Clifford Clark Crabill
Files
Dublin Core
Title
Clifford Clark Crabill
Subject
Crabill, Clifford Clark (1924-1972)
Description
Photograph of Clifford Clark Crabill as a young boy.
Known as Clark, he was from Strasburg, the son of Charles Marion (1885-1952) and Hattie Belle (Stickley) (1884-1957) Crabill.
When he registered for the WWII draft, he lived with his parents on and worked at Vaughan's Drugstore on E. King Street. He served in the U.S. Navy during the war (1943-1946) and by 1950, he was back in Strasburg, still single and working as a carpenter's helper in a construction business.
He married Edna Sibert and went on to work as a salesman for the chemical industry. He died young, only 48 years old, of pancreatic cancer.
Known as Clark, he was from Strasburg, the son of Charles Marion (1885-1952) and Hattie Belle (Stickley) (1884-1957) Crabill.
When he registered for the WWII draft, he lived with his parents on and worked at Vaughan's Drugstore on E. King Street. He served in the U.S. Navy during the war (1943-1946) and by 1950, he was back in Strasburg, still single and working as a carpenter's helper in a construction business.
He married Edna Sibert and went on to work as a salesman for the chemical industry. He died young, only 48 years old, of pancreatic cancer.
Creator
Morrison Studio
Source
Morrison Studio Collection - Shenandoah County Historical Society
Publisher
Shenandoah County Library
Date
Labelled "Jan 1932" on box of plates.
Contributor
Identified by Graham Conner, who remembered subject lived in a house where the Legion building now stands and that his mother worked in the mail room of the Northern Virginia Daily.
Additional biographical information was compiled from public records.
Rights
IN COPYRIGHT - NON-COMMERCIAL USE PERMITTED
Relation
Same subject as in Morrison Photo 06517.
Identifier
006509
Still Image Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Glass Negative
Collection
Citation
Morrison Studio, “Clifford Clark Crabill,” Shenandoah County Library Archives, accessed November 24, 2024, https://archives.countylib.org/items/show/39794.
Comments