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People named Ruth Ocamb
Below are 2 people with the first name Ruth and the last name Ocamb. Try the Ocamb Family page if you can't find a particular Collaborative Biography in your family tree.
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2 Ruth Ocamb Biographies
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Ruth started her schooling in Mulberry IN, spent most of 4th grade in St. Louis MO, and finally entered the Falls City school system where she graduated in 1926. Falls City was only nine miles from a little town named Rulo NE which was on the Missouri River. The young adults of Falls City would often travel to the river to play and picnic on its banks. Ruth became acquainted with a young man named Norman Ocamb. She and Norman became a couple and on October 2, 1926 they traveled to Council Bluffs IA and were married.
Their first home was in Rulo where Norman's family was involved in several businesses. His father, George Ocamb, and his uncles Grant Ocamb and George Ward (husband of Emma Ocamb) all three had mercantile stores. Norman, however, went to work in his grandfather Gottleib Dietsch's Furniture and Coffin business. Ruth and Norman (known as "Shorty" by family and friends) lived in the back of the furniture store. That is where they lived when they became the parents of their daughter, Norma Lee. The baby's first bed was a dresser drawer in those back quarters with the coffins clearly in view!
In 1932, a fire destroyed the general store owned by Norman's father, George Ocamb. He had been widowed nine years earlier and decided not to rebuild the business. George, Norman, Ruth and Norma Lee all moved to North Platte, Nebraska where they purchased and ran the Whitehouse Grocery. They continued running that family business until 1950 when they sold the business and moved to Englewood, Colorado. Norman was semi-retired but worked as a roofer with a construction company for a while.
Ruth was very artistic and she was always busy with one project or another. She was a perfect homemaker and was a wonderful cook. Having spent much of her adult life in the grocery store business, she certainly knew her way around food. Her kitchen always smelled heavenly - she made a barbeque sauce that could have been marketed and she canned the most wonderful Colorado peaches. At Christmas time, she always baked dozens of cookies and made wonderful fudge and divinity candy. One of my favorite memories was that she always had Royal Crown Cola waiting for my sister and I when we came to visit, and she served it to us in icy copper mugs!
She was always taking classes to improve her skills in cooking, gardening, sewing, etc. She loved to garden, and, like her mother Lavina, she belonged to a garden club. Flowers edged their entire yard and they had a wonderful vegetable garden as well. She would often share starts of plants with her friends and relatives. If you looked out their living room picture window in Englewood, you would see a wonderful view of the Rocky Mountains with her lovely rose garden in the foreground.
Ruth was also an accomplished seamstress. She sewed many of her own clothes and sewed for my sister and me as well. She sewed clothes, jackets, curtains, tablecloths and napkins. She also could knit and crochet, and she was always knitting sweaters, pin cushions and slippers for all of her family members. My sister and I would bring our baby dolls when we came to visit and she would crochet little sweaters and booties for them as well.
She had wonderful taste when it came to decorating her home and she was a great collector of antiques. She loved to shop at yard sales and at the Goodwill stores and she was always spotting a great collectible for a bargain price. She especially loved "knickknacks" and other china pieces and at one point she took a series of classes in ceramics. She made lovely pieces for all of her family members. Perhaps that's when she began developing her talent for painting, as she soon graduated from painting ceramics to oil painting. Again, she took numerous classes and became very, very good. Although she painted a variety of subjects, she had a real talent for painting people, and she painted countless portraits from photographs for friends and relatives. She especially loved painting Native American and Amish people. Ruth belonged to a number of art clubs in both Englewood and Windsor Colorado. She participated in many art shows and sold many of her pieces. She and her good friend Maryanna Yauk co-founded the Windsor Art League.
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Similar Ocamb names
Ocamb biographies alphabetically beginning with Aloysius and ending with William Ocamb.
Aloysius Ocamb (Apr 22, 1916 - Nov 3, 1992)
Arthur Ocamb
Beverly Ocamb (Sep 11, 1933 - Aug 1975)
Blanca Ocamb (Dec 23, 1918 - Jun 30, 2011)
Catherine Ocamb (Jul 30, 1928 - Feb 20, 2011)
Charlotte Ocamb (Jul 4, 1894 - Sep 1972)
Denella Ocamb (Feb 6, 1919 - May 29, 1997)
Dolores Ocamb (Feb 16, 1927 - Sep 1994)
Dorothy Ocamb (Mar 20, 1908 - Mar 1986)
Dot Ocamb (Jul 21, 1899 - May 1984)
Douglas Ocamb (May 20, 1927 - Oct 7, 1996)
Edward Ocamb (Feb 6, 1904 - Dec 1970)
Elmo Ocamb (Aug 4, 1910 - Oct 1970)
Eugene Ocamb (Aug 20, 1908 - Apr 1966)
Fay Ocamb (Dec 6, 1876 - Feb 1947)
Flora Ocamb (Mar 26, 1913 - Jun 12, 1997)
Forrest Ocamb (Apr 7, 1922 - Dec 21, 1957)
Frances Ocamb
Frank Ocamb (Jul 6, 1873 - Oct 1963)
Fred Ocamb (Aug 17, 1896 - Jun 1979)
Frederick Ocamb
Gary Ocamb (Dec 15, 1944 - Aug 21, 2007)
George Ocamb
Geraldine Ocamb (Jun 11, 1920 - Apr 3, 2005)
Grace Ocamb (Nov 14, 1891 - Apr 1971)
Gwendolyn Ocamb (Nov 1, 1903 - Jun 1988)
Harold Ocamb (Sep 8, 1898 - Aug 1976)
Harry Ocamb (Feb 2, 1901 - Jun 1980)
Helen Ocamb (Aug 18, 1909 - Apr 1978)
Howard Ocamb
James Ocamb
Joanne Ocamb (Feb 22, 1932 - Aug 23, 1997)
John Ocamb
Lawrence Ocamb
Lillian Ocamb (Mar 23, 1916 - May 28, 1998)
Lionel Ocamb (May 30, 1926 - Apr 29, 1984)
Lisette Ocamb (Nov 24, 1919 - Apr 19, 1997)
Lydia Ocamb (Oct 27, 1921 - Apr 13, 2007)
Mabel Ocamb (Sep 30, 1901 - Feb 23, 1997)
Mae Ocamb (Jun 8, 1899 - Dec 1983)
Marie Ocamb
Marjorie Ocamb (Aug 26, 1922 - Dec 5, 1995)
Mark Ocamb (Oct 31, 1960 - Jan 19, 2009)
Martha Ocamb (Nov 22, 1926 - Aug 12, 1998)
Michael Ocamb (Mar 29, 1951 - Jan 10, 2003)
Norman Ocamb
Opal Ocamb (Feb 14, 1918 - Sep 30, 1988)
Paul Ocamb (Jan 15, 1903 - Dec 1985)
Rayburn Ocamb (Mar 27, 1926 - Sep 2, 1996)
Robert Ocamb
Ruth Ocamb
Shirley Ocamb (Jul 21, 1924 - Sep 1987)
Sophia Ocamb (Aug 27, 1892 - Dec 1972)
Stella Ocamb (May 16, 1927 - Feb 14, 1998)
Susan Ocamb (Sep 21, 1951 - Jan 9, 2006)
Vicki Ocamb (Sep 10, 1957 - May 17, 2003)
Waltrude Ocamb (May 4, 1903 - Jul 1985)
William Ocamb (Oct 8, 1921 - Aug 14, 1998)