Lieutenant Harry Herbert Hagedorn
June 11, 1884 - April 4, 1939


DOCTOR'S RITES WILL BE TODAY
Funeral for Dr. Harry Herbert Hagedorn to be at Westcott's Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon in the Westcott-Doughty-Chandler chapel for Dr. Harry Hagedorn, 55, 3852 Jackson Street, a physician here for the last 25 years, who succumbed Tuesday, April 4, 1939, in a hospital to uremic poisoning.

Rev. George C. Pullman, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Graceland Park Cemetery, Sioux City, Iowa. A firing squad of Monahan Post, American Legion, will conduct committal rites at the grave.

Pallbearers will be George Booth, George Lee, Ernest Mood, George Dixon, Dr. I.S. Hasek, Leon Winter, Dr. J.C. Decker, and Dr. C.C. Yancey.

Dr. Hagedorn was found unconscious Monday morning, on the floor of his office at 218 Davidson building. He was taken to a hospital, but failed to rally from the coma.

PHYSICIAN HERE ANSWERS CALL
Dr. Harry H. Hagedorn Succumbs - Victim of Uremic Poisoning

Dr. Harry Herbert Hagedorn, 55, a physician in Sioux City for the last 25 years, died Tuesday morning, April 4, 1939, in St. Vincent's Hospital where he had been taken Monday, a victim of uremic poisoning. He lived at 3852 Jackson Street.

Dr. Hagedorn was born June 11, 1884, to Fred and Johann (Suhr) Hagedorn, in Manning, Iowa. He was graduated from the University of Iowa School of Medicine in 1909, and became associated with Dr. William Jepson here. After two years with Dr. Jepson he moved to Alpena, South Dakota, but returned to Sioux City in 1914 when he again became associated with Dr. Jepson.

During World War I, Dr. Hagedorn served as a Captain in the United States Army Medical Corps. He was a member of the Masonic lodge here.

Survivors Include the widow, Hazel of Sioux City; a brother, Hans Hagedorn of Manning, Iowa, and a sister, also of Manning.

The body is at the Westcott-Doughty-Chandler Funeral Home pending funeral arrangements.

Dr. Hagedorn was stricken early Monday morning. He was found unconscious in his office in the Davidson building where he occupied a suite with Dr. Jepson and Dr. W.G. Rowley.