Cathy
Prayers for you and family.Cathy Kapuga
Birth date: Oct 26, 1934 Death date: Feb 17, 2020
Age 85, of Jackson, passed away at Henry Ford Allegiance Health February 17, 2020. He is survived by his wife, Marlene B. (maiden-Brigmon) Mosley; three children, Valerie (James) Kimble, Sandra (Dale) Lige and Douglas Mosley; eig Read Obituary
Prayers for you and family.Cathy Kapuga
Uncle Harold and my dad, Bob Hudson were not just coworkers and friends but brother's in law. Our families spent many Christmas mornings together with our grandparents, Lawrence and Edith Kadwell, parents of My Aunt Pat, Harold's first wife and my mother Geraldine Hudson. We spent so much time together, not just at Christmas, but vacations,weekends, and most holidays. Harold and my Dad were famous for the trouble they got themselves into. Like wrecking a store to catch a bat that had wandered into the house . The mighty hunters were successful in chasing him into the Bait and Tackle store, but how to catch him alive and get him out? Everyone knows bars are very helpful to the environment but Aunt Pat also was just as adamant she didn't care HOW it left, just that it did. I remember a lot of yelling hats being put on, girls being told to stay back or it would get caught in our long hair, and they bite! Harold had the great idea to chase it out, or rather catch it in a fishing net. Eventually after much excitement, Dad giving Harold sage advise, and finding a piece cardboard and gloves to trap it in the net they were successful. But not without it getting loose outside and trying another attempt to get in. Fun afternoon.Another adventure was when they decided they were going to canoe together from Wamplers Lake through the damn in Brooklyn's Ford Motor Plant. They nearly killed themselves. But they eventually came back went, cold, but laughing all the way. They were more like brothers than in-laws. Harold's laugh was indeed infectious and no matter your mood, when he laughed you couldn't help but laugh along. And when you were around my dad and Uncle Harold, there was lots of laughing going on.