Savannah Morning News (GA)
December 29, 2001Beaufort, SC - Roger Haskell, 80, died Tuesday, Dec. 25. Born Feb. 16, 1921 in Chattanooga, TN he was an Army Air Corps Staff Sgt., 8th Air Force Tail Gunner on B-26 Bomb Group 397.
Survivors: sons, Mark Haskell and Peter Haskell; brother, John Haskell and sister, Natalie H. Lane.
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U.S., World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946
Name: Roger Haskell
Birth Year: 1921
Race: White, citizen (White)
Nativity State or Country: Tennessee
State of Residence: South Carolina
County or City: Beaufort
Enlistment Date: 10 Jul 1943
Enlistment State: South Carolina
Enlistment City: Fort Jackson Columbia
Branch: No branch assignment
Grade: Private
Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law
Component: Selectees (Enlisted Men)
Source: Civil Life
Education: 1 year of college
Civil Occupation: Machinists
Marital status: Single, without dependents
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U.S. Veterans' Gravesites, ca.1775-2019
Name: Roger Haskell
Death Age: 80
Birth Date: 16 Feb 1921
Service Start Date: 26 Jul 1943
Service End Date: 28 Mar 1946
Death Date: 25 Dec 2001
Cemetery: Beaufort National Cemetery
Notes: SSGT US ARMY AIR FORCES WORLD WAR II
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U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010
Name: Roger Haskell
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 16 Feb 1921
Death Date: 25 Dec 2001
SSN: 245167089
Branch 1: ARMY
Enlistment Date 1: 26 Jul 1943
Release Date 1: 28 Mar 1946
The Buffalo News (NY)
November 10, 2010Ann S. Haskell, Ph.D., a retired University at Buffalo English professor and freelance writer, died of ovarian cancer Oct. 22 in her Troy, Va., home. She was 81.
Dr. Haskell was a Chaucerian scholar whose books included "Essays on Chaucer's Saints" and "A Middle English Anthology." In addition to her scholarly work, she wrote op-ed columns, personal essays and articles for many publications including Smithsonian magazine, the Washington Post, Baltimore Sun and New York Times.
Born Elizabeth Ann Sullivan in Washington, D.C., she was a 1946 graduate of Washington-Lee High School in Arlington County, Va., and in 1961, while raising three children on her own, graduated from Clemson University. She received a Woodrow Wilson Graduate Fellowship and received her doctorate in English and philology cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania in 1964.
In 1966, Dr. Haskell began teaching at UB -- specializing in Chaucer, medieval life and literature and children's literature -- where she remained for 37 years. She was a mentor and adviser to hundreds of students and was known for her generosity and scholarship.
She maintained a home in Provence in southern France for 40 years, taught a program abroad on the culture of Provence and famously lived as a medieval woman in Provence for a period, an experience she documented in a major feature in the Smithsonian magazine.
Dr. Haskell was married to Richard Koepsell. Previous marriages to Thomas Lawson, Roger Haskell and Bolney K. Rasmussen ended in divorce.
Besides her husband of 10 years, she is survived by two sons, Constantine "Dean" Rasmussen and Mark Haskell; a daughter, Gretl Rasmussen; a stepson, David Koepsell; her mother, Elizabeth Sullivan; two brothers, Paul and Glen Sullivan; and a sister, Margaretta Smith.
36525. John Langdon Haskell Sr.
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
January 24, 2016HASKELL, John Langdon, 94, of Charleston, an Army Air Corps veteran, former civil engineer, first married to the late Jane F. Wall and widower of Evelyn P. Pinckney, died Friday.
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The Island Packet
January 26, 2016John Langdon Haskell, Sr., of Charleston, SC, died peacefully at home in loving care of his family on January 22, 2016. He was born February 16, 1921 in Chattanooga, TN. He spent his childhood in Beaufort, SC at Tidalholm, a prominent estate, circa 1853, owned by his parents from the 1930s to the 1950s. This historic property, which has been used in several Hollywood films, sits on a point of the Beaufort River. It is on this river that John and his twin brother, Roger, had many happy days sailing, fishing and swimming. Other fond memories were of the many summers spent at Barn House on Marthas Vineyard. John studied and excelled in sports at Christ School in Arden, NC, where he graduated in 1939. He attended The Citadel in Charleston, SC until 1942, when he volunteered for flight training with the US Army Air Corps. After serving in WWII, he enjoyed a long career as a civil engineer, retiring from the US Army Corps of Engineers in 1980. He spent his retirement in Ridgeland (Grahamville), SC, and he was an active member of the Church of the Holy Trinity until he moved to Charleston, SC in 2012.
John was a sweet and caring man whose compassionate spirit was felt by all who met him. He was the definition of love, always sacrificing his needs for others. He loved the Atlanta Braves, the USC Gamecocks, sailing, sports, old movies, and westerns, especially with John Wayne. He was and is an inspiration, and he will be terribly missed.
He was predeceased by his parents, Natalie Soule Swart Haskell and Adam Haskell; his sister, Natalie Haskell Lane; his brothers William Haskell and Roger Haskell; his first wife, Jane Ford Wall; his second wife, Evelyn Popham Pinckney; and his companion, Dot Stotler.
He is survived by his sons, John L. Haskell, Jr. (Jon Shipp), James Haskell (Melissa Kay) and Daniel Haskell. He is also survived by many nieces and nephews.
The State (Columbia, SC)
November 5, 2001Evelyn Haskell Haskell died November 3, 2001. Born in Ridgeland on January 27, 1919, she was a daughter of the late George Popham and Rosa Dean Popham.
Mrs. Haskell was a retired owner of McTeer Cleaners of Ridgeland. She was a member of Episcopal Church Women and served on the Altar Guild. She was a former member of Ridgeland Baptist Church and a member of Senior Singers. Mrs. Haskell was a member of Holy Trinity Episcopal Church.
Surviving are husband, John Haskell of Ridgeland; sons, William O. "Billy" Richardson of Lexington, Charles D. Richardson of Hinesville, Ga.; sister, Mae Gardner of Savannah. She was predeceased by husbands, William Olen Richardson Sr. and Desaussure Pinckney Sr., both of Ridgeland.
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
January 23, 2017CHARLESTON - Daniel Wall Haskell, a US Army veteran, age 58, passed away on January 9, 2017 at the Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center in Charleston, SC, with his family at his side.
He is predeceased by his father, John Langdon Haskell, Sr.; mother, Jane Ford Wall Haskell; and daughter, Victoria (Vicky) O'Hara.
He is survived by his brothers, John Langdon Haskell, Jr. (Jon Shipp) and James Adam Haskell (Melissa); granddaughters, Yazmin, Alexis, and Tianna O'Hara; and many cousins.
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U.S. Veterans' Gravesites, ca.1775-2019
Name: Daniel Wall Haskell
Rank: SPC
Death Age: 58
Birth Date: 27 Aug 1958
Death Date: 9 Jan 2017
Cemetery: Beaufort National Cemetery
Branch of Service: US ARMY
62362. Ann Haskell Lindsey Montague
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
November 27, 2017Anne Haskell Lindsey Montague "Nancy" Browne, died at The Palms of Mount Pleasant, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina on Monday, November 27, 2017.
She was born on July 14, 1924 in Abingdon, Virginia, the oldest daughter of Allen Fairfax Montague and Sarah Hampton Lindsey Montague.
She is the widow of Robert Edward Browne, III who predeceased her in 2010.
She graduated from Central High School in Charlotte, North Carolina and attended Carolina Business School in Charlotte, North Carolina. She was the seventh generation of her family to be married in Trinity Cathedral, Columbia, South Carolina, where she was married on September 21, 1945. After her marriage and the release of her husband from service in the United States Naval Air Corps, they lived in Charlottesville, Virginia where he attended the University of Virginia Law School and she worked as a secretary to Dean Ivey Lewis of the Academic College. After graduation, they moved to Wilmington, North Carolina. She was secretary of St. James Episcopal Church in Wilmington. When they moved to Spartanburg, South Carolina, she was a member of the Altar Guild of the Church of the Advent for more than fifty years. She worked at the Spartanburg County Public Library on a part time basis. She was a member of The Junior League of Spartanburg, member and past President of The Assembly, a volunteer at St. Luke's Free Medical Clinic, member and past President of the Fruit and Flower Gardeners, former member and President of the Fortnightly Garden Club, the Spartanburg Garden Club and was an active member of the National Society of Colonial Dames in the state of South Carolina, Spartanburg Committee, for many years and also serving on the state board of the Colonial Dames of South Carolina.
She is survived by daughter, Sarah (Sally) Browne Crowder (David William Crowder), granddaughter, Anne Lindsey Montague Jenkins (Richard Thomas Berry) and great grandchild, Elijah Kinsey Berry, all of Charleston, SC. She is also survived by her son, Edward Montague Browne (Paula Faulkner) of Louisville, Kentucky; a brother, Allen Fairfax Montague (Stella Price Montague) of Malvern, Pennsylvania; a sister, Mary Tyler Montague Hutchison (Mrs. Robert S. Hutchison, Jr.) of Charlotte, North Carolina and a large number of nieces and nephews.
A private graveside service will be held at Trinity Cathedral Cemetery in Columbia, South Carolina.
The State (Columbia, SC)
November 9, 2010SPARTANBURG - Robert Edward Browne III, 89, husband of Anne Haskell Lindsey Montague Browne of Spartanburg, died Monday, November 8, 2010. Born in Columbia, SC, July 4, 1921, Mr. Browne was the son of the late Robert Edward Browne Jr. and Roberta Gould Shaw Dargan Browne.
He graduated from University High School and graduated from the University of South Carolina magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1942. Prior to graduation, Mr. Browne had volunteered for training as a pilot in the United States Naval Air Corps and, after receiving his flight training and commission, was assigned to the Caribbean Sea frontier for a few months before being transferred to the Central Pacific Theater of Operations. After being injured in a crash, he was returned to Kaneohe Bay Naval Hospital and, upon discharge from the hospital, was assigned as an operation officer for Admiral John Dale Price.
When discharged from the service, he attended the University of Virginia Law School, graduating in 1947 as a Dean's List student. After graduation, he lived in Wilmington, NC, and was commerce counsel for Atlantic Coastline Railroad Company. While in Wilmington, he was a member of Carolina Yacht Club and L'Arioso German Club.
In 1952, he moved to Spartanburg and joined the late T. Sam Means Jr. in the practice of law. The firm expanded over the years and he was the senior shareholder of Butler, Means, Evins & Browne, P.A., prior to his death.
He was a member of the Spartanburg County Bar Association, served as vice president on two different occasions, and received the Chief Justice Claude A. Taylor Award from that Association; a member of the South Carolina Bar Association, and was a founding member of the Fee Disputes board; a Life Fellow of the American Bar Association; and served for many years as an arbitrator and mediator for the American Arbitration Association.
He was a member of the Episcopal Church of the Advent, where he served as advisor to the Youth Group, as secretary of the vestry for many years, as trustee of the church, administrator of the church cemetery, and was chancellor of the church. As a member of the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina, he served as secretary of the standing committee for many years, on the board of trustees for Kanuga Conference Center, on the board of trustees for York Place, and served on the search committee for the first Suffragan Bishop of the Diocese of Upper South Carolina.
He served as a founding member of the board of trustees of South Carolina Retarded Children's Habilitation Center. He was a former member of the Spartanburg Country Club and a member of the Piedmont Club of Spartanburg.
He is survived by his wife, Anne Haskell Lindsey Montague Browne; his daughter, Sarah "Sally" Hampton Lindsey Browne Jenkins of Charleston, SC; his son, Edward Montague Browne and his wife, Paula Faulkner Browne, of Louisville, KY; and a granddaughter, Anne Lindsey Montague Jenkins of Charleston, SC.
The Charlotte Observer (NC)
February 8, 1992Mr. Robert Stuart ''Hutch'' Hutchison Jr., 71, of 8325 Douglas Dr., died Feb. 6, 1992, at Carolinas Medical Center after a long illness.
Mr. Hutchison, a Charlotte native, was a 1942 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of University of North Carolina and a 1946 graduate of Harvard School of Business Administration. He retired as executive officer from H.L. Bowers Co. after 34 years and was secretary-treasurer of Textile Waste Club.
He was a World War II Navy veteran.
He tutored for the Central Piedmont Community College Adult Literacy Program and volunteered with Friendship Trays, where he was appointed to the board of directors in 1991.
Survivors are his wife, Mary; sons, Tyler Hutchison of Robbinsville, Stuart Hutchison, III; daughter, Mrs. Debra Johnson of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; sister, Miss Betty Hutchison; one granddaughter.
36537. Preston Hampton Haskell II
Preston Hampton Haskell was a mining executive. Educated at University of Virginia. Served in Tank Corps, WW I.
The Fayetteville Observer (NC)
January 16, 1998RICHMOND, Va. -- Mrs. Mary Clark Haskell of Richmond, formerly of Fayetteville, N.C., died Thursday.
Mrs. Haskell is survived by a daughter, Molly H. Sarris of New York; a son, John C. Haskell Jr.; her mother, Dorothy Clark Anderson of Fayetteville; and one grandson.
Charleston Gazette (WV)
June 23, 2012LOS ANGELES - Film critic Andrew Sarris began his rise to prominence in the early 1960s when, fresh off an extended visit to Paris, he became a primary spokesman for a theory that would reverberate throughout the cinema world.
Screenwriters and producers may have thought they wielded the most influence. But Sarris, inspired by what Francois Truffaut called the "politique des auteurs," introduced to America the controversial notion that, despite the collaborative nature of filmmaking, some directors are the "authors" of their movies and that the best directors, by imbuing a movie with their personal vision, make the best films. He called it the auteur theory.
"The art of the cinema is the art of an attitude, the style of a gesture. It is not so much what, as how," Sarris later wrote in his landmark 1968 book "The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929-1968," which has been called the bible of the auteur theory.
Sarris, who elevated the status of film directors and molded a generation of movie makers and reviewers as the leading American proponent of the auteur theory, died Wednesday at a hospital in New York City. He was 83.The cause was complications of a stomach virus, said his wife, film critic Molly Haskell.
Sarris was the longtime critic for the Village Voice and later the New York Observer. He also taught film for many years at Columbia University."He was the most influential American film critic of his time, and one of the jolliest," Chicago Sun-Times critic Roger Ebert wrote Wednesday. "More than anyone else, he was responsible for introducing Americans to the belief that the true author of a film is its director.
"Largely because of him, many moviegoers today think of films in terms of their directors."
Sarris first set out his ideas in "Notes on the Auteur Theory," a 1962 article in Film Culture Magazine. It created a stir in film circles, most famously spurring a barbed attack in Film Quarterly by critic Pauline Kael, whom Sarris later referred to as his "arch-antagonist."
In the 1968 book, Sarris evaluated scores of directors and ranked them in importance, a method that led Kael to deride him as a "list queen."Included in "The Pantheon" - "directors who have transcended their technical problems with a personal vision of the world" - were filmmakers such as Charlie Chaplin, John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock, Howard Hawks and Orson Welles.
Among those Sarris included in "The Far Side of Paradise" - those who fell short of The Pantheon - were Frank Capra, George Cukor and Samuel Fuller.
Other categories included "Expressive Esoterica," "Lightly Likable," "Strained Seriousness" and, perhaps most controversially, "Less Than Meets the Eye." The latter category was for directors whom Sarris deemed to have "reputations in excess of inspirations," such as John Huston, David Lean, William Wyler and Billy Wilder. (Sarris later revised his opinion of Wilder and apologized to him.)
The auteur theory, said Jeanine Basinger, head of the film studies program at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn., "made everybody re-evaluate [American cinema] as an art form and take it seriously for the first time.
"The idea was that masterpieces could actually be made in Hollywood commercial cinema."
Basinger was one of the nearly 40 film scholars, critics and filmmakers - including Ebert, David Thomson, Leonard Maltin, Richard Schickel, Budd Boetticher and Peter Bogdanovich - who contributed essays to "Citizen Sarris, American Film Critic," a 2001 tribute book edited by critic Emanuel Levy.
36539. Augustine Clayton Howze Haskell
Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
September 6, 1986Howze Haskell, 79, founder and retired chairman of the board of Haskell Chemical Co. Inc., died Thursday night at his home, 14 Bridgeway Road.
Earlier in his career, Mr. Haskell had been active in the technology of frozen food packaging for Birdseye and had worked as a chemist for an Alabama firm and for the former Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. in Charleston, S.C., before coming to Richmond in 1934.
Mr. Haskell founded Haskell Chemical Co. Inc. here in 1936. He served for four years as president and then was named chairman of the board. He retired from the chemical firm in 1977. He had served on the boards of Southern Bank and Trust Co., the Richmond Home for Boys, Comp Industries of Waltham, Mass., and the Richmond chapter of the American Red Cross.
He was a native of Birmingham, Ala., and a 1928 graduate of the University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn. He served in the Navy during World War II and attained the rank of lieutenant commander.
He was a former vestryman at St. James's Episcopal Church and a member of the Country Club of Virginia, the Commonwealth Club, the Society of the Cincinnati and the Richmond German.
His wife, Mrs. Ann Burroughs Haskell, died in June 1984. Survivors include two sons, Richard Hansford Burroughs Haskell and Preston Haskell, both of Richmond; a daughter, Miss Ann Hansford Haskell of New York; and a sister, Mrs. Susan Harrell of Goochland County.
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U.S., Select Military Registers, 1862-1985
Name: Howze Haskell
Birth Date: Feb 1907
Military Date: 12 Apr 1942
Publication Date: 1 Jan 1943
Title: Commissioned Officers, Cadets, Midshipmen, and Warrant Officers of the United States Naval Reserve
62369. Preston Hampton Haskell
Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
December 22, 2016HASKELL, Preston Hampton, 73, of Richmond, Virginia, died Saturday, December 17, 2016, in an automobile accident. Son of the late Howze and Ann Burroughs Haskell of Richmond,
Preston is survived by his sister, Ann, of New York; a niece and two nephews; and his dearest friend, Betty Hurt Wetherington of Roanoke, Virgini
Preston graduated from Avon Old Farms School, Parsons College and attended two years of law school at the University of Chicago. He worked for his father at Haskell Chemical Company and devoted the last years of his life to travel. A unique individual, Preston was an animal lover, an automobile enthusiast, an intrepid traveler, and a passionate swimmer at Price Wood's lake.
62371. Richard Hansford Burroughs Haskell Sr.
Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
December 1, 2013HASKELL, Richard Hansford Burroughs Sr., passed away at his home in Richmond, Va., on November 26, 2013. He was born in Richmond, Va., on August 20,1949, the son of the late Howze and Ann B. Haskell of Richmond. He was baptized and confirmed at St. James Episcopal Church and attended Christchurch School in Middlesex County.
He graduated from Old Dominion University in 1972 and entered his father's business, Haskell Chemical Company, in 1975. In 1985, he became the president and served in this position until 2006. During this time, Richard served on the Richmond Human Relations Commission, the Board of Directors of the American Cancer Society of Virginia, The Richmond Memorial Hospital Foundation, the National Association of Chemical Distributors and the Board of Governors of Christchurch School.
He is survived by three children, Richard H. B. Haskell Jr. of Savannah, Ga., Clayton Howze Haskell of Toulouse, France and Lainie Gratz of Charlottesville, Va.; and her two children, Beau and Olana Gratz. Additionally, he is survived by a sister, Ann H. Haskell of New York; and a brother, Preston H. Haskell of Richmond.
Richard spent his entire life on or near the water from Fishing Bay in Middlesex, Va., to Harbour Island in the Bahamas. He imparted his love of the water to all three of his children and both his sons crossed the Atlantic Ocean in a 28-foot boat at the ages of 18 and 21, respectively, to Mr. Haskell's consternation. He met the boys in Portugal and they continued to sail around the Mediterranean with their sister Lainie, who was studying art restoration in Italy.
Susan Howze Haskell was born in 1910 in Birmingham, Alabama. She attended Columbia Institute in Columbia Tennessee, the National Cathedral School in Washington, Sweet Briar College, and the School of Journalism at the University of Georgia In 1934 she married Theron Rice Harrell. In addition to raising two children, she took active roles in social clubs and civic organizations.
Source
Family records and notes courtesy of Preston Hampton Haskell III
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Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
July 22, 1996Susan Haskell Harrell, who served on the boards of several civic organizations and once was a weekly columnist for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, died Sunday in a local hospital. She was 86 and lived in Goochland.
Mrs. Harrell was a former member of the boards of The Museum of the Confederacy and The Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities, which she served as chairman of the Marshall House Committee.
In the late 1940s and 1950s, she wrote a weekly column, "Country Living," for the Sunday Times-Dispatch, said her son, Henry Howze Harrell of Goochland. During World War II, she managed Haskell Chemical Co. for two years. Mrs. Harrell was a native of Birmingham, Ala. She attended Sweet Briar College and graduated from the University of Georgia with a degree in journalism.
Mrs. Harrell was the widow of Theron Rice Harrell. In addition to her son, she is survived by a daughter, Anne Harrell Bristow of Richmond.
Mrs. Harrell was a member of St. Mary's Episcopal Church.
Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
December 19, 2005Robert Ashby Bristow, age 77, died on Saturday, December 17, 2005.
He is survived by his wife of 47 years, Anne Harrell Bristow; his sons, Robert Ashby Bristow Jr. and Peter McDonald Bristow; his daughter, Anne Bristow Yates, their spouses, and seven grandchildren.
Mr. Bristow was born in Washington, D.C., and graduated from Virginia Military Institute in 1949. After graduation, he served as first lieutenant in the United States Air Force.
He joined Highway Machinery and Supply Company in 1954, and became president and co-owner until his retirement in 1998. He was president of Virginia Equipment Distributors and a director of the Virginia Aggregates Association and the Virginia Road and Transportation Association. He also served as a director of the Richmond National Bank, predecessor of First Virginia Bank in Richmond, from 1975 to 1986.
Local newspaper
November 21, 1973Decatur Ga. - Frank Hamton Haskell died Monday in DeKalb General Hospital.
Mr. Haskell, district manager of Vastal Laboratories, was a native of Columbia, S. C., and a son of the late Frank Hampton Haskell and Emmie Sparkman Ward Haskell.
He attended the University of South Carolina and was a veteran of World War II, USMC. He was past president of Dunaire Civic Association and was a member of Riverland Gun Club.
Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Kelley Gillespie Haskell; a son, Frank Hampton Haskell, Jr. of Pamplico, S.C.; two brothers, John C. Haskell of Brimingham, Ala., and George W. Haskell of Vero Beach, Fla.; and a granddaughter.
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U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010
Name: Frank Haskell
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 15 Mar 1913
Death Date: 19 Nov 1973
SSN: 250018983
Branch 1: M
Enlistment Date 1: 30 Jul 1943
Release Date 1: 26 Apr 1946
Enlistment Date 2: 13 Aug 1943
U.S., World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946
Name: John C Haskell
Birth Year: 1915
Race: White, citizen (White)
Nativity State or Country: South Carolina
State of Residence: South Carolina
County or City: Charleston
Enlistment Date: 1 Nov 1941
Enlistment State: Georgia
Enlistment City: Fort Benning
Branch: Air Corps
Grade: Aviation Cadet
Component: Regular Army (including Officers, Nurses, Warrant Officers, and Enlisted Men)
Source: Selective Service within 3 months of Discharge 11 punch
Education: 4 years of college
Civil Occupation: Chemists, assayers, and metallurgists
Marital status: Single, without dependents
Height: 72
Weight: 158
The Stuart News (FL)
August 16, 2007George Ward Haskell, 89, died Aug. 7, 2007, in Houston, under hospice care. He was born in Columbia, S.C., and lived in Stuart for about 20 year
Before retirement he was employed by EBASCO, Inc., power plant construction. He served in the Navy. He received his degree in civil engineering from the University of South Carolina.
Survivors include daughters, Diane Beverly of Chicago, Ill.; Shari Wescott; Gayle McGraw; and Lisa Miles, all of Houston, Texas; eight grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife, Arline Murph Haskell.
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
May 31, 2008SIEGLING, Magdalen Haskell, 97, of Charleston, widow of John A. Siegling, died Friday
Dr. John Arthur Siegling was a physician.