
Ernest
R. "Ernie" Claycamp
Ernest
R. "Ernie" Claycamp, 65, of Seneca, KS, died just before midnight
Tuesday on March 9,
2004 at Stormont Vail Hospital in Topeka. He had been in ill
health for many years.
He
was born April 10, 1938, on a farm south of Wetmore, KS, the son of Eldon
and Evelyn Smith Claycamp. Ernie attended
Bancroft Grade School
and Circleville High School. He worked for Welliever Construction Company
of Holton, KS doing bridge construction all over Kansas.
He was a member of the Kansas Army National Guard at Holton. In 1958
he
entered the U.S. Army and served at Ft. Chaffee and in Germany in the
field artillery. After his discharge in 1961, he returned to Wetmore
and was
again employed by the Welliever Construction Co.
On May 7, 1961, he married Connie Schuneman
at Woodlawn Baptist Church, Woodlawn, KS. They lived in Council Grove
for several months before they
moved to the Ford Community southeast of Seneca. He farmed for his father-in-law
at the location where they presently live.
He was a member of the Woodlawn Baptist
Church. Ernie liked carpentry and making things for his children.
Some of his interests were antique
tractors and machinery.
Survivors are his wife Connie of the home;
a son, Roy Claycamp, Seneca; two daughters, Beverly Claycamp and Deborah
Claycamp, both of Mayetta,
KS; his mother, Evelyn Claycamp, Holton; four brothers, Everett of Edgar,
NE, Edwin of Glendale, KY, Edgar of Wetmore and Edward of Topeka; and
a sister, Ethabelle “Bonnie” Kranz of Dennison, KS.
He was preceded in death by a stillborn
son, Jeffery Lee Claycamp, on March 4, 1969; his father; three brothers,
Ervin, Emmett and Eugene; and a sister, Ellen
Davis.
Funeral services will be 10 A.M. Saturday
at Lauer Funeral Home in Seneca. Burial will be with military honors
in the Seneca City Cemetery.
The family will meet with friends from 7 to 8:30 P.M. Friday at the funeral
home, where he will lie in state after 8:30 A.M. Friday.
Memorials are for the Woodlawn Baptist
Church or the Equipment Fund at the Nemaha Valley Community Hospital,
and should be sent in care of the family.