
Albert
F. "Bud" Haug
Albert F. “Bud” Haug, 86, Seneca, KS, formerly of Corning,
died Saturday morning, March 18, 2006, at the Nemaha Valley Community
Hospital in Seneca.
He
was born December 18, 1919, at St. Benedict, the son of Bernard “Barney”
and Mary Widman Haug. He attended the Haug School north of St. Benedict
and helped on the family farm.
He entered the U.S. Navy prior to the
start of World War II and served on the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown.
After the service, he returned home to farm.
He was married January 30, 1946, to Rosemary
Hochard at St. Patrick’s Church at Coal Creek. They farmed southwest
of Baileyville and in the Corning area until he retired. He and his
wife helped care for her mother, Anna Hochard. They celebrated their
60th wedding anniversary.
He was a member of St. Patrick’s
Church and the Arthur Mills Post #37 of the American Legion, both at
Corning. In 1980, before the age of 60, he earned a G.E.D. He enjoyed
fishing, playing cards, hunting, and attending reunions.
Survivors are his wife, Rosemary of the
home; three sons, Joe of Wamego, Jim of Topeka, and Jerry of Manhattan;
nine daughters, Mary Ann Grob of Centralia, Dorothy Frost and Darlene
Alexander, both of Topeka, Shirley Watkins of Goff, Margie Boeckman
and Carolyn Jones, both of Corning, Loretta Hess of Humboldt, Lucy Gros
of Wamego, and Linda Feldkamp of Seneca; four sisters, Rita Hammes of
Santa Fe, NM, Evelyn Bass and Irene Hardin, both of Wichita, and Lela
Martin of Norton; 58 grandchildren; and 33 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by three brothers,
Leander, Pat, and Jim; four sisters, Edna Congdon, Loretta Baker, Jean
Christy, and Maleta Haug; and five grandchildren, Ernest Mathew Grob,
Joseph Grob, Mary Watkins, Clarence Watkins, and James Alexander.
Mass of Christian Burial will be 10:30
AM Friday, March 24, at St. Patrick’s Church at Corning. Inurnment
will be in the church cemetery. The rosary will be prayed at 2 and 7
PM on Thursday at the Lauer Funeral Home in Seneca. Memorials may be
given for St. Patrick’s Church or St. Patrick’s Cemetery,
and sent in care of the family.