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Margie Mildred Tremper: July 27, 1927-March 5, 2023

She worked as a waitress most of her life before retiring in 1989 and then moved on to caring for families with elderly parents up until 2008.

Margie Mildred Tremper, 95, of Kerrville, passed away on March 5th, 2023 at her home in Kerrville, TX. She was born in Pasche, TX to William Monroe Woolf and Gladys Jewel Swain. She married Wallace Irving Tremper on July 14, 1949 in Uvalde, TX.

She worked as a waitress most of her life before retiring in 1989 and then moved on to caring for families with elderly parents up until 2008.

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Margie was preceded in death by her father, William Monroe Woolf; mother, Gladys Jewel Swain; daughter, Gladys Pearl Conklin; husband, Wallace Irving Tremper; and son, Arthur Clyde Pierce.

She is survived by her children, Jane Ellen Tremper, Floyd Monroe Tremper, Charles Wallace Tremper and his wife Debra Lane Tremper all of Kerrville; grandchildren, Beth Ellen Conklin of New Braunfels, David Pearce of Marble Falls, Teresa Pearce of Marble Falls, Kristopher Morris of Ingram, Michelle Rowan of Ingram, Jennifer Tremper of Buda, Taylor Tremper of Kerrville, Travis Pearce of Marble Falls, Charlie Tremper of Ingram, Charlene Tremper of Kerrville, EJ Pearce of Marble Falls; 28 great-grandchildren; 19 great-great-grandchildren; and 2 great-great-great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held at 10am Thursday, March 9, 2023 at Notre Dame Catholic Church. The burial will immediately follow at Fort McKavett Cemetery in Fort McKavett, TX.

Pallbearers will be Charlie Tremper, Rolando Valenzuela, Dwayne Falardeau, Jerry Persyn, Ethan Rowan, and Rolando Valenzuela Jr.

The family wishes to extend our sincere thanks to the Peterson Hospice nurses, caregivers and all the volunteers.

Author

Growing up in Southern California, Louis Amestoy remained connected to Texas as the birthplace of his father and grandfather. Texas was always a presence in the family’s life. Amestoy’s great-grandparents settled in San Antonio, Texas, drawn by the city’s connections to Mexico and the region’s German communities. In 2019, Louis Amestoy saw an opportunity to make a home in Texas. After 30 years of working for corporate media chains, Louis Amestoy saw a chance to establish an independent voice in the Texas Hill Country. He launched The Lead to be that vehicle. With investment from Meta, Amestoy began independently publishing on Aug. 9, 2021. The Amestoys have called Kerrville home since 2019.

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