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301 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Flack, Sophie (I53)
 
302 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Sall, Sophie (I217)
 
303 SOURCE: https://gardenofpraise.com/hist10.htm

Source of information: Thelma Carrell Jones who used the following resources: Will of John Boon, Guilford Co. N.C. Book B Page 562 File 0738, Pension Application by John Boon for Revolutionary War service 
Family: John Boon / Anna Starnes (F91)
 
304 Steve grew up in Baltimore, Maryland. He graduated from Milford Mill HS in 1980. He studied Business Administration at Virginia Commonwealth University. He then received hs Doctor of Physical Therapy in 2004 from A.T. Still University. He was living in Costa Rica with his husband Bruce at the time of his untimely death in 2015.
----
Nancy Tobias (2nd Cousin) Jul 2023 
Levine, Stephen M. (I1067)
 
305 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Schewel, Steve (I325)
 
306 Studied music (piano) In Amsterdam. Married and lived in Innsbruck 1955-90 with Wolfgang Pfaundler with four children as a musician, pianist, writer and organizer.

BOOKS

Tyrol lexicon. A reference about people and places of the federal state of Tyrol. Innsbruck: Smoke Print 1983
Maria T. A mother. Frankfurt / Basel: stroemfeld 2003 (Review by Sieglinde Velcro Hammer)
Tyrol lexicon. A reference about people and places of the federal state of Tyrol. Innsbruck: Study Verlag 2005 (Info)
 
Spat, Gertrude (I97)
 
307 Surgeon Unterweger, Erasmus (I807)
 
308 SWARTHMORE 1938 YEARBOOK - HALCYON

HERTHA EMMA EISENMENGER
Lab haunting Hertha Emma Eisenmenger is the foremost product of Third East's ability to rouse sleepy heads, have its vertebrae counted, send forth a member with the right date near the right time all on a Saturday night. In return, the corridor may be favored with a wordless rendition of a new song, a constant supply of food, the thrill of having a night picture snapped from a rainy window sill. Appreciative of her roommate's kindness in explaining jokes and her leniency in the matter of lima beans, Hertha plays favorites, breaking a rule by remembering the roommate's name.

MAJOR: Zoology
HOME: 159 Lorraine Ave, Mt Vernon, NY 
Eisenmenger, Hertha Emma (I12)
 
309 SWARTHMORE SCHOLARSHIPS
The Flack Achievement Award, established by Jim and Hertha Flack in 1985, is given to a deserving student who, during his or her first 2 years at the College, has demonstrated leadership potential and a good record of achievement in both academic and extracurricular activities.

The Flack Faculty Award is given for excellence in teaching and promise in scholarly activity by a member of the Swarthmore faculty to help meet the expenses of a full year of leave devoted to research and self-improvement. This award acknowledges the particularly strong link that exists at Swarthmore between teaching and original scholarly work. The president gives the award based upon the recommendation of the provost and the candidate?s academic department. This award is made possible by an endowment established by James M. Flack and Hertha Eisenmenger Flack ?38.
 
Eisenmenger, Hertha Emma (I12)
 
310 Sylvia Michelson Merfeld Obituary
----
On November 28, 2010, SYLVIA M. (nee Michelson), beloved wife of the late Bernard Merfeld Jr., beloved mother of Clare Ferguson of Oklahoma City, OK and James Louis Merfeld of Buffalo Grove, IL, devoted mother-in-law of Don Ferguson and Joan Merfeld, devoted sister of the late Elaine Bledy and Roslyn Forman. Loving grandmother of Michael and Lisa Rosenberg, David Rosenberg, Brian and Andrea Merfeld, Lindsey and Merrill Gad, loving great-grandmother of Emily and Katherine Rosenberg.

Funeral services and interment in Baltimore Hebrew Cemetery; Berrymans Lane, Reisterstown, MD 21136 on Friday, December 3, 2010 at 10 AM.
Please omit flowers.
Contributions to Hadassah, 3723 Old Court Road #205, Baltimore, Md., 21208 or Miriam Lodge KSB, c/o Eileen Caplan, 6503 Trotwood Court, Baltimore, Md., 21209. Arrangements by Sol Levinson & Bros. Inc.

Published in the Baltimore Jewish Times 
Michelson, Sylvia (I30)
 
311 Tax Collector Pfaundler, Josef Maria Ambros (I572)
 
312 Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002
Name: Margaret Bruce
Spouse: J Y Flack
Marriage Date: 25 May 1874
Marriage County: Dyer
Marriage State: Tennessee
Source: Ancestry.com Marriage records courtesy of June Stewart
Jim Flack - 25 Mar 2009 flackgenealogy.com 
Bruce, Margaret (I8)
 
313 Tennis Player Eisenmenger, Hilde (I34)
 
314 The Greensboro Patriot
(Greensboro, North Carolina)
13 Sep 1883, Thu ? Page 3

"Died. In Washington township, on Saturday, Sept. 8tb, Annie Flack, wife of Elisha Flack, in the 86th year of her age."

https://www.newspapers.com/clip/4634998/died_annie_flack/
 
Boon, Anna (I20)
 
315 The last abbess of the Warthehausen convent
Then lived in Oestrich [now called Oestrich-Winkel. See here for more information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oestrich-Winkel] in the Rheingau region of Germany.
 
Escherich, Maria Anna (I866)
 
316 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Cassedy, Theodore Melville (I327)
 
317 THOMAS FLACK (1735-1782) and JANE McCUISTION (1735-1802).

Extracts from the Book "The Forest City Lynching of 1900" by J Timothy Cole.

Thomas Flack of Guilford obtained a grant from Lord Granville for 181 acres along the Walnut Branch in Rowan County (now Guilford) in 1761 and operated a grist and saw mill on or near these Lands.

He was an early member of Buffalo Presbyterian Church, and 'Rankin's History' refers to him as "a young man" at the time of his arrival. Buffalo Prebyterian was established by Scots-Irish who were part of the Nottingham Coloney that purchased a large tract of land (over 20,000 acres) on Buffalo and Reedy Fork Creeks and were among the first settlers of present day Guilford in the early 1750's.

Probably soon after his arrival in Rowan/Guilford Thomas Flack married Jane (or Jean) McQuistion/McQuiston (1735-1802), the daughter of one of the original Nottingham colonists, James McQuiston (1700-1766) who was born in County Derry, Ireland, and received a Granville land grant along the Reedy Fork in 1753. Thomas Flack witnessed James McQuistons will which was proven in Rowan court in 1766.

James McQuiston also had (possibly) a brother Robert, and Thomas Flack also witnessed Robert McQuistons will, proven in Rowan Court in 1766.

Thomas Flack was a Patriot of some note and was active as a leader in the Regulation Movement or 1770-71, he was apparently implicated with the Hillsborough mob that attacked the infamous Tory Edmund Fanning, demolishing his house and brutally whipping him. Evidence also shows it's quite possible he was present at the battle of Alamance.

Later during the revolution, Thomas Flack served as Captain and commanded a company in a Guilford Militia regiment led by Col. James Martin. Surviving Revolutionary War account books indicate that he participated in expeditions to Cross Creek (now Fayetteville) and Wilmington in early 1776 and he was possibly at the Battle of Moore's Creek.

Thomas Flack and wife Jane sold their Walnut Branch tract of land in 1773 to a John Chambers.

In August 1778, a 300 acre Guilford land warrant was applied for by "Jane Flack, WIDOW", for the lands upon which Thomas Flack had "formerly lived ... including an improvement whereon the said Thomas Flack had a grist and saw mill". This grant was issued to Jane Flack in 1783.

CITATION
http://www.flackgenealogy.com/newtng/histories/tree664J_Flack_McCuistion.php
Accessed 16 Dec 2019
Flack Geneology - the online searchable database
Jim Flack - 19 May 2002 
Flack, Thomas (I208)
 
318 Title Dr. juris or Doctor of Laws, Lawyer Pfaundler, Johann Caspar Maria (I543)
 
319 Toll official in Hall Pfaundler, Anton (I562)
 
320 Trade representative Pfaundler, Eduard Gregor (I601)
 
321 TRANSFORMATION OF "AFFLECK" TO "FLACK" SURNAME
Tracing the origin of surnames is not an exact science, and defining the derivation of FLACK is no exception. The Penguin Dictionary states that it is a version of FLAGG meaning turf, sod or peat-cutting. The old Norse word "flag" means "to flay or cut stone or peat". Other sources claim it comes from the Dutch VLAK (Vlake, Vlaken, Vlack, Vlach, Flach, Flake): Dutch settlers would have come across to assist with the farming of the marshy fenlands of Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. Another source claims that the name came from the Scottish surname AFFLECK or "a fal leac" which means flagstone enclosure.

So basically FLACK means "Dweller in a field of flagstones" whichever origin you choose. First found in Norfolk in ancient times, the name spread southwards into Cambridgeshire and Suffolk, then on to Essex, Hertfordshire and inevitably to London and the southern counties of Surrey, Sussex and Kent. From the mid 17th century onward Flacks joined in the great migration from Europe to the New World: most immigrants of this name in America, Canada and Australia can trace their roots back to England, Ireland or Scotland.

by Denise Carr / http://www.flackgenealogy.com/origin.php
9 Jan 2020 
Affleck, James Fleck (I306)
 
322 Treasurer in Tettwang, possibly "Tettnang", a town in the Bodensee district in southern Baden-Württemberg in a region of Germany known as Swabia. Pfaundler, Carl Josef (I660)
 
323 University of Texas
In Memoriam: Beulah Bernice Wiley Hodge
Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Beulah Hodge lived her 90 years with a grace and completeness that has been a gift to all who knew her. She was born on August 29, 1919, in Galesville, Wisconsin, the daughter of Guilford M. Wiley and Beulah Bernice Arnold; she died on November 28, 2009.

She arrived in Austin with her husband Francis Hodge and daughter Betsy, in 1949. Beulah's grandparents, Captain Alexander Ahab Arnold, a lawyer and a farmer, and his wife Mary Douglas gave the town of Galesville the land for its Pine Cliff Cemetery and the County Fair Grounds. Their Victorian brick house, built in 1874, now belongs to the Garden of Eden Preservation Society. Its unique barn had been a National Register Building before it collapsed several years ago in high winds.

Beulah was born on her grandfather's farm and spent her childhood between Galesville and La Crosse, where her father was Superintendent of Schools and her mother ran a loving and chaotic household of four children and gave energy and strength to her community. Beulah played a great game of golf and as a teenager was a state champion; she detassled corn, picked beans and caddied in the summer. Beulah graduated in 1937 from Central High School in La Crosse, and, in 1941, she earned her degree in English and theatre from Carroll College in Waukesha. Her senior year she fell in love with her young theatre instructor, Francis R. Hodge, from Geneva, NY, and married him in 1942. Also that year she completed her Masters Degree from Cornell University in Ithaca NY and returned to Carroll College to teach dramatic interpretation and English literature, while her professor husband served as a propeller specialist in the United States Army Air Corps.

Their single child, Betsy, was born in 1945. Beulah and Fran returned to Cornell after the war to complete Fran's Ph.D. in theatre, taught briefly at the University of Iowa, and made their way to the University of Texas at Austin in 1949 in an old Ford. For the next 30 years, they spent their academic winters in Austin and many summers teaching at the School of Fine Arts in Banff, Alberta. Summer vacations included annual camping treks through the national parks in the United States and Canada to visit their respective families in NY and Wisconsin. Beulah served as principal critic and a constant source of inspiration and support for her husband's work as a professor and play director in the Department of Drama.

By the late 1950s she was embarked on her own career in community service that included lobbying for protective legislation for migrant farm workers with the American Friends Service Committee, urban planning and political education with the League of Women Voters. In 1963 she entered the new field of Public Television and for almost 20 years was known and loved by Central Texans who watched and listened to her many hours of interviews on KLRU television (then KLRN) and KUT-FM radio. She hosted her own show "Nigh Noon" in the 1960s and "People and Ideas" in the 1970s (originally "Men and Ideas") in collaboration with her producer and friend Marye "Chub" Benjamin. She produced and hosted numerous specials that included exploring social and career issues for high school students, and hours of programming in science, music, the arts, election analysis and observation of the workings of state and local government for the Austin community. Her shows were conversational and her interviews were creative and intimate.

From the 1960's on Beulah and Fran's modest-budget travels took them all over the world on trains, buses, and ships. He recorded his impressions in small sketch books and later in self-published stories. She tracked their budgets and itineraries. Upon retirement in 1979, they teamed up to produce several more editions of Fran's book on directing, "Play Directing: Analysis, Communication", and Style. Beulah sewed her own wardrobe, created amazing Halloween costumes for her daughter (under Fran's direction!), and later for her grandsons. She was a great cook, serving solid Mid-Western fare and homemade bread. At heart she was a farm girl who made a comfortable home for her visitors, whether they were students, famous actors or writers, community organizers, or her many friends. It did not phase her one bit going after a bat in her grandfather's farm house with a tennis racket.

Her interviewing skills in television and radio really stemmed from her strong personal attributes as a sensitive listener and a genuine liking for people. Her daughter Betsy recalls her favorite image of her mother hanging out the laundry in short shorts, dripping in the heat, but looking as cool as a cucumber with her long legs and beautiful smile. She enjoyed her coffee black and her beer from Milwaukee (until her dear friend and neighbor Danny Roy Young introduced her to Shiner Bock) - always a lady, with her beautiful silver hair, her dramatic earrings, and her great laughter, which pealed above the rest of the audience during any performance.

Francis Hodge, her partner and devoted husband of 66 years died in April 2008. She spent her last two years enjoying the quiet, her friends and reading four books a week. Loving and missing her terribly are her brother Guilford "Bud" Wiley and his wife Pat from Oshkosh, WI; her daughter Betsy Hodge Flack, son-in-law Jim Flack, San Francisco, CA, and grandsons, Andrew, San Francisco, and Bardin, Kona, HI; her sister-in-law Helen Hodge Hofer, Fairport, NY; her six nieces and nephews and their children in Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Georgia; her phenomenally generous and loving neighbors on Bluebonnet Lane and the Girls in the Bluebonnet Book Club; her Sewing Circle of 50 years and their daughters; and our family friend Phyllis Rothgeb Schenkkan who made the many trips to the doctors a labor love and conversation.

Heartfelt gratitude and thanks to her wonderful new and life-long friends, administrative and dining room staff at Westminster Manor residential community in Austin; and most especially in recent weeks to the staff of Westminster Health Care Center and Home Health Services, who loved her and cared for her and considered her individually their special friend. A gathering of friends and family will be held at 3 PM on December 29, at Westminster Manor Chapel, 4100 Jackson Avenue, Austin. A memorial garden fund is being established at the family farm in Wisconsin.
 
Wiley, Beulah Bernice (I234)
 
324 Ursula Margreiter, widower of a tavern proprietor in Schwaz
 
Family: Mathias Pfaundler / Ursula Margreiter (F252)
 
325 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Heard, Hampton Flack (I11)
 
326 Version of name used in 1915 version of Pfaundler Family Tree Pfaundler, Josef Aloisius Benedict (I547)
 
327 Vice Secretary in Vienna Pfaundler, Hermann (I42)
 
328 VICTOR EISENMENGER
[Extract from Wikipedia, published 19 Jun 2022]

EARLY LIFE
Eisenmenger was born in Vienna in 1864, the son of portrait painter August Eisenmenger and his wife Emma. Victor Eisenmenger had two brothers, a well-known engineer named Hugo and a civil servant in finance named Ewald.

Eisenmenger enjoyed art and natural science, but, as he put it, "An artistic career and a study of natural science were both denied to me, the former because my talent was not sufficiently pronounced, the latter because I was forced to earn my living as soon as possible. Thus, I decided to study medicine." He hoped that a medical career would satisfy his curiosity in science and also allow him to teach others. He graduated from medical school at the University of Vienna in 1889.

MEDICAL CAREER
Early career
After beginning his career as an unpaid assistant surgeon at a Viennese clinic, Eisenmenger secured a position at the laryngology clinic of Leopold von Schrötter in 1894. By the following year, Eisenmenger was suffering from poor health. von Schrötter, who had become something of a father figure to Eisenmenger, arranged for him to become the personal physician to the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, who had just been diagnosed with tuberculosis. von Schrötter thought that such a position would be less physically taxing for Eisenmenger than other positions in medicine.

Service to Archduke Franz Ferdinand
Eisenmenger was the personal physician to the archduke as well as to Charles I of Austria. He worked for the archduke from about 1895 until Ferdinand's assassination in June 1914. "You and the valet are my only friends," Ferdinand once told Eisenmenger.

Eisenmenger wrote Erzherzog Franz Ferdinand (Archduke Franz Ferdinand), a 200-page memoir published by Amalthea Verlag [de] about his time spent with the Archduke. The book was rather critical of the Archduke. Even before it was published, the work generated some controversy among Viennese physicians because Eisenmenger included information that was thought to violate standards of doctor-patient confidentiality.

Eisenmenger married the former Anna Hoberg, and they had two daughters, Anna and Hilde. Eisenmenger's wife was also connected to royalty. When Archduchess of Austria Infanta Maria Theresa of Portugal arranged to sell the Napoleon Diamond Necklace (worth US $450,000 at the time) in the U.S., she received only a few thousand dollars in return, so she sent Anna Hoberg Eisenmenger to the U.S. to recover the necklace. Archduke Leopold of Austria, Prince of Tuscany was jailed on a grand larceny charge in the matter, but he was acquitted at trial.

EISENMENGER'S SYNDROME
In an 1897 article in a German medical journal, Eisenmenger described signs of low blood oxygen levels (including a bluish hue to the skin and nail clubbing) in a 32-year-old man who had been born with a ventricular septal defect. Eisenmenger had seen the patient during his time working with von Schrötter.

Since the 1950s, as the understanding of heart and lung disease has evolved, Eisenmenger's syndrome is the name given to the situation in which a cardiac defect causes too much blood flow to the lungs, which in turn causes changes to the blood vessels in the lungs (pulmonary hypertension) and a reversal of blood flow so that now there is insufficient flow to the lungs. 
Eisenmenger, Victor (I31)
 
329 Viennese Pediatrician that discovered the e. coli bacteria Escherich, Prof. Theodor (I27)
 
330 Virginia Young Heard OBITUARY

Cocoa Beach - Virginia Young Heard, 63, passed away unexpectedly on the morning of 11 November 2019 at Cape Canaveral Hospital in Cocoa Beach, FL with her husband of 37 years at her side. Virginia was born 12 May 1956 in El Paso TX (Fort Bliss) to LtCol Gordon and Carolyn Young and became an official "Army Brat". She was preceded in death by her wonderful parents.

Virginia became an official "Air Force Wife" upon marriage to LtCol Hampton (Hamp) Heard in Alexandria LA (England AFB) 13 November 1982. While stationed at many Air Force Bases in the US and overseas, Virginia, Hamp and daughter, Carolyn, made many friends and memories. Hamp and Virginia retired from the Air Force in 1997 and moved to Cocoa Beach in 1999.

Virginia was always a very supportive wife, mother and "Grammy". She was very proud of the accomplishments of her family, daughter, Carolyn and her husband (Stephen) Szabo of Melbourne FL. Virginia adored her three grandchildren: Katie Grace, Andy, and Miss Ellie. Virginia enjoyed cooking. She valued the important bonding time that comes with sharing meals and traditions with family and friends. She loved baking and shopping with her granddaughters and watching her grandson fish, "He can catch a fish in a ditch". That is true!

Virginia leaves behind: sisters, Susan (Pat) Brazan, Julie (Melvin) Gautreau, Gerri Young and brother, James (Tanya) Young, sister in law Melinda "Nina" (Jerry) Koethe, and nephews, Alex (Lauren) Brazan, Michael (Zoe) Brazan, Morgan (Aprillynn) Gautreau and Josh Chevalier.

A Memorial Mass will be held at 11:00am, Monday, 18 November 2019 at Ascension Catholic Church Melbourne FL. In lieu of flowers, please consider donating a "Memorial Gift" to Moffitt Cancer Center, moffitt.org, 1-888-663-3488.

Arrangements by Ammen Family Cremation and Funeral Care, Rockledge, 632-1350. Condolences at afcfcare.com.

Published in FLORIDA TODAY from Nov. 15 to Nov. 17, 2019

 
Young, Virginia (I223)
 
331 W. H. Mangum Funeral
MAGEE, September 15 --- William Henry Mangum of near this place was buried at the Sharon Cemetery four miles east of town, Rev. J. L. Lloyd of Magee, conducting the services. Uncle Billie, as he was affectionately called, was one of the pioneers of this country, being more than seventy years of age at the time of his death. He leaves a widow and several children to mourn his loss. They had been married fifty years, and lived practically in the same neighborhood all their lives.

Clarion-Ledger, (Jackson, Mississippi)
Wednesday, September 16, 1925, Page 5 
Mangum, William Henry (I298)
 
332 Walter and Robert McQuiston are listed in the 1800 Guilford NC census. Any relation to Jane McCuiston (b.1735)?
 
Source (S3)
 
333 Was killed as a cavalry captain against the French at Regensburg Family: Franz Adam Wenzel von Escherich / Güntha von Sternegg (F279)
 
334 Was killed as first lieutenant at Helmstadt [located in Bavaria, Germany: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helmstadt] near Würzburg Escherich, Carl (I951)
 
335 Was Mother Superior in Budapest at death Pfaundler, Pauline (I621)
 
336 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Flack, Suzanne Margaret (I14)
 
337 WILL: A:124
JANE FLACK [written] 15 Jan. 1802; probated Nov. 1802
Son Thomas all my lands 300 acres
Andrew FLACK, son of Elisha - my black horse
Samuel DAUGHERTY's daughter Jenny - my saddle
Daughter Jenny- two coverlids
John DAUGHERTY's daughter Polly - my great pot
Daughter Dorcas - my bed and furniture
Andrew FLACK's daughter Jenny - my wheel
James FLACK's son Elisha - one cow
Sons Thomas & Elijah - my cattle and sheep
Executor: Son James FLACK - to divide property
Wits: Andrew FLACK, Elijah FLACK
~
The Will Abstract was kindly supplied by Fredric Z. Saunders on the GenForum Messageboard
26 Mar 2009 
McCuistion, Jane (I209)
 
338 Wolfgang Pfaundler published the book Der Tiroler Freiheitskampf published by Süddeutsche Verlag in 1809 under Andreas Hofer, numerous illustrated books and several films about Tyrolean customs. For decades he was also the publisher of the Tyrolean cultural magazine Das Fenster. During the Second World War, he fought as a partisan in the Tyrol against the Hitler regime, where he was the initiator and leader of the resistance group in the Ötztal together with Hubert Sauerwein. This was created in 1941 and sat down in 1942 from about 50 people together. In the mountains, the partisans were able to successfully hide from the Nazis until the end of the war and took power in the Ötztal in May 1945, which they then handed over without a fight to the invading Americans.

Pfaundler published South Tyrol's Promise and Reality in 1958, a compendium of diplomatic negotiations and political events in and around South Tyrol since 1919. However, when the reference work failed to mobilize the public for the cause of the oppressed South Tyroleans, Pfaundler resorted to more radical methods His desire for "freedom for South Tyrol" to help. He founded in 1957 - from the 1954 Bergisel-Bund out - the North Tyrolean section of the Liberation Committee for South Tyrol, mostly called "Freedom Legion South Tyrol" (FLS). In December 1960, he laid down his leadership, after ammunition, explosives and weapons were found in his rented apartment, his successor was Heinrich Klier. He said he never detonated bombs. He came rather as a "logistical" helper and advisor on the plan. Pfaundler was accused in 1962 in a Milan explosive process, the fire night of June 1961, in which 37 electricity pylons were blown up organized. As a result, although the Austrian authorities charged with the possession of explosives against him, in the subsequent jury trial, he was acquitted. In Italy, on the other hand, he was sentenced in absentia to twenty years and eleven months imprisonment, after which he could not pass the Italian border for decades, otherwise he would have been arrested. Only in January 1998, the Italian President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro informed the Austrian Federal President Thomas Klestil that he had pardoned four former South Tyrol activists, namely Heinrich Klier, Peter Matern, Wolfgang Pfaundler and Gerhard Pfeffer.

Wolfgang Pfaundler was married to the pianist and author Gertrud Spat (born November 5, 1930 in Eindhoven, (January 19, 2010 in Innsbruck), working as a translator with Mary de Rachewiltz , the daughter of Ezra Pound, and as a novelist with the mother employed by Georg Trakl.

 
Pfaundler, Wolfgang (I96)
 
339 WRAY MONROE OBITUARY
Wray Stockton Monroe, 94, of Wilderness Road, died Friday, Sept. 21, 2001.

Born in Hilrose, Colo., he was a son of the late Arvilla Stockton and Duncan Daniel Monroe. Graduate: University of Missouri and Northwestern University, Chicago.

Survivors: Wife, Hertha Flack Monroe; and three brothers. Predeceased: First wife, Roma Jean Smith.

Memorial service: 2 p.m. Saturday at Congregational Church, Tryon.

Omit flowers. Memorials: Polk County Community Foundation, 255 S. Trade St., Tryon, NC 28782. - McFarland Funeral Chapel.

Published in The Greenville News on Sept. 25, 2001
 
Monroe, Wray Stockton (I88)
 
340 Yale School of Nursing Class of 1941 Eisenmenger, Hertha Emma (I12)
 

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