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Charles H. Berger

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Charles H. Berger

Birth
Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
16 Jan 1927 (aged 65)
Two Rivers, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Two Rivers, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec.2-Lot 5
Memorial ID
View Source
The Manitowoc Herald News, Friday, January 17, 1927 - Two Rivers News

Sudden Death of Two Rivers Man
DEATH COMES TO PIONEER AT SUPPER TABLE
Charles H. Berger
summoned as Family Is Gathered for Evening Meal at the Home. Death suddenly overtook Charles H. Berger at his home on the Manitowoc-Two Rivers road at 6 o'clock Thursday evening. Deceased was seated at the supper table when he was called and his passing is believed to be caused by the hardening of the arteries.
Although not being in the best of health the past few months, Mr. Berger worked every day at the machine shop of the Aluminum Goods plant one. Deceased was a native of Two Rivers, born on August 5, 1861 and practically spent his entire life in this city.
Surviving him is his widow Marguerite M. Berger, with her two children Mercedes and Alfred Louisier and one son, George, an instructor in the public school at Kimberly, Wis. He also leaves one brother, Guido of this city and two sisters, Mrs. Schafflahd and Mrs. William E. Seibel of Manitowoc. The first wife of the deceased died twenty years ago.
He was a mechanic by trade for the past 15 years previously being employed as a marine engineer. Mr. Berger's father, Gottlieb, also deceased was one of the earliest settlers in the city, making his home in this city in 1849.
Mr. Berger was affiliated with the Masonic order and the funeral will be held under the auspices of the local lodge No. 200 on Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock with Rev. T. A. Hawkes officiation. Burial will be at Pioneer's Rest cemetery.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marriage of Chas. Berger & Mrs. Marguerite Lousier (she is not here)
This appears to be second marriage for both

Chas. Berger and Mrs. M. Lousier were married Saturday at Waukegan, Ill.
After a short sojourn at Milwaukee they have returned here where Mr.
Berger is one of the skilled machinists at the Hamilton Plant and is
well and favorably known.
The Reporter, Thurs., Sept. 26, 1918
The Manitowoc Herald News, Friday, January 17, 1927 - Two Rivers News

Sudden Death of Two Rivers Man
DEATH COMES TO PIONEER AT SUPPER TABLE
Charles H. Berger
summoned as Family Is Gathered for Evening Meal at the Home. Death suddenly overtook Charles H. Berger at his home on the Manitowoc-Two Rivers road at 6 o'clock Thursday evening. Deceased was seated at the supper table when he was called and his passing is believed to be caused by the hardening of the arteries.
Although not being in the best of health the past few months, Mr. Berger worked every day at the machine shop of the Aluminum Goods plant one. Deceased was a native of Two Rivers, born on August 5, 1861 and practically spent his entire life in this city.
Surviving him is his widow Marguerite M. Berger, with her two children Mercedes and Alfred Louisier and one son, George, an instructor in the public school at Kimberly, Wis. He also leaves one brother, Guido of this city and two sisters, Mrs. Schafflahd and Mrs. William E. Seibel of Manitowoc. The first wife of the deceased died twenty years ago.
He was a mechanic by trade for the past 15 years previously being employed as a marine engineer. Mr. Berger's father, Gottlieb, also deceased was one of the earliest settlers in the city, making his home in this city in 1849.
Mr. Berger was affiliated with the Masonic order and the funeral will be held under the auspices of the local lodge No. 200 on Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock with Rev. T. A. Hawkes officiation. Burial will be at Pioneer's Rest cemetery.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marriage of Chas. Berger & Mrs. Marguerite Lousier (she is not here)
This appears to be second marriage for both

Chas. Berger and Mrs. M. Lousier were married Saturday at Waukegan, Ill.
After a short sojourn at Milwaukee they have returned here where Mr.
Berger is one of the skilled machinists at the Hamilton Plant and is
well and favorably known.
The Reporter, Thurs., Sept. 26, 1918


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