Where this family lived, worked, fought, and died.
30 places, from Czaraholand in lower Bavaria to a B-24 airfield in Norfolk.
Central Vermont, the granite capital of the world. Anchor town for both the Arnholm and Loso families across the twentieth century. Hope Arnholm Loso was born here in 1925 and worked here for 65-plus years.
Town in Orange County, Vermont. Home to Gifford Medical Center and its associated Menig Nursing Home. Place of death for Hope A. Loso, 2024-04-27.
Skilled nursing facility associated with Gifford Medical Center. Hope A. Loso's place of death.
Town adjacent to Barre. Site of Central Vermont Medical Center, where Robert F. Loso volunteered and where Merena Fisher Arnholm (1984) and Merena M. Arnholm (1999) likely died.
Town in central Vermont. Birthplace of Robert Fred Loso Sr., 1927-07-18.
Town adjacent to Barre. Site of Loso's Body Shop, Robert F. Loso's auto-body business, and of Plainmont Cemetery, where the prior Loso generation is buried.
Vermont's largest city. Birthplace of Merena Fisher Arnholm (1903) and Bernard Roy Arnholm (1928). Place of death for Helen Buxton Loso (1973).
Town northeast of Burlington. Birthplace of Helen Mary Buxton, 1911-10-03.
Marble-quarrying town in southern Vermont. Birthplace of Nellie Phileman Lascor, Charles Arnholm Sr.'s first wife (1892-11-12).
Lake Champlain city on the New York side. Birthplace of Wilfred 'Pete' Loso (1910). Loso family stronghold across the Champlain Valley.
Township in Clinton County NY, just north of Plattsburgh. Birthplace of Silas Wilfred Loso (1890) and Mabel Rachel Frederick (1892). The Loso and Frederick lines both trace to this Lake Champlain community.
Site of the Robert F. Loso x Hope A. Arnholm wedding 1950-09-09. Site of Robert's funeral 2012-03-22. Hope was a 74-year member, longest-serving at her death, and sang in the choir.
Internationally known for granite memorial carving. Hillcrest Lot 43 holds Charles Arthur Arnholm Sr. (d. 1944), Merena Fisher Arnholm (d. 1984), Merena M. Arnholm (d. 1999), Robert Fred Loso Sr. (d. 2012), and presumably Hope Arnholm Loso (d. 2024). Other family at Hope Cemetery in separate lots: Charles Arnholm Jr. (1997), Rachel Nichols Arnholm (2012), Bernard Roy Arnholm (1993).
Catholic cemetery in Barre. Burial site of Nellie Phileman Lascor Arnholm (Charles Sr.'s first wife) and the broader Lascor family. The Catholic burial confirms the Lascor line is French-Canadian Catholic, consistent with the surname's anglicization.
Burial site of Wilfred 'Pete' Loso, Helen Buxton Loso, Silas Wilfred Loso, and Mabel Frederick Loso (Robert F. Loso's parents and paternal grandparents). The two Loso generations chose Plainmont; Robert chose Hope Cemetery to lie with his wife.
Hope Arnholm Loso worked as bookkeeper here for 25 years.
Long-running granite-industry equipment supplier. Hope Arnholm Loso worked here for more than 40 years, part time into her early 80s.
Robert F. Loso's first employer, auto body repair, during World War II.
Robert F. Loso's own auto-body shop, opened after his years at Central Motors.
Used car business Robert F. Loso started in 1960 with partner Dick Blake.
Robert F. Loso class of 1945. Played baseball and football.
Robert F. Loso was the first left-handed club champion in 1965, repeated in 1970 and 1977.
Robert F. Loso volunteered here. Likely the hospital where Merena Fisher Arnholm died (1984) and Merena M. Arnholm died (1999).
Charles A. Arnholm Jr. operated an auto body shop here and served as Vermont Auto Enthusiasts president in 1961.
Residence of Kathie L. (Loso) MacInnes and Barry MacInnes.
Residence of Ronald Fisher Arnholm since the 1960s; home of the University of Georgia.
Ronald Fisher Arnholm's professorship in graphic design.
Ronald Fisher Arnholm BFA.
Ronald Fisher Arnholm MFA in graphic design.