Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The funeral homes sued Tri-State and Marsh, eventually settling first for $36 million with the plaintiff's class in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. Ultimately, the Marsh defendants also settled for $3.5 million after their insurer, Georgia Farm Bureau, agreed to pay the settlement.
The house, which was constructed with sandstone from the Navajo Reservation, is located on Keim Street, just east of 40th Street in Paradise Valley. [4] His ashes and those of his wife, Peggy, who died in 1985, are interred in the "Goldwater crypt" in the Memorial Garden on the grounds of the Christ Church of the Ascension.
He had seven children with wives Cynthia Warrick Kemper and Mary "Bebe" Stripp Kemper, including Crosby Kemper III and Mariner Kemper. [2] On June 18, 1965, Kemper and his wife Mary Kemper adopted son Sandy Kemper in Chicago Illinois. Kemper was a first cousin, twice removed, of actress Ellie Kemper. [citation needed]
On April 14, 2013, Oliver "Chip" Northup Jr. and his wife Claudia Maupin were tortured, murdered, and mutilated by Daniel William Marsh in the couple's Davis, California home. Marsh, who was 15 years old at the time of the murders, had an extensive history of antisocial and violent behavior.
Kemper Jr. was a notable patron of the arts, like his mother, who was a champion of the arts. [4] Even though his family was prominent, Kemper, Jr.'s contributions, were often anonymous or quiet. [4] The William T. Kemper Foundation was established in 1989 after Kemper's death. [2] The initial gift from the estate was more than $160,000,000. [8]
Edmund Emil Kemper III was born in Burbank, California, on December 18, 1948. [4] He was the middle child of three children and only son born to Clarnell Elizabeth Kemper (née Stage, 1921–1973), a native of Montana, and Edmund Emil Kemper Jr. (1919–1985).
Keim originally built a log structure for his family's housing and later a stone home along Keim Road in Pike Township. The main section of the Jacob and Magdelena Keim house on Boyer Road was built in two phases and it is, "replete with early German construction features ... including[an] extremely original second floor Chevron door."
Rufus Crosby Kemper Sr. (1892–1972) was an American banker. He is known for expanding City Center Bank, acquired by his father, from a three-man operation with $600,000 in deposits into UMB Financial Corporation , with $300 million in deposits, during his tenure from 1919 to September 1967.