Aaron Juwon Johnson III
BIRTH
unknown
DEATH
12 Oct 2006
BURIAL
Scarboro Grove Cemetery
Portal, Bulloch County, Georgia, USA
MEMORIAL ID
84381654 · View Source
MEMORIAL
PHOTOS 1
FLOWERS 2
Mr. Aaron Juwan Johnson III, age 23, passed into eternal rest October 12, 2006 at the Beauford Memorial Hospital. The Bulloch County native was a 2001 graduate of Portal High School and lived in Beauford for the past two years. He was a former manager for the Waffle House Corporation and currently an employee of Stanley Steamer Company. He was a member of the Whitesville Full Gospel Worship Center. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandmother, Malinda Faye Mincey Johnson.
Memories are left to be cherished by, a son, Amazarus Z. Johnson, Statesboro; mother and step father, Janis Raymond (Mac) Hagins, Portal; father, Aaron Johnson Jr. (Dobbie Kirkland), Statesboro; three sisters, Karen Johnson, Swainsboro; Traci Harden and Cassandra Hagins both of Statesboro; two brothers, Terry Aaron Johnson, Swainsboro; and Michael Hagins, Pooler; maternal grandmother, Tommie Lee Raymond, Statesboro; paternal grandfather, Aaron Johnson Sr., Portal; maternal grandfather, Jimmy Raymond, Statesboro; special friends, Nyasha Chilsolm and China Williams, a host of well loved aunts, uncles, cousins and other relatives and friends.
Funeral Services for Mr. Aaron Juwan Johnson III will be held on 11 a.m. Tuesday October 17, 2006 at the Whitesville Full Gospel Worship Center with the senior pastor, Bishop Larry Jones officiating.
Burial will be in the Scarboro Grove Missionary Baptist Church cemetery (Portal).
See family photos of Georgia taken over the years shared by members of the community.
Georgia is the largest of the U.S. states east of the Mississippi River and the youngest of the 13 former English colonies (joined the US on January 2, 1788), is known as the Peach State or the Empire...
I'm a Christian, and I'm a daughter of Allan B. Holbrook, now in heaven. My married name is Debby Stevens. My parents, Allan and Marie, were devout Christians, and had 10 children. They were both school teachers, but Mom quit teaching at public school after marriage. But both Mom and Dad home-schooled us all - starting when I was in 1st grade - that's when they came to the decision to home-school us.
Dad earned an income through being an English teacher here in Traverse City, for man years.
Dad started some Bible meetings that took place in the homes of friends of ours and in our own. He was the main teacher in it, and it was in a discoursing style - he would talk about spiritual things with the fathers of the families, each time, and all the children of the families would sit and listen to it all.