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Thomas Oral Guin

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Thomas Oral Guin

Birth
Stroud, Lincoln County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
1 Sep 1917 (aged 18)
Stroud, Lincoln County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Stroud, Lincoln County, Oklahoma, USA GPS-Latitude: 35.7394295, Longitude: -96.6445999
Plot
03-033-3S
Memorial ID
View Source
Obituary: "Thomas O. Guin.

The eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. G.E. Guin, Thomas O., died at his home Saturday morning, September 1, at 2 o'clock.

He was born August 20, 1899, and died in the house in which he was born. He was a good boy and had the respect of all who knew him; to his parents he was the hope for the future. He had been confined to his bed for six weeks with the dreaded "white plague," commonly called consumption, which resulted from an attack of the measles which he had early in the spring. He was a submissive sufferer, and resigned to the departure from the scenes of this life; so he informed his father several days before the end came.

His body was laid to rest in the Stroud cemetery after a service at the Christian church at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon.

The bereaved parents have the sympathy of the entire community, and especially of Democrat force."

Source: The Stroud Democrat, Stroud, Oklahoma. No. 50, Vol. 7, September 7, 1917.
Obituary: "Thomas O. Guin.

The eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. G.E. Guin, Thomas O., died at his home Saturday morning, September 1, at 2 o'clock.

He was born August 20, 1899, and died in the house in which he was born. He was a good boy and had the respect of all who knew him; to his parents he was the hope for the future. He had been confined to his bed for six weeks with the dreaded "white plague," commonly called consumption, which resulted from an attack of the measles which he had early in the spring. He was a submissive sufferer, and resigned to the departure from the scenes of this life; so he informed his father several days before the end came.

His body was laid to rest in the Stroud cemetery after a service at the Christian church at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon.

The bereaved parents have the sympathy of the entire community, and especially of Democrat force."

Source: The Stroud Democrat, Stroud, Oklahoma. No. 50, Vol. 7, September 7, 1917.


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