hmtl5 Shirley Jean Jenkins: Hedges Genealogy

Shirley Jean Jenkins

Female 1934 - 2019  (84 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Shirley Jean Jenkins was born on 25 Oct 1934 in Linn County, Missouri; died on 19 Jun 2019 in Missouri; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Linneus, Linn County, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/200322655/shirley-jean-kingsolver

    Shirley married Morris Vane Kingsolver on 25 Jan 1955 in Brookfield, Linn County, Missouri. Morris was born on 23 Feb 1934 in Linn County, Missouri; died on 26 Mar 2014 in North Kansas City, Clay County, Missouri; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Linneus, Linn County, Missouri. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Dennis Eugene Kingsolver  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Sep 1966 in Kansas City, Clay County, Missouri; died on 25 Jul 2005 in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Dennis Eugene Kingsolver Descendancy chart to this point (1.Shirley1) was born on 1 Sep 1966 in Kansas City, Clay County, Missouri; died on 25 Jul 2005 in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Dennis was the beloved son of Morris Kingsolver and Shirley Jenkins, and husband of Amy Verran Hennessy, who he married on May 16, 1987 and with whom he had 5 children, Briana Kristine, Mikaela Verran, Danika Michelle, Kierra Denise and Braeden Nathaniel Kingsolver. He was tragically and suddenly killed in his "haunted house" in the west bottoms of Kansas City, Missouri. Over 1000 attended his funeral. His ashes are in the possession of his wife and children.


    Dennis Eugene Kingsolver, 38, Kansas City, MO, died Monday, July 25, 2005. A celebration of his life will be held 2 p.m. Sunday, July 31, 2005, at D.W. Newcomer's Sons White Chapel, 6600 N. Antioch, Gladstone, MO. Cremation. The family will receive friends from noon until 2 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Dennis Kingsolver family education fund at Bank of America, 2728 Vivion Road, Kansas City, MO. Dennis was born September 1, 1966, in North Kansas City, MO, the son of Morris V. and Shirley (Jenkins) Kingsolver. He graduated from Winnetonka High School in 1984. On May 16, 1987, he married Amy V. Hennessy. They became the parents of four daughters, Briana, Mikaela, Danika, Kierra and a son, Braeden. In addition to his wife and five children, he is survived by his parents of Gladstone; two sisters and a brother-in-law, Delora M. Kingsolver, Diana and Danny Leahy and their two children, all of Brick, NJ; Julie and Sean Hensley and their four children; Felicia and Brittany Morgan; brother-in-law, Robert and Hiedi Hennessy and their five children; several cousins; his mother-in-law and step-father-in-law, Joanne and Philip Morgan, Kansas City, MO; father-in-law, Danny Hennessy, Houston, TX. Dennis was employed by Southwestern Bell for 15 years. He was the owner operator since 1979, of the Catacombs and Fear Haunted Houses in the West Bottoms. He was a dedicated and loving husband and father, was known for his cheerfulness and humor and his passion for Haunted Houses, Hawaii and the Chiefs. He coached the Hounds T-Ball team this year and was on the Catacombs' sponsored baseball team for several years. (Arrangements: D.W. Newcomer's Sons White Chapel, (816) 452-8419)

    Published by Kansas City Star on Jul. 28, 2005
    https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/kansascity/name/dennis-kingsolver-obituary?id=4127921


    ‘Catacombs’ owner dies in accident
    Haunted houses were his passion
    By KEVIN HOFFMANN The Kansas City Star

    Dennis Kingsolver died in a place he loved: a haunted house.

    Kingsolver, whose family had founded and operated The Catacombs since he was a teenager, fell Monday night while working on an elevator. He was 38.

    A repairman with SBC Communications and a father of five, Kingsolver was best known as one of Kansas City’s haunted house icons. His enthusiasm for Halloween showed even as a youngster, when at age 10 he transformed his mother’s basement into a haunted house to spook neighborhood children.

    “He would hang blankets to separate the basement into different rooms with different things in each one,” said Morris Kingsolver, Dennis Kingsolver’s father. “He put cardboard over the stairs and you had to slide down.”

    His mother, Shirley Kingsolver, said her son charged 25 to 50 cents and made hundreds of dollars scaring many in the early endeavor.

    In 1981, at age 13, he spurred his family to open its first commercial haunted house, The Catacombs, at 1221 Main St. The Catacombs later moved to an old castle-like building in Independence before setting up in its current location in the West Bottoms at 1100 Santa Fe St.

    According to a police report, Kingsolver and another man were trying to cut an elevator cable near the second floor of the seven-story building. As they worked, a cable snapped and hit Kingsolver, who was standing on top of the elevator car, and knocked him off balance. The other worker tried to grab him, but the cable hit Kingsolver again and knocked him off the elevator. Kingsolver fell about 10 feet. He apparently died when either the cable or counterweights from the elevator system struck him, police said. Both parents were there Monday when the accident happened.

    “It’s very tough,” his sister Diana Leahy said, adding that the family had been buoyed by friends stopping by and recounting “all the good things” Kingsolver had done for them.

    Kingsolver grew up in Kansas City, North, and graduated from Winnetonka High School, where he met his wife. He raised his own family north of the river.

    He worked more than 15 years for the phone company but spent much of the year at his haunted houses. Even in the off-season, he constantly tinkered with them, creating new thrills and switching out props for a fresh look.

    In 2003, he merged his two haunted houses, The Catacombs and Fear, into The Catacombs Extreme Scream.

    He and some employees had been working there two nights a week since January.

    “They would go down there from 5 to 9 (p.m.) and work on props, and clean it,” Morris Kingsolver said. “That’s what they were doing last night.”

    Many patrons of Kingsolver’s haunts remember his trademark graveyards and the worker who chased them out an exit with a fake chain saw.

    Lately, Kingsolver had spoken to another haunted house owner of a new attraction he likened to a small roller coaster that would drop patrons a story or more. It was unclear whether the work Monday was for that attraction and whether workers would finish the ride.

    Workers and family members talked Tuesday about whether they would open the Catacombs on schedule the second weekend of September.

    One of those workers, childhood friend Todd Sheets, praised his boss.

    Growing up, he and Kingsolver played baseball together and ran around their Gracemor neighborhood. Sheets, an independent filmmaker, can still remember the hearse that Kingsolver used to keep in his front yard during the summer months when the haunted house was shut down.

    Kingsolver was like an older brother, said Sheets, whom Kingsolver hired at the Catacombs and quickly promoted. When Sheets needed a place to edit his horror movies, Kingsolver let him set up shop in the West Bottoms building.

    “I’ve never met anyone that good-hearted before in my life,” Sheets said.

    Sheets was there when the accident happened, standing a few feet away.

    Kingsolver had given Sheets a ride to the haunted house Monday night. Just a few hours before Kingsolver died, they had sat in the car, joking and laughing. Kingsolver already was brainstorming what the Catacombs would be like, not this fall, but the year after.

    “I’m thankful,” Sheets said. “I’m very thankful for that time I got to be with him.”

    Dwayne Throneberry, longtime owner of the Main Street Morgue, said he held a lot of respect for Kingsolver even though they were friendly competitors, and he hoped the business would remain open.

    “He had that fire in him when he talked about haunted houses,” Throneberry said. “He was always excited about improving his place … he just loved Halloween.”

    For many years, Kansas City’s haunted house industry thrived with about a dozen houses opening every season. But by last year, only three owners of major haunted houses remained, holding four locations.

    “It will impact it just because it’s a very small community,” Throneberry said. “He was one-third of the owners and we lost him.”

    Shirley Kingsolver said her son hired many underprivileged young workers to help with his haunted houses and took pride in giving them paychecks.

    “He felt so good because many of them would use that money to buy a car or something like that,” she said.

    Haunted houses were not Kingsolver’s only love, said his sister Leahy. He “was one of the biggest Chiefs fans” she said, and his favorite place was Hawaii. He traveled to the islands four or five times, she said.

    The only passion that surpassed his love for haunted houses, however, was his family.

    “He absolutely adored his wife and his children,” she said. “They meant everything to him.”

    Kingsolver and his wife, Amy, had been married 18 years. Their five children range in age from 4 to 16. The family has established a fund to help support the children’s education. In lieu of flowers or memorial contributions, the family suggests donations to the Dennis Kingsolver Family Education Fund through the Bank of America, 2728 Vivion Road, Kansas City, MO 64119.

    https://iamslarti.livejournal.com/19162.html



    Buried:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37834867/dennis-eugene-kingsolver