Advertisement

Adam Ray Chrismer

Advertisement

Adam Ray Chrismer

Birth
Walker County, Georgia, USA
Death
9 Oct 2002 (aged 17)
Tennessee, USA
Burial
Cremated, Ashes given to family or friend Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Chattanooga Times Free Press

Adam Ray Chrismer, 17, passed away in October 2002.

His father, Richard M. Chrismer, preceded him in death, and also preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Ray and Anne Chrismer; and great-grandparents, Truman and Jimmie Mae Slaton, and Robert and Margaret Denton.

Survivors include his mother, Teresa Annette Chrismer; sister, Honey Nicole Scealf; brothers, Justin Richard Slaton Chrismer, Joseph Michael Chrismer; maternal grandparents, J. T. Slaton Sr. and Annette Chavis.

Family will receive friends from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. Friday, and from 8 a.m. until noon Saturday at the funeral home. A celebration of life will then follow at the home of Teresa Chrismer in Cloudland, Ga.

Arrangements are by W.L. Wilson & Sons Funeral Home, Fort Oglethorpe.

He and his wife, Samantha Foster Leming, 16 were victims of murder.

Chattanooga Times Free Press
Oct. 3, 2010

All eyes in the funeral home were watching as Teresa Chrismer Lynch was handed the urn containing her son's remains Saturday in Fort Oglethorpe.

"I'm taking him home," she said, holding the urn high in the air.

Eyes closed, tears flowing, Lynch began singing Adam Chrismer's favorite song, "Angel from Montgomery," as family and friends gathered for Adam's memorial service.

She had waited eight years for that moment, ever since she had learned that her 17-year-old son was dead, his head and hands found in Boone Lake near Johnson City, Tenn.

Adam Chrismer and his 16-year-old bride, Samantha Leming, were killed in 2002 and their bodies stuffed in a Johnson city warehouse.

Samantha's body was returned shortly. Investigators kept Adam's remains as evidence against Howard Hawk Willis, who had befriended the teenagers months before and whom police believed was the killer.

During years of delay in the trial, "I was afraid to leave the house," Lynch said. "Afraid there would be a motion or a court date. I couldn't trust anything that was happening."

Lynch testified against Willis. Four months after a Johnson City jury convicted Willis of murder and handed down three death sentences, Lynch received her son's cremated remains.

The memorial service drew a crowd, including Adam's friends from Ridgeland High School.

Sharon Gladden said her son, Jonathan, was a schoolmate who would "never forget Adam."

"Jonathan has a speech impediment, and Adam was one of the only people that didn't tease him," Gladden said.

The family considers Adam Chrismer a hero, said Lynch's cousin, Sybil Jones.

Because of his death, Willis was convicted of murder and won't be able to kill anyone else, she said. Police suspected Willis killed his wife in 1987 and his stepfather earlier in 2002, but he never was charged in either death, records show.

"[Teresa] told me, ‘I forgive [Willis], that's what Adam would have wanted,'" Jones said.

After the service Saturday at a Fort Oglethorpe funeral home, Adam Chrismer's urn was placed on a table outside his mother and stepfather's home in Cloudland, Ga., as the family gathered to celebrate his life.

"It's going to be OK," Lynch said. "I feel like there's a new day and it's coming. I've got Adam home."
Chattanooga Times Free Press

Adam Ray Chrismer, 17, passed away in October 2002.

His father, Richard M. Chrismer, preceded him in death, and also preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Ray and Anne Chrismer; and great-grandparents, Truman and Jimmie Mae Slaton, and Robert and Margaret Denton.

Survivors include his mother, Teresa Annette Chrismer; sister, Honey Nicole Scealf; brothers, Justin Richard Slaton Chrismer, Joseph Michael Chrismer; maternal grandparents, J. T. Slaton Sr. and Annette Chavis.

Family will receive friends from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. Friday, and from 8 a.m. until noon Saturday at the funeral home. A celebration of life will then follow at the home of Teresa Chrismer in Cloudland, Ga.

Arrangements are by W.L. Wilson & Sons Funeral Home, Fort Oglethorpe.

He and his wife, Samantha Foster Leming, 16 were victims of murder.

Chattanooga Times Free Press
Oct. 3, 2010

All eyes in the funeral home were watching as Teresa Chrismer Lynch was handed the urn containing her son's remains Saturday in Fort Oglethorpe.

"I'm taking him home," she said, holding the urn high in the air.

Eyes closed, tears flowing, Lynch began singing Adam Chrismer's favorite song, "Angel from Montgomery," as family and friends gathered for Adam's memorial service.

She had waited eight years for that moment, ever since she had learned that her 17-year-old son was dead, his head and hands found in Boone Lake near Johnson City, Tenn.

Adam Chrismer and his 16-year-old bride, Samantha Leming, were killed in 2002 and their bodies stuffed in a Johnson city warehouse.

Samantha's body was returned shortly. Investigators kept Adam's remains as evidence against Howard Hawk Willis, who had befriended the teenagers months before and whom police believed was the killer.

During years of delay in the trial, "I was afraid to leave the house," Lynch said. "Afraid there would be a motion or a court date. I couldn't trust anything that was happening."

Lynch testified against Willis. Four months after a Johnson City jury convicted Willis of murder and handed down three death sentences, Lynch received her son's cremated remains.

The memorial service drew a crowd, including Adam's friends from Ridgeland High School.

Sharon Gladden said her son, Jonathan, was a schoolmate who would "never forget Adam."

"Jonathan has a speech impediment, and Adam was one of the only people that didn't tease him," Gladden said.

The family considers Adam Chrismer a hero, said Lynch's cousin, Sybil Jones.

Because of his death, Willis was convicted of murder and won't be able to kill anyone else, she said. Police suspected Willis killed his wife in 1987 and his stepfather earlier in 2002, but he never was charged in either death, records show.

"[Teresa] told me, ‘I forgive [Willis], that's what Adam would have wanted,'" Jones said.

After the service Saturday at a Fort Oglethorpe funeral home, Adam Chrismer's urn was placed on a table outside his mother and stepfather's home in Cloudland, Ga., as the family gathered to celebrate his life.

"It's going to be OK," Lynch said. "I feel like there's a new day and it's coming. I've got Adam home."


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement