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Arthur L Horn-KS killed by explosion (m. Belle Zora Warren b 1887)
Posted by: Cameron heath (ID *****3991) Date: December 04, 2007 at 21:15:39
  of 4459

Belle Zora WARREN b. 19 Aug 1887 Batesville, Independence Co. AR
d. 7 Jan 1968 Wichita, Sedgwick Co KS. m. Arthur L HORN. Her husband Arthur Horn, was killed when he was just 35 years old, by an explosion at the Osage Torpedo Factory where he worked. According to family knowledge, Belle and her husband Arthur Horn were divorced shortly after the birth of their 2nd son in 1912.However, they were in the process of planning to ‘remarry’at the time he was killed. The following newspaper article of the account of his death (from which newspaper is unknown) was found in the                                    personal effects of Belle Horn after her death:

Arthur.L. Horn was the Victim of The Explosion
Head was Partly Blown Off and practically every bone in his body was                             said to have been broken Fire....Cause

Fire in the Wash Room of the Factory Was the Cause of the Explosion                             Which Destroyed Entire Plant
The explosion yesterday afternoon at the Osage Torpedo Factory eight                             miles southeast of here was felt throughout the entire city with the rattling                      of windows and doors very distinct. The entire plant, which was the most                             modern and up-to-date plant of it's kind in the state was completely                             destroyed with an estimated damage of $25,000. A.L.Horn, age thirty five                             years who leaves two small sons besides a widow of this city was killed                             instantly, the top of his head having been blown away, and practically                             every bone in his body broken.
W.F. Long, helper, was slightly injured and the third man employed at the                             plant H.S. Hinkle escaped the tragedy without receiving the slightest                             injury.The factory was located on a side of a hill which probably account                             for the comparatively small damages to the neighboring towns, however                             trees, and bushes within a radius of fifty yards were stripped and several                             window lights are reported to have been shattered in Pershing and                                    Wynona. The explosion tore a hole in the ground large enough to bury a                             large sized building. It has been reported that the cause of the explosion                             was the result of a spontaneous fire which the three men were tying to put                      out with water which they were carrying from a nearby water tank. The                             fire gained headway on the men and it was decided by the three that it was                      time to abandon their efforts and flee from the building. All three of the                             employees ran from the building, but Mr. Horn who stopped out side the                             frame structure to turn off a faucet to a water line which they had also                             been using to combat the flames and at the same time that the explosion                             occurred which caused the death of one person and the injury of another.                             However it was stated that if Horn had not waited to cut off the water, he                             too would have escaped with slight injuries.
Debris from the wrecked buildings were strewn in every direction with                             fragments being picked up by individuals two miles away from the scene                             of the tragedy and a car a mile and a half away is said to have been hit by                             fragments of the building. It was stated this afternoon at the Osage                                    Torpedo Company's offices in this city that the plant will immediately be                             rebuilt near the same location. The funeral arrangements of Mr. Horn have                             not been announced.


Following Arthur’s death, Belle (Warren) Horn worked as a live-in                                    housekeeper in the homes of various well-to-do families in Kansas City.                             In later years, she lived off and on with her younger sister Mamie (Warren)                      Kleweno and her husband. She passed away at age 80 on 7 Jan 1968 in the                      Sedgwick County Hospital, Wichita, KS. Her obituary read: “ Mrs. Belle                             Horn, 80, died Sunday at the Sedgwick County Hospital at Wichita after a                      long illness. Born Aug 17, 1887 at Batesville, AR, she had been a                                    Hutchinson resident since 1934. She was a member of the Presbyterian                             Church in Hutchinson. (Reno Co. KS). Survivors are a son, Warren                             Horn of Paradise, California; a sister, Mrs. Mamie Kleweno. Funeral will                             be Wednday at 11 a.m. at Center Mulvane Mortuary Chapel, Mulvane.                             Graveside service at 2:30 pm at Eastside Cemetery in Hutchinson. Belle                             (Warren) Horn is buried in Eastside Cem , Hutchinson, Reno Co. KS Belle                             and Arthur Horn had two boys:

Arthur Harold HORN b.ca. 1910. Referred to as an ‘expert camera man who has come here from St. Louis, MO in a newspaper article about the Tulsa Litho Company where Harold was then working. He died 23 Oct 1955 at Miami, Dade Co. FL. Arthur Harold        Horn is buried in Dade County Cemetery, grave #456, Miami Dade Co FL.

Warren Leslie HORN b.ca. 1912 m. Louise___. Warren L. Horn served in the U.S. submarine service during WWII. Between 1960-68 he lived in Paradise, CA.



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