Henry and Alice McIntire were married in Yakima in June 1918 at the Methodist Parsonage with Reverend Smith performing the ceremony. Their first home was at 403 North Ruby Street in Ellensburg. Henry was 20 and Alice was 22. In 1930, they were rooming with the George Stiltz family in Ellensburg. Henry was working as a plasterer at the time.
In 1943, he moved to Puyallup where he and a brother started a masonry contracting firm. He was a member of the Bricklayers Union, a charter member of the American Legion Post in Ellensburg, and a member of the Christian Church. He resided in Puyallup with his wife, Mabel, whom he married in 1951.
Funeral services were at the Chapel of the Towers Funeral Home in Puyallup. He was survived by one brother, Fred, and four sisters (Eva, Effie, Mable, and Bertha), one son, John, and two step-daughters, Kaaren and Sydney. Burial was in Puyallup. [source: obituary]
Henry and Alice McIntire were married in Yakima in June 1918 at the Methodist Parsonage with Reverend Smith performing the ceremony. Their first home was at 403 North Ruby Street in Ellensburg. Henry was 20 and Alice was 22. In 1930, they were rooming with the George Stiltz family in Ellensburg. Henry was working as a plasterer at the time.
In 1943, he moved to Puyallup where he and a brother started a masonry contracting firm. He was a member of the Bricklayers Union, a charter member of the American Legion Post in Ellensburg, and a member of the Christian Church. He resided in Puyallup with his wife, Mabel, whom he married in 1951.
Funeral services were at the Chapel of the Towers Funeral Home in Puyallup. He was survived by one brother, Fred, and four sisters (Eva, Effie, Mable, and Bertha), one son, John, and two step-daughters, Kaaren and Sydney. Burial was in Puyallup. [source: obituary]
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