Dr Herman G. Maul

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Dr Herman G. Maul Veteran

Birth
Denver, City and County of Denver, Colorado, USA
Death
13 Aug 1944 (aged 56)
Red Feather Lakes, Larimer County, Colorado, USA
Burial
Wheat Ridge, Jefferson County, Colorado, USA Add to Map
Plot
Block 49, Lot 121, Grave D3
Memorial ID
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U.S. Army, Major, World War I era.
Physician and surgeon-practiced in Denver for over 30 years. Dr. Herman G. Maul was fatally injured at a sawmill on his Rocky Mountain ranch six miles northwest of Red Feather Lakes (Red Feather Lakes are northwest of Fort Collins, Colorado). Working with ranch foreman Frank Koleski (1900-1987)and while sawing wood, Dr. Maul had turned the off the power to the saw to remove a jammed twig. Apparently the saw's rotation had not stopped, and a carrier used to remove sawdust snagged Dr. Maul's suspenders and pulled him into the pit beneath the saw. Dr. Maul died en route to a Fort Collins hospital.
Entered the U.S. Army in 1915 and was promoted to the rank of major and spent 2 years in the Phillipines.
Family: Wife-R. (Rosa) Mae Murdock Maul (1885-1950); sons (with then current -1944-occupations) Herman S. Maul (1917-2000), US Army medical officer in the South Pacific; Robert Murdoch Maul (1919-1969)-US Army medical officer stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, and, Eugene M. Maul (1920-1974)l, US Navy member attending the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Siblings: Dr. Robert Maul with whom Herman S. Maul had a practice; Bruno Maul (1878-1969) of Michigan; Mrs. Edith Tachannon, Oakland, California; Mrs. Elizabeth Schmidt and Mrs. Clara Davis, both of Lakewood, Colorado.
Dr. Maul resided at 2704 W. 32nd Avenue (the house is no longer there-the property is now occupied by tennis courts of Denver's North High School), Denver. Dr. Maul was a member of the Masonic Highlands Lodge No. 86 (Ancient Free & Accepted Masons of Colorado)-the building still exists on Federal Blvd in north Denver-and served as Master in 1936.
Information in part complied from articles in the August 14, 1944 editions of The Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News. and history from my family.
U.S. Army, Major, World War I era.
Physician and surgeon-practiced in Denver for over 30 years. Dr. Herman G. Maul was fatally injured at a sawmill on his Rocky Mountain ranch six miles northwest of Red Feather Lakes (Red Feather Lakes are northwest of Fort Collins, Colorado). Working with ranch foreman Frank Koleski (1900-1987)and while sawing wood, Dr. Maul had turned the off the power to the saw to remove a jammed twig. Apparently the saw's rotation had not stopped, and a carrier used to remove sawdust snagged Dr. Maul's suspenders and pulled him into the pit beneath the saw. Dr. Maul died en route to a Fort Collins hospital.
Entered the U.S. Army in 1915 and was promoted to the rank of major and spent 2 years in the Phillipines.
Family: Wife-R. (Rosa) Mae Murdock Maul (1885-1950); sons (with then current -1944-occupations) Herman S. Maul (1917-2000), US Army medical officer in the South Pacific; Robert Murdoch Maul (1919-1969)-US Army medical officer stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, and, Eugene M. Maul (1920-1974)l, US Navy member attending the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Siblings: Dr. Robert Maul with whom Herman S. Maul had a practice; Bruno Maul (1878-1969) of Michigan; Mrs. Edith Tachannon, Oakland, California; Mrs. Elizabeth Schmidt and Mrs. Clara Davis, both of Lakewood, Colorado.
Dr. Maul resided at 2704 W. 32nd Avenue (the house is no longer there-the property is now occupied by tennis courts of Denver's North High School), Denver. Dr. Maul was a member of the Masonic Highlands Lodge No. 86 (Ancient Free & Accepted Masons of Colorado)-the building still exists on Federal Blvd in north Denver-and served as Master in 1936.
Information in part complied from articles in the August 14, 1944 editions of The Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News. and history from my family.

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HERMAN G. MAUL
1887 1944