No inquest was held as the coroner of Manitowoc County pronounced death due to suicide from carbon monoxide.
The body was taken to the Erbe-Hoffmann funeral home where it lay in state until the time of the services which were conducted by the Rev. A. Geo. Schmid. Interment was in the local cemetery.
The deceased was born Jan. 30, 1888, in the town of New Holstein on the farm on which he lived at the time of his death. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hansen. He was married to Miss Mathilda Graf, town of Eaton, Mar. 28, 1918 and the couple settled on the Hansen homestead.
Survivors are his wife, three daughters, Mrs. Gilbert Erbach, town of New Holstein, Eileen a student at the university at Madison, Ruth at home; three sons, Gilbert, Charles and Eugene, all at home; one grandchild, His father and one sister, Mrs. Edw. Aggen of this city.
Chilton Times – March 9, 1939
No inquest was held as the coroner of Manitowoc County pronounced death due to suicide from carbon monoxide.
The body was taken to the Erbe-Hoffmann funeral home where it lay in state until the time of the services which were conducted by the Rev. A. Geo. Schmid. Interment was in the local cemetery.
The deceased was born Jan. 30, 1888, in the town of New Holstein on the farm on which he lived at the time of his death. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hansen. He was married to Miss Mathilda Graf, town of Eaton, Mar. 28, 1918 and the couple settled on the Hansen homestead.
Survivors are his wife, three daughters, Mrs. Gilbert Erbach, town of New Holstein, Eileen a student at the university at Madison, Ruth at home; three sons, Gilbert, Charles and Eugene, all at home; one grandchild, His father and one sister, Mrs. Edw. Aggen of this city.
Chilton Times – March 9, 1939
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