Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home

Funeral home at 803 North Texas Street, Emory, TX 75440


Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home contacts

Categories Funeral home
Address
Phone

Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home rating

☆ ☆   (2 reviews)

How would you rate Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home?

Working hours of
Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home

Closed now.
Today: 09:00 am - 04:00 pm
Monday 09:00 am - 04:00 pm
Tuesday 09:00 am - 04:00 pm
Wednesday 09:00 am - 04:00 pm
Thursday 09:00 am - 04:00 pm
Friday 09:00 am - 04:00 pm

Vacancy Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home (jobs):

Coming soon

Advertisement

Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home photos

Make a Donation to help this Funeral home-directory website!


Please donate to help us keep this website operating. Your donation will help further our mission to share information about Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home on site alluschurches.com. Please keep in mind, that while the site supports church-related causes, this is a directory website; this is not a Funeral home. Your donation will also help humanitarian aid.

By helping us, you agree to terms and conditions page

Last reviews about Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home
in Emory, TX


Please add your review. Your comments help to get feedback and an honest opinion about the Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home.
Thanks to the reviews, other people are able to learn of mistakes or read of the warmth and delight of your gratitude. Please keep your comments--whether praise or criticism--kind and appropriate. This is not the place to ask questions, or post contact information. Inappropriate language, off-topic or duplicate comments, names of individuals criticised, phone numbers, etc will be X'd out or removed, according to the moderator's notice and discretion. Thank you for your comments and participation!

  • ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆

    The Wilson Orwosky Funeral Home advertises that it serves the Emory area. Apparently that means only the persons living in the immediate Emory vicinity! My wife and I are some of the out-of-town family members of an Emory area man who pre-paid his funeral expenses, intending for all three of his children and their families to be at his funeral services. When he died, only the local family members were allowed access to the decision making. The needs of those grieving relatives who were not local were ignored in favor of the preferences of the local family. Even leaving our mobile numbers with the director did not result in any calls by the director to check on scheduling decisions or to assist with the two children's family's unique needs as persons traveling a great distance with babies and teenaged children. The most egregious example was when the funeral director ordered that the out-of-town interment service (seventy-minute drive under ideal conditions) had to begin even after she had been told by some of the young family members who were present that the out-of-town travelers were going to be arriving in five minutes! Their pleas were ignored. The fact that these individuals had traveled over twenty-three-hundred miles to be present for the playing of taps to honor this WWII veteran was not considered. The director had specifically told me that they would hold the service at the grave past the appointed time to allow family members time to get some food, if necessary. In our three-car caravan, we had two nursing mothers and a baby who needed a diaper changed, and a diabetic who has to eat something at regular intervals. But somehow, the needs of some sixty-something adults (all locals) took precedence over the needs of these travelers. One of the travelers (who was delayed by traffic and these nutrition and care needs of certain family members) was one of the six pall bearers: a fine teenaged young man who was denied the privilege and right to bear his grandfather’s casket to the grave! There was no excuse for this insensitivity, since the military representatives who had gathered to fold the flag were all professional military or veterans who would be accustomed to delays caused by the needs of grieving family members. As an ordained minister with thirty-nine years of experience conducting funerals, I have never seen such appalling insensitivity to the pain of two grieving children and their families. Use care if you choose Wilson-Orwosky, as they sound fine until you need something out-of-the-ordinary, like grief support. We were gravely disappointed.

    Added March 18, 2017 by Paul Fraser
  • The funeral director was nice and the service for my buddy Donnie Cross was nice enough for any cowboy. I have nothing bad to say about it at all .

    Added March 02, 2017 by rw millsap
How would you rate Wilson-Orwosky Funeral Home?