| Anthony “Andy” C. Moore, age 16, of South Amana, died Saturday morning, May 14, 2005, at the University Hospitals, Iowa City, after injuries sustained in an accident in Amana on Friday. Funeral services: 10:30 A.M, Wednesday, May 18, 2005, St. John’s Lutheran Church, rural Homestead with Rev. Wayne Woolery officiating. Burial will be in St. John’s Lutheran Cemetery. Friends may call from 1 to 8 P.M., Tuesday, May 17, 2005, St. John’s Lutheran Church, rural Homestead where there will be a presentation of Eagle Scout Court of Honor at 7:00 P.M. A memorial fund has been established. Kloster Funeral Home, Marengo is in charge of the arrangements.
He is survived by his parents, Tim and Carol of South Amana; two sisters at home, Kathryn “Katie” and Meghan “Maggie”; paternal grandmother, Virginia Hammer, Coralville; maternal grandparents, Bill and Bonnie Eberhardt, San Antonio, TX; and “special” grandparents, Dale and Shirley Noyes, Victor. He was preceded in death by his step-grandfather, Kenneth Hammer.
Anthony Cameron Moore was born February 16, 1989 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the son of Shawn Timothy and Carole Nannette Eberhardt Moore. He received his early education at Lutheran Interparish School in Williamsburg and was a sophomore at Clear Creek Amana High School. He was a member of St. John’s Lutheran Church where he was active as a church usher and involved in the church choir, L.Y.F., and helped with special church music. Through school he was involved in the band, show choir, jazz band, pep band, academic decathlon, was a tutor for Math Counts and a volunteer at the middle school band and choir competition. Andy was also involved in Amana On-The-Hill at the Iowa State Fair, the Old Creamery Theatre, Boy Scouts in which he became and Eagle Scout in August of 2004, and was an honorary member of the Iowa County Cattlemen’s Association. He also worked at the Brick Haus and previously at Zuber’s Restaurant.
Because of his great love for his country, his stewardship to the outdoors, and his love of God and all mankind, for his project to become an Eagle Scout he chose to make upwards of 150 crosses for all the veterans buried at Koszta Cemetery, rural Marengo. |