File:William Henry Chandler (1876-1924) obituary in The Central New Jersey Home News of New Brunswick, New Jersey on 18 July 1924.jpg
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[edit]DescriptionWilliam Henry Chandler (1876-1924) obituary in The Central New Jersey Home News of New Brunswick, New Jersey on 18 July 1924.jpg |
English: William Henry Chandler (1876-1924) obituary in The Central New Jersey Home News of New Brunswick, New Jersey on 18 July 1924 |
Date | 18 July 1924 |
Source | The Central New Jersey Home News of New Brunswick, New Jersey on 18 July 1924 |
Author | AnonymousUnknown author |
Other versions | https://www.newspapers.com/clip/106501014/the-central-new-jersey-home-news/ |
Text
[edit]Justice Chandler Dies Suddenly Of Heart Trouble. Justice of the Peace William Chandler of Lincoln Gardens died suddenly of heart trouble at 7 o'clock this morning. He was forty-seven years old. Mr. Chandler had not been in the best of health for the past year and had been under the care Dr. Howard C. Voorhees. This morning he awoke at 6 o'clock and told his wife he was not feeling well. She arose and secured some medicine for him, and later some coffee. A few minutes after he drank the coffee he passed away. He was well known in the sporting world as a bicycle racer, an auto racer and an aeroplane racer, although his experience in the later consisted of only one race. He began his career as a bicycle rider and was well known over the board tracks of the country as a sprint rider. Later he entered the auto game. He raced on the board and on dirt tracks of the country from coast to coast, and from Canada to the Mexican border. Mr. Chandler was a captain in the war, being what is known as a liaison officer. He made the first Liberty motor for an aeroplane at the Packard plant at Detroit, and later was the direct connecting link between the Liberty engine and Washington. D.C. He returned to this city at the close of the war and opened a garage along the highway at Lincoln Gardens. He was later made a justice of the peace. Recently, his wife, who was Miss Ida Thomas of South River, was also made a justice of the peace. He is survived by his wife, his mother, Mrs. Walter Chadwick of Fair Haven, and two sisters, Mrs. A. McGee and Mrs. Howard Frey of Red Bank.
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