Raymond E. Humbertson

Male 1921 - 1979  (57 years)


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  • Name Raymond E. Humbertson 
    Birth 8 Jul 1921  Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Death 22 May 1979  Bethesda, Montgomery County, Maryland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Notes 
    • Raymond E. Humbertson, 57, of 2815 9th Street, South Arlington, Va., died yesterday in National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md. He was a former resident of Cumberland. Born in Cumberland, he was a son of the late Ace Humbertson and Mary E. (Anderson) Humbertson. A veteran of World War II and the Korean War, he was a retired Marine and a member of the Marine Corp Reserve Association and National Guard, Cumberland, and of Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, Arlington. Surviving are his widow, Margaret (Hargosh) Humbertson, formerly of Frostburg; three brothers, Albert Humbertson, Parkersburg, W.Va.; Ace Humbertson, Bowling Green; Earl Humbertson, Cumberland; two sisters, Mrs. Catherine Johnson, Bowling Green, and Mrs. LaVada Carney, Cumberland. Friends will be recieved at the Durst Funeral Home from 7 to 9 p.m. today and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Friday at 9:30 a.m. in St. Michael's Catholic Church. Interment will be in the parish cemetery. Farrady Post 24, American Legion will accord military honors at gravesite. The family suggests expressions of sympathy take the form of memorials to the American Cancer Society. Cumberland Evening Times (no source date)

      Raymond Humbertson fondly remembered - Daleen Berry
      Cumberland Times-News
      FROSTBURG - Unlike the resurrected 1957 Plymouth Belvedere awaiting his heirs in Tulsa, Okla., the gifts given by Raymond Humbertson have withstood the test of time - and tell the tale of a beloved brother and uncle.

      The man whose 50-year-old prediction was unearthed along with the vintage car June 15, "R.E. Humbertson" turned out to be Raymond Eugene - a Cumberland native whose family just learned he unknowingly left them one, final last gift.

      It would be just like him. Humbertson's return trips from Japan while on leave from the military included presents for everyone - sets of Noritake china, silk prints and ornate jewelry boxes. The 18 nieces and nephews still have many of Raymond's gifts.

      Raymond's sisters remember him being just as loving to them. "Every time he came he always brought me up something. He was just so good to me," said Catherine (Humbertson) Johnson.

      "He always had something special for us," niece Mary Catherine (Humbertson) Kesner, said. "Now we have a car."

      Saturday's reunion of the Humbertson clan included lively talk about how Humbertson came to be in Tulsa half a decade ago. That's when city residents buried a time capsule in the form of the spanking new Plymouth sedan, and when Humbertson cast one of the 812 entries. His was the winning one, and the career Marine predicted Tulsa's population in 2007 would be 384,743. The town's actual population is 382,457.

      Because Humbertson died childless in 1979, and his wife Margaret passed away in 1988, Johnson, 93, and her sister LeVada (Humbertson) Carney, 83, are his closest living relatives. But he has a slew of nieces and nephews - all of whom are laying claim to being their uncle's favorite.

      "With 18 of us, every year and a half the car can rotate through the family. We'll drive up here and pick it up from Catherine and Levada," Don Humbertson said. The sisters live together in Bowling Green.

      "Levada already announced the highest bidder gets it," Sue (Humbertson) Gerhart said.

      Among the growing list of humorous pleas for the Belvedere was nephew Al Humbertson's, "I was the oldest."

      Sue said her husband Paul broke the news to her early Saturday morning, when he said, "You're not going to believe what was in today's paper." Sue added, "I wasn't even awake yet ... I thought he said, ‘Raymond buried a car and they just dug it up.' I said, ‘My God, is there a body in it?'"

      Good-natured family ribbing aside, everyone continued to speculate how Raymond came to be in Oklahoma on June 15, 1957. After several attempts to chronicle family events, they finally figured it out.

      "What we think is, our grandfather was probably sick," nephew Ace Humbertson Jr. said. They believe Raymond came back to Cumberland after returning to San Diego, stopping in Tulsa along the way. "He probably got word his dad was sick," Ace said. Raymond's father, Azariah Humbertson, had both legs amputated not long before he died in August 1957 - and his loving son would have returned home to see his father, Ace added.

      The rest of the puzzle remains a mystery, though. They speculate that Raymond stayed overnight in Tulsa, and perhaps had a bite to eat at a local diner - where he may have filled out the form for the time capsule contest. As far as why he chose the numbers he did - no one knows. In fact, they said Raymond wasn't a great math or science whiz. "For all we know, he could have picked those numbers because (the cost of his meals were) $3.84 and $7.43, or something like that," Ace added.

      While some Humbertsons didn't learn about the Belvedere until Saturday, two of them knew Friday night. Dina (Humbertson) Lawyer's father-in-law had been following the story "for years." He called her Friday afternoon from Mississippi, telling her to get online. "He's really into old cars and ... it's a story that caught his attention and he just followed it," Lawyer said. "I think it's just outstanding. It's something you would never think would happen."

      But it did happen, and the close-knit family intends for sisters Catherine and Levada to fly to Tulsa to see their new prize. "I would love to see them out there because I would like to see history with their picture, with that vehicle," Kesner, who is Levada's daughter, said.

      With some gentle urging, Catherine, who has never flown, agreed she "might do it."

      Levada was a little more willing. "Give me some sleeping pills or something, and I won't know I'm on the plane," Levada said. from the Find a Grave Memorial
    Person ID I48245  McKenzie Genealogy
    Last Modified 29 Oct 2021 

    Father Azariah (Ace) Humbertson,   b. 24 Aug 1887, Ocean, Allegany County, Maryland Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 2 Aug 1957, Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 69 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Mary Elizabeth (Mame) Anderson,   b. 2 Nov 1889, Hyndman, Londonderry Township, Bedford County, Pennsylvania Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 29 Dec 1962, Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 73 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F06969  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Margaret Hargosh,   b. Private 
    Marriage Private 
    Family ID F18119  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 29 Oct 2021 


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