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Otto Lewis Klamberg

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Otto Lewis Klamberg

Birth
Winchester, Randolph County, Indiana, USA
Death
25 Jun 1932 (aged 56)
Muncie, Delaware County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Windsor, Randolph County, Indiana, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Otto was the son of Louis and Mary Newfarmer Klamberg. He married Wilma, daughter of G.W. and Nora Arment Clevenger, on April 4, 1896 in Randolph County, Indiana.

The couple lived for a time in Anderson, Indiana and then moved to Jasper County, Missouri, where their son Willard Otto Klamberg was born in 1910. The couple returned to Indiana and settled in Muncie.

Otto died there, on the date above, and was laid to rest at Union Cemetery in Windsor on June 27, 1932. His survivors, in addition to his wife and son, were a brother, William of Galena, Kansas and three sisters, Mrs. Oliver Bloom and Mrs. Edward Schroth of Niles, Ohio and Mrs. Hurba F. Miller, Sandusky, Ohio.

Note: Otto's father's name was spelled Louis and Lewis in records. Louis was the name on his business papers, his passport application and is inscribed on his headstone. His son, Otto, evidently preferred the Lewis spelling of the name as he signed his WWI Draft registration this way.
Otto was the son of Louis and Mary Newfarmer Klamberg. He married Wilma, daughter of G.W. and Nora Arment Clevenger, on April 4, 1896 in Randolph County, Indiana.

The couple lived for a time in Anderson, Indiana and then moved to Jasper County, Missouri, where their son Willard Otto Klamberg was born in 1910. The couple returned to Indiana and settled in Muncie.

Otto died there, on the date above, and was laid to rest at Union Cemetery in Windsor on June 27, 1932. His survivors, in addition to his wife and son, were a brother, William of Galena, Kansas and three sisters, Mrs. Oliver Bloom and Mrs. Edward Schroth of Niles, Ohio and Mrs. Hurba F. Miller, Sandusky, Ohio.

Note: Otto's father's name was spelled Louis and Lewis in records. Louis was the name on his business papers, his passport application and is inscribed on his headstone. His son, Otto, evidently preferred the Lewis spelling of the name as he signed his WWI Draft registration this way.


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