Caroline Kramer1
F, (29 July 1869 - 25 November 1910)
Caroline Kramer was born on 29 July 1869 at Germany.1 She was the daughter of William Kramer and Regina Neff.1 Caroline Kramer married John Keller, son of Johannes Keller and Elizabeth Minzi, in 1896. Caroline Kramer died on 25 November 1910 at Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio, at age 41 years, 3 months and 27 days. The cause of death is listed as toxemina of pregnancy and she was also listed as being pregnant at the time of death.1 She was buried on 28 November 1910 in section 105, lot 2663, in the Woodland Cemetery, located in Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio.1
She and John Keller appeared on the census of 1 June 1900 at Dayton, 8th Ward, Montgomery County, Ohio. Caroline Kramer, deceased, formerly lived at 31 North Harbine Avenue, Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio, as of 1910.2 She and John Keller appeared on the census of 25 April 1910 at Dayton, 3rd Ward, Montgomery County, Ohio.
She and John Keller appeared on the census of 1 June 1900 at Dayton, 8th Ward, Montgomery County, Ohio. Caroline Kramer, deceased, formerly lived at 31 North Harbine Avenue, Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio, as of 1910.2 She and John Keller appeared on the census of 25 April 1910 at Dayton, 3rd Ward, Montgomery County, Ohio.
Children of Caroline Kramer and John Keller
- Hugo R. P. Keller (Jan 1901 - 12 Sep 1901)
- Marion A. Keller (15 Oct 1906 - 2 Nov 1999)
- Doris Barbara Keller+ (Oct 1908 - 1955)
Last Edited=19 Jan 2010
Citations
- [S1506] Montgomery County, Ohio, "Ohio Deaths 1908-1953," death certificate no. 62588 (file no.) 1911 (reg. no.), "Caroline Keller," 28 November 1910; digitial image, FamilySearch Labs, Record Search (http://search.labs.familysearch.org/recordsearch/ : accessed 14 April 2008).
- [S1506] Montgomery County, Ohio, "Ohio Deaths 1908-1953," death certificate no. 62588 (file no.) 1911 (reg. no.), "Caroline Keller," 28 November 1910. The address listed on the death certificate is 31 Harbine Street, which was later renamed Harbine Avenue when it was split between North and South, sometime before 1920.