We’re celebrating the annual Twins Days festival by spotlighting a few sets of identical twins.
Every year since 1976, the town of Twinsburg, Ohio has hosted Twins Days, the largest annual gathering of twins in the world. As thousands of twins, triplets, quads and other multiples from the United States and beyond gather to celebrate their unique bonds, we’re honoring twins by spotlighting a few identical twins who’ve died in recent months. These sibling pairs shared everything, starting with their DNA.

In the obituary he wrote about them for the St. Petersburg Times, reporter Andrew Meacham noted that the Riesters “were more than just brothers and more than just identical twins.” They made the same choices — from deciding to commit their lives to the Catholic church following a visit to the Vatican as high school students, to ordering the same food at restaurants.
“The brothers attended St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute, and might have entered the draft in the later part of World War II. They were turned down because of their eyesight, according to St. Bonaventure — one with a bad left eye, the other a bad right eye.”
The Riesters are not the only twins who had more than their DNA in common.
June “Shorty” Stow and her identical twin sister Jean Shetler Jones both graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University, where they met their husbands (both of whom were future doctors). Both Stow’s obituary in the Lansing (Michigan) State Journal and Jones’s in the Akron (Ohio) Beacon-Journal indicate that each sister “was a dedicated volunteer and enjoyed affiliation with many community organizations.”
Stow was a member of the Junior League of Lansing, the Ingham County Medical Auxiliary, and the Women’s Board of Sparrow Hospital. An avid golfer, she belonged to country clubs in Michigan, Florida, and North Carolina.
Jones meanwhile served as treasurer for the Junior League of Canton, Ohio, and belonged to both the Medical Auxiliary of Stark County and the Women’s Board of Aultman Hospital. Also an avid golfer, she belonged to country clubs in Ohio and Florida.
Architect Carolyn McCarron Brink died at the home she designed for herself in Arcadia, California. According to her obituary in the Pasadena Star-News, Brink graduated from the School of Architecture at the University of Southern California and was a licensed California architect since 1957. Brink “served the City of Arcadia as a member (and chairman) of the Planning Commission” and “worked as an architect for HMC and at Kasier Permanente until her retirement.”
Her identical twin, the late Marilyn McCarron Urmston, also was an architect.
This post was contributed by Alana Baranick, a freelance obituary writer. She was the director of the Society of Professional Obituary Writers and chief author of Life on the Death Beat: A Handbook for Obituary Writers before she passed away in 2015.