Notes


Note    N3378         Index
Thomas was a Justice of the Peace in Fleming County, Ky


Notes


Note    N3379         Index
Frank was a salesman.

"PANDORF--Frank H. Pandorf, beloved husband of Augusta Pandorf (nee Liebrich), Monday February 9, at his residence, 828 York st., aged 61 years. Services at residence Thursday, February 12, at 2 p.m."--12 Feb 1914, The Cincinnati (OH) Enquirer

Notes


Note    N3380         Index
Appears in McElroy's Philadelphia City Direcctory for 1863, page 447 as lock manufacturer. Business address 110 S 8th

The Philadelphia Record; Monday, May 12, 1919, Page 15:
"LIEBRICH - May 10, 1919, PHILIP LIEBRICH, aged 80. Relatives and friends, also Annie Ross Post, No. 34, G. A. R., are invited to funeral services, Wed., 2 P. M., son's residence, Charles P. Liebrich, 120 N. 59th st. Interment Mt. Peace Cem. Remains may be viewed Tues., 8 to 9 P. M."

Occupation 1880 census Saloon Keeper.
Various birthplaces listed, ie. 1870 Federal Census=Pennsylvania, 1910 Federal Census=New York, 1900 Federal Census=Germany

"LIEBRICH--May 10, PHILIP LIEBRICH, aged 89. Relatives and friends, Annie Ross Post, No. 94, G.A.R., invited to funeral services, Wed., 2 P.M., son's residence, Charles P. Liebrich, 120 N. 59th s. Int. Mt. Peace Cem. Remains may be viewed Tues., 8 to 9 P.M."--13 May 1919, The Philadelphia (PA) Inquirer

Notes


Note    N3381         Index
William and his wife Colleen passed away on the same day. He was a member of the Warwick Fire Dept. for 16 years before retiring as Warwick Fire Inspector . They both served as soccer coaches for Warwick Arsenal and the Warwick Soccer Association. William also was a coach for Warwick PAL Football.

WARWICK, R.I. - The police are investigating the death of a husband and wife in their home early Monday morning as a suspected murder-suicide.
A man called 911 just after midnight reporting two dead people at 161 Armstrong Ave., in the city's Warwick Neck section. The authorities responded to the house and found two victims - identified as William Liebrich, 52, and his wife, Colleen Liebrich, 50 - shot dead in their bed. Notes indicating that it was a murder-suicide were recovered, Capt. Thomas Hannon said. A gun believed to have been used in the shooting was recovered. The police would not comment further, citing their investigation. The authorities believe William Liebrich called 911, hung up, shot his wife and then killed himself.

"LIEBRICH, COLLEEN (DAVID) LIEBRICH, WILLIAM A. Colleen, 50, and William Liebrich, 52, passed away, Monday, January 21, 2013. They were the beloved parents of William J. and Jeffrey M. Liebrich and recently celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary. Colleen was a daughter of the late Herbert and Barbara (Bannigan) David and sister of Michael David and Donna Clark. William was a son of the late William C. and Helen E. (Spencer) Liebrich and brother of Judith A. Lopez, Joan H. Bradley and Patti S. McGarrahan. Colleen was a cosmetologist for 20 years and William was a member of the Warwick Fire Dept. for 16 years before retiring as Warwick Fire Inspector. They both served as soccer coaches for Warwick Arsenal and the Warwick Soccer Association. William also was a coach for Warwick PAL Football. Their funeral will be held Saturday, January 26, at 9:45 am from the Thomas & Walter Quinn Funeral Home, 2435 Warwick Ave. with a Mass of Christian Burial in St. Kevin Church, Sandy Lane at 11 am. Visiting hours Friday 5-8 pm."--24 January 2013, Providence (RI) Journal

Notes


Note    N3382         Index
Death notice from http://www.tributes.com/show/William-Colleen-Liebrich-95117161. Colleen was a cosmetologist for 20 years. They both served as soccer coaches for Warwick Arsenal and the Warwick Soccer Association.

WARWICK, R.I. - The police are investigating the death of a husband and wife in their home early Monday morning as a suspected murder-suicide.
A man called 911 just after midnight reporting two dead people at 161 Armstrong Ave., in the citys Warwick Neck section.
The authorities responded to the house and found two victims - identified as William Liebrich, 52, and his wife, Colleen Liebrich, 50 - shot dead in their bed.
Notes indicating that it was a murder-suicide were recovered, Capt. Thomas Hannon said. A gun believed to have been used in the shooting was recovered. The police would not comment further, citing their investigation.
The authorities believe William Liebrich called 911, hung up, shot his wife and then killed himself.

Source: http://www.turnto10.com/story/21122240/police-warwick-deaths-treated-as-murder-suicide Police are investigating two deaths in Warwick as a murder-suicide.
"The victims were identified as 52-year-old William Liebrich and his wife 50-year-old Colleen Liebrich.
Officers found them in their home at 161 Armstrong Ave. Both residents were found in bed with gunshot wounds.
Police responded to the house after receiving a 911 hang up call just after midnight.
Based on information at the scene, investigators said William Liebrich made the call and then shot his wife while she was in bed before turning the gun on himself. Investigators said William Liebrich left a suicide note.
Autopsies will be performed to confirm the cause of the death of the victims.
According to the Warwick Fire Department, William Liebrich became a firefighter in 1988 and retired in 2004. He was one of the Warwick fire inspectors for the Fire Inspection Bureau. Colleen Liebrich used to own a local salon.
"To go to those extremes, you have to be in extreme pain of some kind. We can't judge. We can't fault. We don't know," said neighbor Jorgie Sheperd.
Family members told NBC 10 that Colleen Liebrich was battling a diseased pancreas over the past 15 years, and that her condition worsened over the past few months. "It's a tragedy and the family's going to have to live with that," Sheperd said."

Source: http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/11/16928534-the-faces-behind-the-numbers-six-victims-of-long-weekends-gun-violence
“There are two dead people.”
Those chilling words on a 911 call just after midnight on Jan. 21 were the last that anyone heard retired fire inspector William Liebrich utter. He hung up and then, police believe, shot his wife of 30 years, Colleen, before turning the 12-gauge shotgun on himself.
When cops arrived at the Warwick, R.I., home they found a note on the front door saying it was safe to enter and that the couple’s two sons, Bill, 24, and Jeff, 21, should not be allowed in. There were also letters for the boys, unsigned but typed by William, police say.
Before that, the sons said, it had been just like any other day. When Bill left for soccer practice, his dad told him, “Have fun. Be safe, bud.” Jeff watched TV with his dad before meeting friends.
“The thing that was so shocking about the whole thing is that life was moving along as normal. There wasn’t a single red flag, there wasn’t anything to show that anything like this could possibly happen. … It still feels like a nightmare,” said Jeff, an information technology student.
But life hadn’t been easy for Colleen. The once-active soccer and karate mom was mostly bedridden in recent months by a range of ailments: pancreatitis, osteoporosis, schizophrenia. She had suffered a seizure, memory loss, confusion and falls.
Warwick Police Capt. Robert Nelson said her condition was not terminal, but Bill recalled his mother hitting “an all-time low, physically and mentally,” on Christmas.
The brothers believe their parents decided together to end their lives. They said their father had never owned a gun and they assume he bought one to carry out a pact.
“It wasn’t just the fact that, you know, she wasn’t getting better,” Bill said. “It was the fact that she was progressively getting worse.”
The police are continuing their investigation into what they have tentatively ruled a murder-suicide and waiting for a trace on where the shotgun came from.
Bill and Jeff are treasuring the good memories of their parents -- their dad playing secret Santa and giving money to families in need, the couple's love of animals, the launch of their mother's salon business, which she eventually gave up because of her health - while coping with sadness and anger.
“I can see where my dad was coming from and I hate to say it like that because I don’t agree with what he did or how he did it,” said Jeff. “But I know what he was doing and the whole point was to put her out of pain, and he did that and she’s not in pain. So there’s a bittersweetness to it. “
Asked if they felt the need to forgive their father, Jeff said, “Obviously our primary focus is that we don’t have our parents anymore. … And so as far as forgiveness, there’s no one there to forgive.”

"LIEBRICH, COLLEEN (DAVID) LIEBRICH, WILLIAM A. Colleen, 50, and William Liebrich, 52, passed away, Monday, January 21, 2013. They were the beloved parents of William J. and Jeffrey M. Liebrich and recently celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary. Colleen was a daughter of the late Herbert and Barbara (Bannigan) David and sister of Michael David and Donna Clark. William was a son of the late William C. and Helen E. (Spencer) Liebrich and brother of Judith A. Lopez, Joan H. Bradley and Patti S. McGarrahan. Colleen was a cosmetologist for 20 years and William was a member of the Warwick Fire Dept. for 16 years before retiring as Warwick Fire Inspector. They both served as soccer coaches for Warwick Arsenal and the Warwick Soccer Association. William also was a coach for Warwick PAL Football. Their funeral will be held Saturday, January 26, at 9:45 am from the Thomas & Walter Quinn Funeral Home, 2435 Warwick Ave. with a Mass of Christian Burial in St. Kevin Church, Sandy Lane at 11 am. Visiting hours Friday 5-8 pm."--24 January 2013, Providence (RI) Journal