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Lee tweeten
Lee tweeten




lee tweeten

at Roble Funeral Home in Spring Grove and one hour prior to services at the church on Wednesday.Tweeten, Vivian L. Burial will be in the Trinity Lutheran church cemetery.įriends may call Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. He was preceded in death by his beloved daughter Jaclyn Mae Tweeten Morken, his parents Lewis and Matilda Tweeten, and his siblings Otis Tweeten, Leila Ingvalsen, Mabel Buckmeyer, Esther O’Dell, Charlotte Rhodes and Gladys Lundvedt.įuneral services for Morris will be held Wednesday, August 11, 2021, at Trinity Lutheran Church at 2 p.m., with Pastor Lane Zaffke officiating. Morris died at home, as he wished, surrounded by his children and holding the hand of the woman he loved for over 72 years. 10 grandchildren: Jessica Wolfgram, Amy Lee and Matthew Garness, Nathan, Leah, Gina (Meinertz) and Timothy Morken Tracy (Lind) and Jaclyn Tweeten, and Cole Melbostad 18 great-grandchildren: June and Lyla Moore, Kyle and Breanna Lee, Samuel, Henry and Everette Garness Izaak, Lynden, and Konnor Morken Bernt and Kallyn Morken, Tate, Channing and Laramie Lind, Devon Williamson, and Brynley and Hudsen Meinertz.ĭuring his lifetime, he was a member of several organizations: Trinity Lutheran Church, Spring Grove, Minn., American Legion, Spring Grove, Minn., VFW, Mabel, Minn., 1st Calvary North Division, REO Club of America, and Sons of Norway Lodge, Spring Grove, Minn. To this union was born four daughters and one son: Marsha (Bruce) Wolfgram, Albert Lea, Minn., Jennifer (Dale) Garness, Mabel, Minn., Jaclyn (Donald) Morken, Spring Grove, Minn., Michael (Donna) Tweeten, Spring Grove, Minn., and Taresa Tweeten, Rochester, Minn. Morris loved walking the fields and shared this pleasure with all of his children. They purchased a farm in rural Spring Grove Township and together farmed dairy and beef cattle for over 50 years. Together they would share 72 years of love and devotion for each other. He was united in marriage to the love of his life, Geneva Alma Berquam, July 30, 1949. His greatest joy and blessing was his family. After serving, Morris started his own business, Tweeten Trucking, hauling livestock throughout several midwestern states including Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska, Missouri, South Dakota and North Dakota for over 50 years. He was discharged on Septemout of the Separation Center, Sheridan, Ill. While serving in occupied Japan, he was a member of the 1st Cavalry Division 99th Field Artillery Battalion detached service of the military government for General MacArthur’s Headquarters in Tokyo, Japan. His company was one of the first to go ashore after the bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima. There he drove a 6×6 artillery truck hauling supplies to liberated POW soldiers at the Cabanatuan Prisoner of War Camp. When deployed, his destination was Luzon Island and Cabanatuan, Philippines.

lee tweeten

During his service, he was awarded the Asiatic Pacific and Philippines Liberation Ribbons, Two Bronze Battle Stars, WWII Victory War Medal, Good Conduct Medal and the Army Occupation of Japan Medal. During his service, he rose to the rank of Technician 5th Grade (TEC-5), equivalent to the rank of corporal. On August 10, 1944, he was drafted into the U.S. He drove truck for Grant, hauling cream and livestock until he was 18 years old. When Morris was 15 years old, he moved to Spring Grove, Minn., and lived with his older sister and brother-in-law, Grant and Leila Ingvalsen. Morris’ youth was spent on the North Dakota prairie where he gathered arrowheads and buffalo bones with his dog, drove cattle to rail on his pony, survived the dust bowl, battled locusts, mined in an underground coal mine, hunted skunks to purchase a 22 rifle and raised turkeys to buy a bicycle. Morris attended the Argon and Darling Spring Schools. He was baptized at Wolf Butte church, September 5, 1926. Dak., to Lewis and Matilda Anderson Tweeten, homesteaders on the North Dakota prairie. Morris “Mike” Truman Tweeten was born July 19, 1926, on a homestead near Bucyrus, Adams Co., N.






Lee tweeten