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Gottlieb Ludiwig Richard Stover

Birth
Germany
Death
20 Dec 1894 (aged 45–46)
Burial
Colma, San Mateo County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
Mass Grave - Originally buried Masonic Cemetery San Francisco
Memorial ID
View Source
Obituary
STOVER— In this my, December 20, 1894 Gottlieb Ludwig Richard Stover, beloved brother of Mrs. .John F. Winter and Mrs. .John McCallough of Alameda. a native or Osterwanna, Amt Otterdorf, Germany, aged 46 years Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend the funeral TOMORROW (Sunday). at 1 o'clock p. m.. from the parlors of Charles . I. B. Metzler. 636 Washington street. Interment Masonic Cemetery

Information shown above is original grave site only.This Cemetery is now Defunct and all graves moved. Relatives were given the option of moving the grave at their own expense (in which case, could be anywhere). Of those not moved by next of kin, 19,900 were moved to a mass grave at Woodlawn Memorial Park in Colma, and 100 moved to Japanese Cemetery in Colma. Headstones were all disposed -unless paid for by next of kin. Woodlawn Cemetery does have one memorial representing all of these people that were reinterred there. They can be contacted to see if the person was tranferred there, but there would be no headstone unless the family paid for reinterment.
Obituary
STOVER— In this my, December 20, 1894 Gottlieb Ludwig Richard Stover, beloved brother of Mrs. .John F. Winter and Mrs. .John McCallough of Alameda. a native or Osterwanna, Amt Otterdorf, Germany, aged 46 years Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend the funeral TOMORROW (Sunday). at 1 o'clock p. m.. from the parlors of Charles . I. B. Metzler. 636 Washington street. Interment Masonic Cemetery

Information shown above is original grave site only.This Cemetery is now Defunct and all graves moved. Relatives were given the option of moving the grave at their own expense (in which case, could be anywhere). Of those not moved by next of kin, 19,900 were moved to a mass grave at Woodlawn Memorial Park in Colma, and 100 moved to Japanese Cemetery in Colma. Headstones were all disposed -unless paid for by next of kin. Woodlawn Cemetery does have one memorial representing all of these people that were reinterred there. They can be contacted to see if the person was tranferred there, but there would be no headstone unless the family paid for reinterment.

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