This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/UYB.2ACE/434.2.1.1 Message Board Post: David, You have the right Harry and Florence. They are both buried in the Hillcrest Cemetery in Ardmore, OK. Mrs Revelle had a grandson, John, whose father was Harry. I don't know if the Harry b. 1928 is the one. He is a year younger than my dad b. 1927. The John Revelle I knew in high school, whose father was Harry, was a year ahead of me in school. My dad married when he was 20. I am sending an obit for Mrs Revelle taken from the The Daily Ardmoreite online archives. Harold in New Orleans Posted August 22, 1997 Florence Adelia Tracy Revelle Services for longtime Ardmore resident Florence Adelia Tracy Revelle will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at the First Presbyterian Church with Denise Balmer, director of Christian Education, officiating. Interment will be at Hillcrest Memorial Park. Florence Adelia Tracy Revelle, attorney-at-law, sister, mother, grandmother and friend, was born Dec. 2, 1903, in Taunton, Mass. The daughter of John B. and Florence Adelia Baker Tracy, she was the oldest of seven children. She passed from this life Aug. 18, 1997, at her residence here in Ardmore. She married Harry H. Revelle Sr. in New Haven, Conn., June 24, 1926. He preceded her in death in 1983. "Ga," as she was affectionately called by friends and family, was a "Yankee" and proud of it! She graduated "suma cum laude" from Radcliff, an all-female school at Harvard. In 1925 she became a graduate of Yale University Law School. She became the fourth member of the Tracy family to become an attorney-at-law, as she joined her father and mother and later a sister in the law profession. She and Harry moved to Ardmore in 1935, where she became the first woman admitted into the Carter County Bar Association. She was very active in her community, volunteering her services to various civic organizations as a legal adviser. She helped establish and was a charter member of the Ardmore Day Nursery for women who needed to work outside the home. She also helped in establishing the Ardmore chapter of the American Red Cross, Oak Hall School, the Goddard Center, and was a lifelong associate of Camp Fire Girls. She was well known for her many lectures over the years on the symbolism of Chinese ceremonial robes which her father brought back from China in 1925. She often would write her opinions on social and political issues in local and state newspapers. Florence impacted the lives of many. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church where she taught Sunday School for many years. She loved young people and was an inspiration to them. She is survived by one son, Harry Hassell Revelle Jr., Oklahoma City; two sisters, Constance Chreste, Evansville, Ind., and Mary Tracy, Taunton, Mass.; a brother, John B. Tracy Jr., Satellite Beach, Fla.; three grandsons, John Revelle, Panama City, Panama, Mark Revelle, Arlington, Texas, and Hal Revelle, Ardmore; two granddaughters, Dana R. Wilson, Ardmore, and Cindy Cox, Oklahoma City; 14 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews. Serving as pallbearers will be Mike Hisey, Rusty Noble, Darrell Roberts, Fred Nevill, Osmun Latrobe and John Revelle. The family will receive friends at the Craddock Funeral Home Friday evening from 7 to 9 p.m. Memorials may be made to Ardmore Day Nursery, 320 D St. NW, Ardmore, or CASA, Carter County Court House, Room 401, Ardmore.