1916 - 2000 (84 years)
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Name |
Charles Jewett Harding |
Born |
13 Jul 1916 |
Lyme, Connecticut, USA |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
29 Nov 2000 |
Niantic, Connecticut, USA |
Buried |
North Lyme Cemetery, Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, United States |
Person ID |
I28200 |
Family Tree |
Last Modified |
5 Aug 2019 |
Father |
Ray LaPlace Harding, b. 23 Jun 1885, Lyme, Connecticut, USA , d. 8 May 1972, New London, Connecticut, USA (Age 86 years) |
Mother |
Helen Jewett, b. 11 Dec 1891, East Haddam, Connecticut, USA , d. 15 Feb 1971, Essex, Connecticut, USA (Age 79 years) |
Married |
5 Sep 1911 |
East Haddam, Connecticut, USA |
Family ID |
F13759 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Headstones |
| Charles Harding Charles Jewett
HARDING
July 13, 1916 - Nov. 29, 2000 |
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Notes |
- Charles Jewett Harding, 84, of Blood St., Lyme died Wednesday, (November 29, 2000) at Mariner Health Care at Bridebrook, Niantic. Mr. Harding was born in Lyme on July 13, 1916 the son of Ray LaPlace and Helen Jewett Harding. He was a graduate of what was the one-room grade school system in Lyme and then graduated from Pratt High School in Essex, Yale College, and Yale Law School. In 1954, he joined McGraw-Hill, an international publishing company in New York as labor editor of its magazine "Engineering News-Record" and later became senior editor in charge of the magazine's management and labor department. He was nationally known for his work in construction labor relations. In 1981, he retired from McGraw-Hill, later working for several years with the Business Roundtable. During World War II, he joined the U.S. Naval Reserve and served as a fighter director aboard the command ship of the Fifth Amphibious Force during the invasions of Iwo Jima and Okinawa and the occupation of Japan. After the war, he practiced law in New York and Hartford for nine years. He was a member of the First Congregational Church of Lyme. He is survived by a brother, J. Ely Harding; and two sisters, Daphne H. Dahlke and Gertrude H. Emerson, all of Lyme. Funeral services will be private. There are no calling hours. Donations may be made in his memory to a local charity of the donor's choice. The Fulton-Theroux Funeral Home, Beckwith Lane, Old Lyme is in charge of arrangements.
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