
Hamlin
H. Miller
Hamlin
H. Miller, 77, of Seneca, Kansas, died Friday, May 23, 2003, at Country
View Estates in Seneca.
He was born August 18, 1925, at Topeka,
Kansas, the son of Orman and Helen Haskell Miller. He grew up on the
family ranch three miles east
of Onaga, KS. He attended Onaga schools and graduated from high
school in 1943. Hamlin worked on the family ranch for several years.
He raised cattle and horses specializing in quarter horses. In 1960
he had a farm sale and moved to Topeka to further his education. Hamlin
played the piano, organ, and had a good singing voice. He shared his
talents by playing and singing for churches and other events in the
community.
In 1965 he graduated from Washburn University
with a degree in history. After graduating from the Central Baptist
Seminary in Kansas City in
1971, he served as the pastor at the Congregational Church in Muscotah,
KS, for seven years. He also was a pastor at Junction City, KS,
the Community Church at Wiggins, Colorado, and at Nogales, AZ.
He was pastor at the First Congregational United Church of Christ in
Seneca two different times and helped to build a fellowship hall at
the church.
Later he served at churches at Thedford, Trenton, and Ainsworth in
Nebraska. He retired from full time ministry in 1989, but continued
to serve
churches on an interim basis. He moved to Seneca in October of 1998
and entered Country View Estates in 1999 because he had Alzheimer’s
Disease.
In 1960, he married Evelyn Long at Topeka.
She died May 16, 1990, while he was serving a church in Ainsworth,
NE.
Hamlin was a charter member of the Nemaha County Historical Society.
He wrote “Regis Loisel and Seventy Years of Kansas Land Claims” which
was published in the Trail Guide, a quarterly historical publication.
He is survived by a brother, Mansfield
Miller of Olathe, KS.
Funeral services will be 1:30 P.M. Tuesday
at Lauer Funeral Home in Seneca.
The burial will be in Rochester Cemetery, Topeka, Kansas.
Memorials may be given for the First Congregational United Church of
Christ in Seneca.