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Harold “Bud” Chapman

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Harold “Bud” Chapman

Birth
Missouri, USA
Death
28 Oct 1920 (aged 16–17)
Parsons, Labette County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Parsons, Labette County, Kansas, USA GPS-Latitude: 37.33545, Longitude: -95.2390139
Memorial ID
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Harold Chapman, a 17-year-old Parsons boy, was lying at the point of death in a Parsons hospital yesterday. He is a victim of general blood poisoning, caused by the opening of a carbuncle by a friend with a pen knife.

From The Coffeyville Daily Journal (Coffeyville, Kansas), Friday Evening, October 29, 1920.
____________________________________________________________

HAROLD CHAPMAN

End Came at 7:30 O'clock, Last Night--Funeral to Be Sunday.

Harold Chapman, the 17-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W[alter] N[ewton] Chapman, 1310 Morgan avenue, passed away at 7:30 o'clock last night after an illness which was not considered dangerous until two or three days ago. The sympathy of the entire community goes out to Mr. and Mrs. Chapman in the hour of their grief.

The funeral will be held from the home Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, conducted by Dr. S. A. Munneke, pastor of the first Presbyterian church, and interment at Oakwood cemetery. Pall bearers will be selected from the Melodee and Linger Longer clubs and the senior class of the Parsons high school.

Miss Alice Chapman, a sister of the deceased, and a sophomore at Lindenwood college, St. Charles, Mo., arrived home this morning and other members of the family will be here for the funeral.

From The Parsons Daily Sun (Parsons, Kansas), Friday Evening, October 29, 1920.
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Funeral of Harold Chapman.

The funeral of Harold Chapman was held from the family home Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, conducted by Dr. S. A. Munnekee, and interment was made at Oakwood cemetery. The funeral was attended by one of the largest crowds ever gathered at a funeral here and a long procession of cars followed the body to the cemetery. Members of the senior high school class, the Melodee club and other organizations to which the deceased belonged attended in a body and the profusion of floral offerings attested to the popularity of young Chapman, and the sympathy which the whole community felt for the bereaved family.

From The Parsons Daily Sun (Parsons, Kansas), Monday Evening, November 1, 1920.
Harold Chapman, a 17-year-old Parsons boy, was lying at the point of death in a Parsons hospital yesterday. He is a victim of general blood poisoning, caused by the opening of a carbuncle by a friend with a pen knife.

From The Coffeyville Daily Journal (Coffeyville, Kansas), Friday Evening, October 29, 1920.
____________________________________________________________

HAROLD CHAPMAN

End Came at 7:30 O'clock, Last Night--Funeral to Be Sunday.

Harold Chapman, the 17-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W[alter] N[ewton] Chapman, 1310 Morgan avenue, passed away at 7:30 o'clock last night after an illness which was not considered dangerous until two or three days ago. The sympathy of the entire community goes out to Mr. and Mrs. Chapman in the hour of their grief.

The funeral will be held from the home Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, conducted by Dr. S. A. Munneke, pastor of the first Presbyterian church, and interment at Oakwood cemetery. Pall bearers will be selected from the Melodee and Linger Longer clubs and the senior class of the Parsons high school.

Miss Alice Chapman, a sister of the deceased, and a sophomore at Lindenwood college, St. Charles, Mo., arrived home this morning and other members of the family will be here for the funeral.

From The Parsons Daily Sun (Parsons, Kansas), Friday Evening, October 29, 1920.
____________________________________________________________

Funeral of Harold Chapman.

The funeral of Harold Chapman was held from the family home Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, conducted by Dr. S. A. Munnekee, and interment was made at Oakwood cemetery. The funeral was attended by one of the largest crowds ever gathered at a funeral here and a long procession of cars followed the body to the cemetery. Members of the senior high school class, the Melodee club and other organizations to which the deceased belonged attended in a body and the profusion of floral offerings attested to the popularity of young Chapman, and the sympathy which the whole community felt for the bereaved family.

From The Parsons Daily Sun (Parsons, Kansas), Monday Evening, November 1, 1920.

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