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William Byron Linhart

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William Byron Linhart

Birth
Barry County, Missouri, USA
Death
20 Mar 1969 (aged 73)
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Born 24 May 1895 in Barry County, Missouri to Michael John Lenhart (1865 - 1929) and Elizabeth Eldora Pannell (1868 - 1899) he had one brother Richard. The brothers paternal grandparents moved to the SE Missouri, Barry County, Missouri area from around the Pittsburgh, Washington, Pennsylvania area.

William Byron Linhart's Mother died when he was very young, and he and his brother were living with his Mother's brother's, Spencer Pannell's family on the 1900 census. In 1916, he joined the Missouri National Guard, Mexican Border Division.

He married Ruby Bernice Swartz and together they had five female children all born in Kansas City, Missouri:

1. Dora Almina Linhart (1916-1976) m. Robert Charles Anderson and they had at least 3 children.

2. Anna Frances Linhart (1918 - ) m. Chett Arthur Eckman and they had one daughter.

3. Harriett Jean Linhart (1920 - 2010) m. Nelson Adrew Ashwill and they had 4 children, 3 living to adulthood.

4. Mabel Lucille Linhart (1923 - 1995) m. twice.

5. Shirley Lee Linhart (1925 - 2010) m. Dwight E Hammett and they had one daughter.
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LINHART - SWARTZ
Married By Telegraph
Laredo, Tex Dispatch, Oct 24
Over twelve hundred miles of telegraph wire, and performed through proxies in the persons of two telegraph operators, Private Byron J. Linhart, B Company, Second Missouri Infantry, stationed here, and Miss Ruby Swartz, in her home town of Butler, Mo., were married tonight according to the rites of the Episcopal church. Preliminary to the wedding the officiating lcargyman in Laredo and Butler entered into a telegraphic conversation to ascertain the official standing of each other in the church and their authority to perform the ceremony. The telegraph operators handled the messages direct between Laredo and Butler, embodying the full marriage ceremony of the Episcopal church, wherein both bride and groom signified their acceptance of each other as life partners. (The Monroe Journal, Monroe, NC, Oct 27, 1916)
Contributor: Sherry (47010546)
Born 24 May 1895 in Barry County, Missouri to Michael John Lenhart (1865 - 1929) and Elizabeth Eldora Pannell (1868 - 1899) he had one brother Richard. The brothers paternal grandparents moved to the SE Missouri, Barry County, Missouri area from around the Pittsburgh, Washington, Pennsylvania area.

William Byron Linhart's Mother died when he was very young, and he and his brother were living with his Mother's brother's, Spencer Pannell's family on the 1900 census. In 1916, he joined the Missouri National Guard, Mexican Border Division.

He married Ruby Bernice Swartz and together they had five female children all born in Kansas City, Missouri:

1. Dora Almina Linhart (1916-1976) m. Robert Charles Anderson and they had at least 3 children.

2. Anna Frances Linhart (1918 - ) m. Chett Arthur Eckman and they had one daughter.

3. Harriett Jean Linhart (1920 - 2010) m. Nelson Adrew Ashwill and they had 4 children, 3 living to adulthood.

4. Mabel Lucille Linhart (1923 - 1995) m. twice.

5. Shirley Lee Linhart (1925 - 2010) m. Dwight E Hammett and they had one daughter.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
LINHART - SWARTZ
Married By Telegraph
Laredo, Tex Dispatch, Oct 24
Over twelve hundred miles of telegraph wire, and performed through proxies in the persons of two telegraph operators, Private Byron J. Linhart, B Company, Second Missouri Infantry, stationed here, and Miss Ruby Swartz, in her home town of Butler, Mo., were married tonight according to the rites of the Episcopal church. Preliminary to the wedding the officiating lcargyman in Laredo and Butler entered into a telegraphic conversation to ascertain the official standing of each other in the church and their authority to perform the ceremony. The telegraph operators handled the messages direct between Laredo and Butler, embodying the full marriage ceremony of the Episcopal church, wherein both bride and groom signified their acceptance of each other as life partners. (The Monroe Journal, Monroe, NC, Oct 27, 1916)
Contributor: Sherry (47010546)


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