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Biver family

Miller, Louis Aloysius Jr - Person Profile

Introducing Louis Aloysius Miller Jr.

Welcome to the Story of Louis Aloysius Miller Jr.

Born: 13 May 1931 or 1932
Died: 3 January 1996
Buried: Memorial Park Cemetery, Indianapolis, Indiana


He was born twice, according to the records. In two different years, and possibly in two different Kentucky towns. His childhood was marked by the kind of loss you don’t always survive—but somehow, he did. He may have spent his earliest years in the halls of St. Thomas Orphanage, separated from his sister Mary Ray, who was placed in St. Vincent’s across the city. They were reclaimed by their mother, but the shadows never quite let go.

Louis Jr. grew up to serve in the Air Force, marry, and father ten children. And then, he left.

But he didn’t vanish—not really. He kept writing. He kept sending money. He kept trying, in his own quiet, complicated way.

He was a tinkerer, an inventor, a man of codes and circuits. He helped build a computer poker game from scratch, made cabinets by hand, and left faint digital fingerprints in places no one expected to find him.

We may never untangle all the knots in his story. But that’s what this space is for.


🕯️ Have a memory of Louis? A photo? A theory?

Please share it in the comments below. Whether you knew him personally, heard whispers from family, or are following the same research trail, your voice matters here. Every comment helps us bring his story into sharper focus—and preserve it for the next generation.

You can also read the full narrative of his life on Louis’s Family Page.

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Introducing Muguette KL Biver

Muguette Kathern Lucy Biver Rovansek

August 30, 1922 – December 15, 2012
A lifelong traveler, loyal military wife, devoted mother, and proud daughter of France.

Welcome to the space where we remember Muguette, not just by the facts of her life, but through the stories that shaped her and the echoes she left behind.

Born in Phoebus, Virginia, to two French immigrants, Muguette grew up speaking French in a home where postmen delivered more than mail—they delivered dreams of opportunity. She married a soldier, raised children across states and oceans, and made homes from Japan to California, Colorado to Hawaii, and finally Arizona.

She was a woman who wore navy blue at her wedding, played golf in her golden years, and navigated the life of a military spouse with grace and grit. She knew how to pack a house, raise a family across military bases, and wave goodbye to ships and soldiers more times than most. And she did it all with resilience and style.

We’ve gathered the milestones of her life on her Family Page, but here is where we hope you will help fill in the quiet spaces between the lines.

Did you know her in Hawaii? Remember her on the golf course in Sun Lakes? Have a cherished story from one of those cross-country moves, or a moment of kindness she offered you?

Share your stories, your photos, your memories.

Let’s give her more than a headstone—let’s give her a legacy of laughter, remembrance, and shared history.

Feel free to leave a comment below. Your words become part of the thread that ties her story to those of her children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren—and to all of us who believe that every life deserves to be remembered well.

Thanks for coming,

~Kris

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