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Albert Sherman “Bert” Hall

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Albert Sherman “Bert” Hall

Birth
Death
30 Nov 1910 (aged 44)
Pawnee County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Pawnee City, Pawnee County, Nebraska, USA Add to Map
Plot
Hazel Hill 4- 9- 2
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Oscar E. & Ellen M. Kingsbury Hall.
Married to Hattie G. Woodward on March 15, 1888.
Remarried to Mary Bower on March 20, 1903.

(Pawnee Library, book of obits in the Pawnee Republican.)

(From the Pawnee Republican)

Bert Hall was thrown from his horse he was riding at noon last Wednesday, alighting upon his head and suffering injuries from which he died at 8 o'clock the same evening. (He was born in 1866.)

TABLE ROCK ARGUS, Dec. 8, 1910.(pg.5)

Bert Hall, a farmer living near Pawnee City, was thrown from a hose he was riding on Wednesday of last week and sustained injuries from which he died several hours after the accident occurred. It is thought the animal struck a wire fence, throwing Mr. Hall over its head. He had been assisting other workmen in building a bridge near his home and when the horse arrived home riderless, an investigation was made and Mr. Hall was found in an unconscious condition, with his skull fractured at the base. He leaves a wife and six children.

(Posted courtesy of the Table Rock Historical Society.)
Son of Oscar E. & Ellen M. Kingsbury Hall.
Married to Hattie G. Woodward on March 15, 1888.
Remarried to Mary Bower on March 20, 1903.

(Pawnee Library, book of obits in the Pawnee Republican.)

(From the Pawnee Republican)

Bert Hall was thrown from his horse he was riding at noon last Wednesday, alighting upon his head and suffering injuries from which he died at 8 o'clock the same evening. (He was born in 1866.)

TABLE ROCK ARGUS, Dec. 8, 1910.(pg.5)

Bert Hall, a farmer living near Pawnee City, was thrown from a hose he was riding on Wednesday of last week and sustained injuries from which he died several hours after the accident occurred. It is thought the animal struck a wire fence, throwing Mr. Hall over its head. He had been assisting other workmen in building a bridge near his home and when the horse arrived home riderless, an investigation was made and Mr. Hall was found in an unconscious condition, with his skull fractured at the base. He leaves a wife and six children.

(Posted courtesy of the Table Rock Historical Society.)


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