to his widow, Mr. Bouchee is survived by four sons, Rodney, Harry, Henry, and William, all of Livingston, one daughter, Mary Strub, also of this city, eleven grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs. William Ebert of Clyde Park and Mrs. A. E. Tecca of Livingston, two brothers, Charles Bouchee and Fred Bouchee of Anaconda, and several nieces and nephews.

Note: The evidence the family has indicates that his wife had the head stone carved with an older birth year.


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