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Patrick Henry McCullough

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Patrick Henry McCullough

Birth
Huntington, Cabell County, West Virginia, USA
Death
9 Jul 1919 (aged 46)
Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia, USA
Burial
Huntington, Cabell County, West Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
14-64-7
Memorial ID
View Source
Patrick Henry McCullough was the eldest of four children born to Julius W. McCullough (1843-1883) and his wife Mary Ann Page Capps McCullough (1853-1933) of Huntington, Cabell Co., W.Va. He was named for his paternal grandfather, a prominent Cabell Co. physician. His father captained steamboats on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers before health and family obligations compelled him to find work in Huntington as a grocer and later as a clerk for the C&O Railroad. Patrick's mother was the daughter of a steamboat captain from Washington, St. Landry Parish, La.

After the early death of Patrick's father, the family was left in straightened circumstances. Patrick and his brothers were expected to help support their widowed mother and sister. On December 2, 1906 he married Harriet (Hattie) A. Warman, daughter of Stephen and Mary Harold Warman of Parkersburg, Wood Co., W.Va. The couple settled in Parkersburg. (The couple was apparently estranged at the time of Patrick McCullough's death since his wife is not mentioned among the survivors in his published obituary.) No children were born to this union.

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Patrick Henry McCullough, Formerly of This City, Dies at Home in Parkersburg

Funeral services over the remains of Patrick Henry McCullough, who died at his home in Parkersburg of Tuesday, will be held at the home his sister, Mrs. J. C. LeSage, 631 Twelfth street Friday at 3:30 o'clock. The remains were brought to Huntington from Parkersburg today.

Mr. McCullough was a native of Huntington and a member of one of the best known families of Cabell county. He lived in Huntington until he moved to Parkersburg eighteen years before his death. He was foreman of an important industrial concern in Parkersburg, where he was a well known and highly respected citizen. He was prominent in the affairs of the Modern Woodmen of America there.

He was a grandson of the late Dr. Patrick Henry McCullough. His father was the late J. W. McCullough and he was a nephew of F. F. McCullough and Mrs. Thomas H. Harvey.

Besides his sister, Mrs. LeSage, and his mother, Mrs. Mary A. McCullough, he leaves two brothers, Stanard McCullough and J. W. McCullough, both of Huntington. His mother resides here but was with her son in his last illness.

His death was due to paralysis of the throat, from which he had suffered for six months.
[Unidentified newspaper (Huntington, W.Va.), July 10, 1919.]
Patrick Henry McCullough was the eldest of four children born to Julius W. McCullough (1843-1883) and his wife Mary Ann Page Capps McCullough (1853-1933) of Huntington, Cabell Co., W.Va. He was named for his paternal grandfather, a prominent Cabell Co. physician. His father captained steamboats on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers before health and family obligations compelled him to find work in Huntington as a grocer and later as a clerk for the C&O Railroad. Patrick's mother was the daughter of a steamboat captain from Washington, St. Landry Parish, La.

After the early death of Patrick's father, the family was left in straightened circumstances. Patrick and his brothers were expected to help support their widowed mother and sister. On December 2, 1906 he married Harriet (Hattie) A. Warman, daughter of Stephen and Mary Harold Warman of Parkersburg, Wood Co., W.Va. The couple settled in Parkersburg. (The couple was apparently estranged at the time of Patrick McCullough's death since his wife is not mentioned among the survivors in his published obituary.) No children were born to this union.

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Patrick Henry McCullough, Formerly of This City, Dies at Home in Parkersburg

Funeral services over the remains of Patrick Henry McCullough, who died at his home in Parkersburg of Tuesday, will be held at the home his sister, Mrs. J. C. LeSage, 631 Twelfth street Friday at 3:30 o'clock. The remains were brought to Huntington from Parkersburg today.

Mr. McCullough was a native of Huntington and a member of one of the best known families of Cabell county. He lived in Huntington until he moved to Parkersburg eighteen years before his death. He was foreman of an important industrial concern in Parkersburg, where he was a well known and highly respected citizen. He was prominent in the affairs of the Modern Woodmen of America there.

He was a grandson of the late Dr. Patrick Henry McCullough. His father was the late J. W. McCullough and he was a nephew of F. F. McCullough and Mrs. Thomas H. Harvey.

Besides his sister, Mrs. LeSage, and his mother, Mrs. Mary A. McCullough, he leaves two brothers, Stanard McCullough and J. W. McCullough, both of Huntington. His mother resides here but was with her son in his last illness.

His death was due to paralysis of the throat, from which he had suffered for six months.
[Unidentified newspaper (Huntington, W.Va.), July 10, 1919.]


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