Edward Laville Carlisle, a well-known Crosby County resident since 1939, was claimed by death at 2:15 a.m. last Thursday in Methodist Hospital in Lubbock.
Funeral rites for the 73-year-old Carlisle were conducted at 3 p.m. Saturday in Ralls First United Methodist Church by the Rev. Vernon O´Kelly, pastor. Dr. Hubert Bratcher of Lubbock officiated.
Interment was in Ralls Cemetery, under direction of Carter Funeral Home.
Active in the field of farm credit for over a decade, Mr. Carlisle served his community and area as director and vice chairman of the board of Lubbock Production Credit Association, in addition to serving as director and vice chairman of the Federal Land Bank Association of Crosbyton.
The deceased was also active in the Methodist Church for approximately 40 years.
Survivors include his wife; one son, Wright L. Carlisle of Lubbock; a daughter, Mrs. Arthur Naquin Jr. of Dallas; two grandsons, Mike Carlisle of Ralls and Keith Carlisle of Dallas; two great-grandsons; and two sisters, Mrs. Jim Bradberry of Dublin and Mrs. W.C. McClesky of DeLeon.
Crosbyton Review, March 14, 1974
Record provided by Crosby County Pioneer Memorial Museum
transcribed by Linda Fox Hughes
Services for Maurine Carlisle, 83, of Lubbock were held at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 5, 1990 in Ralls First United Methodist Church.
Burial was in Ralls Cemetery under direction of Carter-Adams Funeral Home.
She died at 4:20 p.m. Thursday, May 3, 1990 in Methodist Hospital after a lengthy illness.
She was born in Dublin, where she graduated from high school. She attended Southern Methodist University. She moved to Ralls in 1939 and to Lubbock in 1979. She married Laville Carlisle May 3, 1926, in Dublin. He died in 1974. She was a housewife and had been a member of Ralls First United Methodist Church since age 12. She was active in Methodist Women and the Ralls Study Club. She attended St. Luke´s United Methodist Church in Lubbock, where she was a member of the Friendship Class. She was a volunteer worker at John Knox Village.
Survivors include a son, Wright of Hartford, Conn.; a daughter, Helen Naquin of Canton; two sisters, Leta Robbins of Dallas and Willie Mae Crouch of Dublin; two grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
The family suggest memorials to John Knox Village Medical Center.
Crosby County News & Chronicle, May 11, 1990
Record provided by Crosby County Pioneer Memorial Museum
transcribed by Linda Fox Hughes
Crosby County TXGenWeb Project
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