Nancy Lou Cooke

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Nancy Lou Cooke

Birth
Port Huron, St. Clair County, Michigan, USA
Death
13 Sep 1954 (aged 1)
Port Huron, St. Clair County, Michigan, USA
Burial
Port Huron, St. Clair County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Nancy Lou was a beautiful blonde haired blue eyed girl born to William Edward Cooke and Julia Elizabeth Runyan in Fort Gratiot, MI.

Nancy is survived by her four sisters; two older Penny Lynn Cooke-Brennan, Julia Elizabeth Cooke-Coats and two younger, Connie Marie Cooke-Kinnee and Virginia Lee Cooke-Willey.

Nancy is still an important member of our family and her life is celebrated as if she never died. She now is resting in the arms of her Daddy as William passed away May 22, 2003. They are reunited in heaven at last.

Nancy Lou died of kidney failure due to shock from a burn she received to chest from boiling water.

As a child we would ride our bikes to The Lakeside Cemetery to picnic on her gravesite. We never thought it odd. It was just a part of fact that Aunt Nancy lived there and we visited her as we would visit any family member for lunch.

I love and miss her, and now I bring my children to play with her at her gravesite. I want to make sure that each generation in the future will have the same great memories of her as my brother and I do.
Nancy Lou was a beautiful blonde haired blue eyed girl born to William Edward Cooke and Julia Elizabeth Runyan in Fort Gratiot, MI.

Nancy is survived by her four sisters; two older Penny Lynn Cooke-Brennan, Julia Elizabeth Cooke-Coats and two younger, Connie Marie Cooke-Kinnee and Virginia Lee Cooke-Willey.

Nancy is still an important member of our family and her life is celebrated as if she never died. She now is resting in the arms of her Daddy as William passed away May 22, 2003. They are reunited in heaven at last.

Nancy Lou died of kidney failure due to shock from a burn she received to chest from boiling water.

As a child we would ride our bikes to The Lakeside Cemetery to picnic on her gravesite. We never thought it odd. It was just a part of fact that Aunt Nancy lived there and we visited her as we would visit any family member for lunch.

I love and miss her, and now I bring my children to play with her at her gravesite. I want to make sure that each generation in the future will have the same great memories of her as my brother and I do.