Goldy Obits 2


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Date: January 28, 1920
The husband of Mary E Goldy (daughter of Joseph Goldy and Mary Croshaw)

Summary: John Taylor, who conducted a truck farm on the Jacksonville road, a number of years ago and supplied many residents of Mount Holly with vegetables, died at the home of his son, A.L.Taylor, at Haddon Heights, on Sunday. He is survived by three sons and a daughter, all grown, one of whom is William J. Taylor, who operates the former Asher Pew farm at Wood Lane station. The funeral will be held today; interment at Evergreen cemetery, Camden.



New Jersey Mirror.
May 13, 1936, page 5, column 7.
Budd S Goldy, 77, bookkeeper for more than 40 years at the H B Smith Machine Works, Smithville, died in Pemberton, from a heart ailment. In his early life Mr Goldy operated a general store in Pemberton before moving to Smithville. Funeral services were held at 2 pm yesterday. Burial was at the Pemberton Baptist Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Ella N., a sister Mrs Anna Sapp, of Camden. Mr Goldy was one of the organizers and a charter member of the Pemberton Chapter, P.O.S of A.


New Jersey Mirror. November 11, 1936. page 5 column 7.
Category: OBITUARIES
Headline: Obituaries
Date: November 11, 1936
Page: 5
Column: 7
Summary: Mrs. Marion G. MacFarland - Mrs. Marion G. MacFarland, wife of James M. MacFarland, of Vincentown, died on Monday and will be held at her late residence at two o'clock on Friday afternoon. Mrs. MacFarland was 47 years of age. She is survived, besides her husband, by a daughter, Lois; her father, Edward A. Goldy; a sister, Mrs. Ernest Calcaterra, of Long Branch, and a brother, Charles S. Goldy, of Riverside.


Category: OBITUARIES
Headline: DIED
Date: November 11, 1936
Page: 8
Column: 1
Summary: MacFARLAND - At Vincentown, N. J., November 9, 1936, Marion G. MacFarland, wife of James M. MacFarland, aged 47 years. Relatives and friends are invited to funeral from her late residence, Vincentown, N. J., Friday at 2 P. M. Interment Mount Holly Cemetery. Friends may call Thursday evening.

 


New Jersey Mirror
September 8, 1937.
page 5 column 3.
Mrs Ella N Goldy- 72, a resident od Smithville for more than 40 years, died today at her home in Smithville. Mrs Goldy was the widow of Budd S Goldy. She is survived by a sister, Mrs (Laura) A B Grobler of Pemberton and a brother Daniel Nutt of Mount Holly. Funeral services were held at 11 am, Sunday, from her home. Burial was in the Baptist Cemetery, Pemberton.

Denise found information from funeral records: A. A. Collins Funeral Home, Pemberton, New Jersey

She was 73 years, 5 months and 27 days old

Cause of death: Cerebral Hemorrage, Agina pectoris


New Jersey Mirror
Category: OBITUARIES
Headline: Mrs. Emeline Staley
Date: March 30, 1938
Page: 5
Column: 7
Summary: Mrs. Emeline Staley, nee Goldy, widow of Martin W. Staley and mother of the late H. Raymond Staley, who was a City Commissioner of Camden for a term beginning in 1923, died Saturday at her home, 306 Cooper street, Camden. The family moved to Camden from Mount Holly shortly after the birth of H. Raymond, in 1880. Funeral services are being held this afternoon at 736 Market street, Camden. Burial will be in Mount Holly cemetery.




The son of James Logan and Jerusha G Clevenger
(daughter of John Combs Clevenger and Dority Corlies Goldy)

James P. Logan Died from Heart Attack; Editorial Writer / Native of Burlington County, Became a Well Known Newspaper Man / Edited Burlington Enterprise
Date: November 2, 1938 Page: 1 Column: 5

Summary: Funeral services for James Parmelee Logan, retired editor of the Newark Sunday Call, were held at his late home, 9 Elson road, Montclair, on Monday, conducted by Rev. Charles L(.) Gomph, rector of Grace Episcopal Church. Burial was in the Mount Holly cemetery. He died from a heart ailment on Thursday night at his home. Mr. Logan, who was 81, had been seriously ill since the previous Sunday. He suffered from a heart attack five years ago from which he never fully recovered. Mr. Logan was born May 23, 1857, on his father's farm in Springfield township, Burlington county, the son of James and Jerusha Clevenger Logan. He was of Scotch-Irish ancestry. The date of the arrival of the family in New Jersey is not known. Its earliest records, dating to pre-Revolutionary days, are found in Bucks County, Pa., where Mr. Logan's great-great-grandfather, James Logan, is buried in a now abandoned Presbyterian cemetery near Newton. Fifth Successive James Logan Mr. Logan was the fifth successive James Logan. Records of the Adjutant General's office in Trenton show that James Logan, 2d, a resident of Burlington, served in the Revolutionary war as sergeant in Capt. Joseph Pancoast's company, First Regiment, Burlington Militia. One of his 10 children was James, born in 1787. This James had a son, James, born in 1825, the father of Mr. Logan. The latter disregarded the tradition by naming his only son Harold. After preliminary education in private schools, Mr. Logan was graduated in 1880 from the law school of the University of Michigan. He was a member of the Michigan varsity football team in 1879. Admitted to the Michigan bar in May of 1880 and to the New Jersey bar in June, he read law in the office of Joseph H. Gaskill in Mount Holly. Started Newspaper in 1884 Mr. Logan turned to newspaper work when he was 27 years old, by founding the Daily Enterprise in Burlington. Seven years later he became the editor of the New Brunswick Fredonian. He joined the Newark Evening News in 1895 and after service as a political writer became associate editor. He left The News at the end of 1916 to become associate editor of The Sunday Call, serving in that capacity until his promotion to succeed G. Wisner Thorne as editor in 1925. He was a director of the Newark Call Printing & Publishing Company and for 10 years its secretary. He retired as editor in 1936 but remained on the board until his death. Besides his newspaper and public duties, Mr. Logan was active in many other circles. He was elected a trustee of the United Savings Bank in 1926 and was a member of the Newark Museum, New Jersey Historical Society, New Jersey Press Association, Essex Club and University of Michigan Club in New York. Mr. Logan married Miss Emma Ottinger, of Philadelphia, May 23, 1883, in Mount Holly. She died January 10, 1903. Two children were born to them. Eleanor, who is now Mrs. E. Graham Ward, of Newark, and Harold E. Logan, of Metuchen. His second wife was Miss Mary C. Foley, of Newark, whom he married in 1909. They had two children, Constance, who is Mrs. John F. Clunan, of Montclair, and Miss Elisabeth Logan, also of Montclair. There is one grandchild, James Logan Clunan.


New Jersey Mirror
OBITUARIES
Headline: OBITUARY
Date: April 6, 1939
Page: 5
Column: 2
Summary: Joseph Goldy - Joseph Goldy, 69, farmer on the South Pemberton road, died at his home on Saturday from a heart condition with which he had been suffering for some time. For a number of years in his younger life he was in the employ of the late Charles B. Parson as a butcher, later turning to farming as an occupation. He had a large circle of friends. He is survived by his widow, Effie, and two sons, Thomas P., of Mount Holly, and Ralph, of Burlington. Funeral services were held on Tuesday with interment in the Baptist burying ground, Mount Holly.