Opal Cynthia Seely (born Armstrong)
Personal
Gender: Female
Date of Birth: 1911
Date of Death: April 25, 1968
Birth Place: Long, OK
Death Place: Tulsa, OK
Personal
Gender: Female
Date of Birth: 1911
Date of Death: April 25, 1968
Birth Place: Long, OK
Death Place: Tulsa, OK
Funeral services for Mrs. Charles Seely, 57, of Sand Springs, resident of Chelsea area for some thirty years, were conducted Sunday afternoon from the Baptist church by the pastor, the Rev. James A. Kent, and the Rev. Fred L. Williams, Owasso.
Music was presented by Mrs. Clyde Harris, organist, and John Davis who sang “Beyond The sunset”.
Bearers were Edgar Gambel, Harold Radke, Homer McMahan, E.G. Cowden, Bob Maupin and J.P. Morgan.
Burial was in Chelsea cemetery under direction of Paul Merriott Funeral Service.
Mrs. Seely died about 9:30 Thursday night at Oklahoma Osteopathic hospital in Tulsa following an extended illness. She had been in ill health for some six years.
Mrs. Seely died on the day funeral services were conducted for her brother, Will Armstrong, at Sallisaw.
She had celebrated her 57 birthday on April 23.
The former Opal Cynthia Armstrong was born in 1911 at Long in Sequoyah county where she grew up. She came to Chelsea area in the 1930s. She and her husband moved to Sand Springs some five years ago.
She was a member of the Baptist church and Order Of The Eastern Star.
Surviving is the husband; four sisters, Goldie Ellis of Las Vegas, Nevada, Myrtle Turner of Quinton, Eunice Woodward of Broken Arrow, and Ella Bias, Muskogee; and a brother, Moses Parris, Roland.
Published in The Chelsea Reporter (Chelsea, Oklahoma) Thursday May 2, 1968
CARD OF THANKS
We are most grateful for the many kindnesses extended our loved one during her illness, and to us at her death. We especially thank Paul Merriott and people of the Baptist church for their helpfulness. The flowers and other expressions of Sympathy from our Chelsea friends, the old neighbors, brought mush consolation.
The Family of Mrs. Charles (Opal) Seely
Published in The Chelsea Reporter (Chelsea, Oklahoma) Thursday May 9, 1968