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Clarence Revere Felt

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Clarence Revere Felt

Birth
Ibapah, Tooele County, Utah, USA
Death
12 Apr 1930 (aged 34)
Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA Add to Map
Plot
PARK_31_10_3W
Memorial ID
View Source
Source: Ferguson-File Footprints from Canada by Jeannine C. Hardy (found on familysearch.org):

Clarence Revere Felt was born 31 August 1895 at Ibapah, Tooele, Utah, the second son of George and Molly Felt. He married Rachel Woolley Taylor on June 4, 1915. They were the parents of two sons: Taylor Clarence Felt and Gale Maurice Felt.

Clarence lived and worked in Inglewood, California as an electrician. In the late twenties, Clarence was interested in a mine in Mexico that he planned to go down and help develop. His mother was so distressed about it that she said she would do anything to keep him from going.

In 1930 Clarence got blood poisoning from a cut on his finger while working as an electrician. After quite awhile the doctors amputated his finger. Subsequently they were thinking of amputating his arm, but he died first from septicemia (blood poisoning, it was called then).


Additional information from familysearch.org:
After their marriage, Clarence and Rae made their home in Ibpah, Utah and Gooding, Idaho before moving to Inglewood, CA. In 1917 while in Ibapah, Clarence registered for the World War I draft. He was a farmer at the time. He is described as tall with a medium build, also with blue eyes and light brown hair.
Source: Ferguson-File Footprints from Canada by Jeannine C. Hardy (found on familysearch.org):

Clarence Revere Felt was born 31 August 1895 at Ibapah, Tooele, Utah, the second son of George and Molly Felt. He married Rachel Woolley Taylor on June 4, 1915. They were the parents of two sons: Taylor Clarence Felt and Gale Maurice Felt.

Clarence lived and worked in Inglewood, California as an electrician. In the late twenties, Clarence was interested in a mine in Mexico that he planned to go down and help develop. His mother was so distressed about it that she said she would do anything to keep him from going.

In 1930 Clarence got blood poisoning from a cut on his finger while working as an electrician. After quite awhile the doctors amputated his finger. Subsequently they were thinking of amputating his arm, but he died first from septicemia (blood poisoning, it was called then).


Additional information from familysearch.org:
After their marriage, Clarence and Rae made their home in Ibpah, Utah and Gooding, Idaho before moving to Inglewood, CA. In 1917 while in Ibapah, Clarence registered for the World War I draft. He was a farmer at the time. He is described as tall with a medium build, also with blue eyes and light brown hair.


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