Advertisement

Advertisement

Frances Huntington “Sanny” Loofbourow

Birth
South Salt Lake, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Death
7 May 1933 (aged 25)
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Burial
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source

Ailment Fatal To Daughter of F. C. Loofbourow

Huntington 'Sanny' Loofbourow Dies After Brief Illness of Meningitis


Miss Huntington Loofbourow, 25, known to her friends as "Sanny" Loofbourow, the daughter of former Congressman Frederick C. Loofbourow, died Sunday night at the family home, 54 Twelfth East street, of tubercular meningitis after an illness of three weeks.


Miss Loofbourow, a popular member of Salt Lake's younger set, was stricken three weeks ago and her condition had been critical for the last few days. Her father and brother, Leon T. Loofbourow, were at the home when death came.


Miss Loofbourow was born in Salt Lake November 16, 1907, and was graduated from the East high school, and studied at Scripps college at Claremont, Cal., and the University of Utah. She was a member of the congressional Women's club of Washington, D. C., and a member of a Washington, D. C., chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Miss Loofbourow represented Utah as a page at the Continental congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1932. She was also a member of the Women's Republican club of Salt Lake.


While her father served as a member of congress from the second congressional district, Miss Loofbourow was her father's official hostess, following the death of her mother in October, 1930. Miss Loofbourow, with her capacity for friendship and highly developed ability for knowing names, faces and facts, also served her father as assistant secretary. She took an active part in social activities in Washington and in Salt Lake.


In addition to her father, Miss Loofbourow is survived by two brothers, Frederick Read Loofbourow, now in Stockholm, Sweden, for a New York law firm, and Leon T. Loofbourow, of Salt Lake. Mrs. C. E. Pew, Helena, Mont, a sister of Mrs. Loofbourow, has been with the Loofbourow family during the illness of Miss Loofbourow.


Funeral arrangements will be made Monday.


Salt Lake Tribune May 8, 1933


Certificate of Death


Ailment Fatal To Daughter of F. C. Loofbourow

Huntington 'Sanny' Loofbourow Dies After Brief Illness of Meningitis


Miss Huntington Loofbourow, 25, known to her friends as "Sanny" Loofbourow, the daughter of former Congressman Frederick C. Loofbourow, died Sunday night at the family home, 54 Twelfth East street, of tubercular meningitis after an illness of three weeks.


Miss Loofbourow, a popular member of Salt Lake's younger set, was stricken three weeks ago and her condition had been critical for the last few days. Her father and brother, Leon T. Loofbourow, were at the home when death came.


Miss Loofbourow was born in Salt Lake November 16, 1907, and was graduated from the East high school, and studied at Scripps college at Claremont, Cal., and the University of Utah. She was a member of the congressional Women's club of Washington, D. C., and a member of a Washington, D. C., chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Miss Loofbourow represented Utah as a page at the Continental congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1932. She was also a member of the Women's Republican club of Salt Lake.


While her father served as a member of congress from the second congressional district, Miss Loofbourow was her father's official hostess, following the death of her mother in October, 1930. Miss Loofbourow, with her capacity for friendship and highly developed ability for knowing names, faces and facts, also served her father as assistant secretary. She took an active part in social activities in Washington and in Salt Lake.


In addition to her father, Miss Loofbourow is survived by two brothers, Frederick Read Loofbourow, now in Stockholm, Sweden, for a New York law firm, and Leon T. Loofbourow, of Salt Lake. Mrs. C. E. Pew, Helena, Mont, a sister of Mrs. Loofbourow, has been with the Loofbourow family during the illness of Miss Loofbourow.


Funeral arrangements will be made Monday.


Salt Lake Tribune May 8, 1933


Certificate of Death




Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement