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Katherine Cronin

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Katherine Cronin

Birth
Death
28 Sep 1959 (aged 79–80)
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, USA
Burial
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec 09, Lot 180, Grave 8
Memorial ID
View Source
Katherine E. Cronin, who lived in Portland all of her 80 years, died Monday at her residence at the Campbell Court Hotel.

Miss Cronin is survived by two brothers, Ambrose M. and Joseph P., both of Portland.

Funeral will be Wednesday at 10 a.m. at St. Mary's Cathedral following rosary Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Hennessey, Goetsch & McGee Funeral Home. Burial will be in the family plot at Riverview Cemetery.

Miss Cronin's parents came to Oregon in 1876. Her father was one of the city's first automotive supply dealers and founded a firm which still operates in Portland.

She was a registered nurse, having earned her degree at St. Francis Hospital in San Francisco and was active in the Providence Hospital Nursing Guild.

She also was a member of St. Mary's Cathedral and of the Christ Child Society of Holy Child Academy, to which the family suggests remembrances be sent in the form of contributions.

[The Oregonian, 29 Sep 1959, p15]
Katherine E. Cronin, who lived in Portland all of her 80 years, died Monday at her residence at the Campbell Court Hotel.

Miss Cronin is survived by two brothers, Ambrose M. and Joseph P., both of Portland.

Funeral will be Wednesday at 10 a.m. at St. Mary's Cathedral following rosary Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Hennessey, Goetsch & McGee Funeral Home. Burial will be in the family plot at Riverview Cemetery.

Miss Cronin's parents came to Oregon in 1876. Her father was one of the city's first automotive supply dealers and founded a firm which still operates in Portland.

She was a registered nurse, having earned her degree at St. Francis Hospital in San Francisco and was active in the Providence Hospital Nursing Guild.

She also was a member of St. Mary's Cathedral and of the Christ Child Society of Holy Child Academy, to which the family suggests remembrances be sent in the form of contributions.

[The Oregonian, 29 Sep 1959, p15]


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