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Hattie Evaline “Eva” <I>Kinkade</I> Wiltshire

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Hattie Evaline “Eva” Kinkade Wiltshire

Birth
Gober, Fannin County, Texas, USA
Death
28 Jun 1998 (aged 97)
San Bernardino, San Bernardino County, California, USA
Burial
San Jacinto, Riverside County, California, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.7601583, Longitude: -116.9604556
Plot
N-2-W-C
Memorial ID
View Source
Obituary:

Hattie Wiltshire, 97, died of pneumonia Sunday at Mountainside Health Care in San Bernardino. Friends may call from 4 until 8 p.m. today at Harford Funeral Home in Hemet. Burial will be in San Jacinto Valley Cemetery in San Jacinto.

Mrs. Wiltshire, who was born in Gober, Texas, lived in Rialto six years after living in Riverside for 20 years and Hemet 32 years. She was a laundry person for the Mission Inn in Riverside for five years. She and her late husband Murphy owned a market, motel and service station at Florida Avenue and Hemet Street in Hemet during the mid- to late-1930s and the Palm Tree Cafe in Hemet in the early 1940s.

Survivors include four daughters, Fern Boom, Pam Ciraula and Joyce Buckhout, all of Rialto, and Lois of Cherry Valley; two sons, Wayne of Hemet and Dave of Glendora; 12 grandchildren; 26 great-grandchildren; one brother, Marvin Kinkade of San Jacinto; and one sister, Irene Sanzburro of Hemet.

The Press-Enterprise (Riverside, California)
Hemet/San Jacinto Edition
Wednesday, July 1, 1998, page B-2
_________________________________________

Name of first husband courtesy of Soul Seekers
Obituary:

Hattie Wiltshire, 97, died of pneumonia Sunday at Mountainside Health Care in San Bernardino. Friends may call from 4 until 8 p.m. today at Harford Funeral Home in Hemet. Burial will be in San Jacinto Valley Cemetery in San Jacinto.

Mrs. Wiltshire, who was born in Gober, Texas, lived in Rialto six years after living in Riverside for 20 years and Hemet 32 years. She was a laundry person for the Mission Inn in Riverside for five years. She and her late husband Murphy owned a market, motel and service station at Florida Avenue and Hemet Street in Hemet during the mid- to late-1930s and the Palm Tree Cafe in Hemet in the early 1940s.

Survivors include four daughters, Fern Boom, Pam Ciraula and Joyce Buckhout, all of Rialto, and Lois of Cherry Valley; two sons, Wayne of Hemet and Dave of Glendora; 12 grandchildren; 26 great-grandchildren; one brother, Marvin Kinkade of San Jacinto; and one sister, Irene Sanzburro of Hemet.

The Press-Enterprise (Riverside, California)
Hemet/San Jacinto Edition
Wednesday, July 1, 1998, page B-2
_________________________________________

Name of first husband courtesy of Soul Seekers


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