Mary Olive Campbell, 19152010 (aged 94 years)

KarpABAndCampbellMary.jpg
Name
Mary Olive /Campbell/
Given names
Mary Olive
Surname
Campbell
Birth December 5, 1915 38 29
Birth of a sisterHannah D Campbell
August 6, 1918 (aged 2 years)
Birth of a sisterAlma W Campbell
July 3, 1921 (aged 5 years)
Death of a maternal grandfatherSamuel D Rogers
March 8, 1946 (aged 30 years)

Death of a brotherJohn A Campbell
October 1968 (aged 52 years)
CampbellJohnAheadstone.jpg
CampbellJohnAheadstone.jpg

Note: Photo taken from findagrave vai by Toni Swan 4/13/2010
Death of a sisterAlma W Campbell
September 29, 1992 (aged 76 years)
Death of a sisterLydia H Campbell
October 24, 1995 (aged 79 years)
Death of a sisterHannah D Campbell
September 15, 2006 (aged 90 years)
Note: HANNAH C. WATSON

HANNAH C. WATSON Written by Staff Tue, 19 Sep 2006 08/06/1918 ? 09/15/2006

Hannah Campbell Watson, 88, of Paris, and formerly of Paxton, died at 9:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 15, 2006, at Paris Healthcare Center. She was retired after a 35-year career as an elementary school teacher and principal.

A memorial service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Templeton Funeral Home. Private interment will occur at a later date in Glenn Cemetery, Paxton.

Mrs. Watson was born Aug. 6, 1918, at Plumbers Landing, Ky., the daughter of the late Clarence T. Campbell and Bessie D. Rogers Campbell. She married Earl Watson on June 2, 1951, at Loda. He died June 1, 1987.

She is survived by one sister, Mary (A.B.) Karp of Minneapolis, Minn.; two sisters-in-law, Mildred Perry of Mystic, Conn., and Doris Niccum of Perry, Mich.; and several nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by one brother and two sisters.

Mrs. Watson was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Paris and former member of the Sycamore Hills Country Club for many years.

She was a graduate of Illinois State University and also attended the University of Illinois.

She taught in Paxton for several years before moving to Paris, where she served as a teacher and later principal of Memorial Elementary School.

Memorial donations may be made to D.O. it! Edgar County Cancer Support Group, in care of the funeral home.

Death January 12, 2010 (aged 94 years)
Note: Eulogy By Chris Fulford 16 April 2010

Eulogy By Chris Fulford 16 April 2010

My name is Chris. Mary was my grandmother. A few years ago, my parents finally cleaned out their house of the things I’d left behind when I moved out over twenty years ago. They shipped 17 boxes of stuff to me in Seattle. The boxes sat untouched for several years in my basement, until, a few months ago I got curious about their contents. I opened a couple the boxes from the top of the pile to see what was in them. One of the things I found was this album. I recognized it immediately without even opening it. There’s no date or other writing inside – you can see that it’s just a photo album with leaves in it. The album was put together one fall afternoon when I was a small child visiting grandparents’ house in Minneapolis. My grandmother and I, just the two of us, walked down Coffey Lane, collecting leaves that we thought were pretty from the sidewalk. We returned to my grandma’s house and ­put them in this album together. It’s one of my many loving memories of my grandmother. My brother Craig and I were always welcome at her house. We were able to spend a lot of time with her growing up. She was a big part of our lives. She was always very generous to us and always came to the big events in our lives, even when it meant travelling long distances. My grandmother didn’t talk a lot about her own life. Most of what I learned about her life came from asking her direct questions. But even the things she didn’t talk about told me about how strong she was. When she was ten, her father died. That must have been hard on her, but she never told me about it. After her father’s death, her family had to move halfway across the country, but she never talked about how hard that must have been for her. She gave birth to her first child by herself, my grandfather having been sent away to war some months before. When I asked about how hard this period of her life must have been, she just said everyone had to make sacrifices during the war, that’s just what people did. She was very modest. One story she did tell me occurred when my grandmother was in her twenties. She was going to a convention in Denver with members of her church. On the train ride there, the employees refused to serve one of the congregation members in the dining car because she was black. My grandmother joined this woman in the back of the train for dinner so that she wouldn’t have to eat alone. Now, one reason this story stands out to me is that, if you knew my grandmother, you’d know she wasn’t exactly a civil rights activist. It must have been hard for my grandmother to defy the social conventions of the time -- but she did. She did it because she cared about this woman. My grandmother cared about a lot of people. She cared about her friends, keeping in touch with many for over sixty years, even when they had moved away decades before. She cared about her neighbors on Coffey Lane. She followed what was going on in their lives and offered help when she could. She appreciated the help that her neighbors gave her as she and my grandfather got older. She cared about her family. She was very proud of her children and their families. She was proud of her son, Fred – proud of his success in business. She would always keep me up-to-date on my uncle’s recent business trips. She was very proud of her daughter, Elizabeth – proud of her involvement in the women’s group PEO. She told me several times how impressed she was that my mother had become president of the state chapter. She loved having Craig and I visit her with our families. She’d tell us how much she loved us, our wives and our children. She always told us how much she appreciated us and how lucky we were to have such wonderful families. I’ve been thinking a lot recently about how the people that were around us growing up influence us, how their words and behaviors shape us, shape who we become. Some of their values we internalize, others we may reject, but the influence of our families, both conscious and unconscious, makes us who we are. Through my grandmother, I learned a lot about kindness, strength, humility and manners. She helped teach me about what it means to be a family. I believe that when people die, their bodies may disappear, but they still live on, inside of us. They will continue to guide us and guide those who we in turn influence. To my children, nieces and nephew, when the time comes that I’m no longer here, and you have to sort through my stuff, I don’t mind that you’ll throw the book of leaves away. I won’t even mind if you don’t remember what it was or why I kept it, because I know that the woman who put it together will be inside of you. Thank you, Grandma, for what you’ve done for me and will continue to do for me. I love you.

Family with parents
father
mother
elder sister
CarterGeorgeAndLydia1.jpeg
19091995
Birth: August 11, 1909 32 22Flemingsburg, Kentucky
Death: October 24, 1995Paxton, Ford, Illinois
3 years
elder brother
CampbellJohnAheadstone.jpg
19121968
Birth: October 23, 1912 35 26Flemingsburg, Kentucky
Death: October 1968Paxton, Ford, Illinois
3 years
herself
KarpABAndCampbellMary.jpg
19152010
Birth: December 5, 1915 38 29Flemingsburg, Kentucky
Death: January 12, 2010Bloomington, Hennepin, MN
3 years
younger sister
WatsonEarlAndCampbellHannah.jpg
19182006
Birth: August 6, 1918 41 31Plumbers Landing, Ky
Death: September 15, 2006Paris, Edgar, Illinois
3 years
younger sister
19211992
Birth: July 3, 1921 44 34Flemingsburg, Kentucky
Death: September 29, 1992Western Springs, Cook, Illinois
Family with Abraham Karp
husband
KarpAbraham01.jpg
19152012
Birth: January 5, 1915 38 22Birmingham, Jefferson, Alabama
Death: February 26, 2012Bloomington, Hennepin, Minnesota
herself
KarpABAndCampbellMary.jpg
19152010
Birth: December 5, 1915 38 29Flemingsburg, Kentucky
Death: January 12, 2010Bloomington, Hennepin, MN
daughter
Private
son
Private
Death

Eulogy By Chris Fulford 16 April 2010

My name is Chris. Mary was my grandmother. A few years ago, my parents finally cleaned out their house of the things I’d left behind when I moved out over twenty years ago. They shipped 17 boxes of stuff to me in Seattle. The boxes sat untouched for several years in my basement, until, a few months ago I got curious about their contents. I opened a couple the boxes from the top of the pile to see what was in them. One of the things I found was this album. I recognized it immediately without even opening it. There’s no date or other writing inside – you can see that it’s just a photo album with leaves in it. The album was put together one fall afternoon when I was a small child visiting grandparents’ house in Minneapolis. My grandmother and I, just the two of us, walked down Coffey Lane, collecting leaves that we thought were pretty from the sidewalk. We returned to my grandma’s house and ­put them in this album together. It’s one of my many loving memories of my grandmother. My brother Craig and I were always welcome at her house. We were able to spend a lot of time with her growing up. She was a big part of our lives. She was always very generous to us and always came to the big events in our lives, even when it meant travelling long distances. My grandmother didn’t talk a lot about her own life. Most of what I learned about her life came from asking her direct questions. But even the things she didn’t talk about told me about how strong she was. When she was ten, her father died. That must have been hard on her, but she never told me about it. After her father’s death, her family had to move halfway across the country, but she never talked about how hard that must have been for her. She gave birth to her first child by herself, my grandfather having been sent away to war some months before. When I asked about how hard this period of her life must have been, she just said everyone had to make sacrifices during the war, that’s just what people did. She was very modest. One story she did tell me occurred when my grandmother was in her twenties. She was going to a convention in Denver with members of her church. On the train ride there, the employees refused to serve one of the congregation members in the dining car because she was black. My grandmother joined this woman in the back of the train for dinner so that she wouldn’t have to eat alone. Now, one reason this story stands out to me is that, if you knew my grandmother, you’d know she wasn’t exactly a civil rights activist. It must have been hard for my grandmother to defy the social conventions of the time -- but she did. She did it because she cared about this woman. My grandmother cared about a lot of people. She cared about her friends, keeping in touch with many for over sixty years, even when they had moved away decades before. She cared about her neighbors on Coffey Lane. She followed what was going on in their lives and offered help when she could. She appreciated the help that her neighbors gave her as she and my grandfather got older. She cared about her family. She was very proud of her children and their families. She was proud of her son, Fred – proud of his success in business. She would always keep me up-to-date on my uncle’s recent business trips. She was very proud of her daughter, Elizabeth – proud of her involvement in the women’s group PEO. She told me several times how impressed she was that my mother had become president of the state chapter. She loved having Craig and I visit her with our families. She’d tell us how much she loved us, our wives and our children. She always told us how much she appreciated us and how lucky we were to have such wonderful families. I’ve been thinking a lot recently about how the people that were around us growing up influence us, how their words and behaviors shape us, shape who we become. Some of their values we internalize, others we may reject, but the influence of our families, both conscious and unconscious, makes us who we are. Through my grandmother, I learned a lot about kindness, strength, humility and manners. She helped teach me about what it means to be a family. I believe that when people die, their bodies may disappear, but they still live on, inside of us. They will continue to guide us and guide those who we in turn influence. To my children, nieces and nephew, when the time comes that I’m no longer here, and you have to sort through my stuff, I don’t mind that you’ll throw the book of leaves away. I won’t even mind if you don’t remember what it was or why I kept it, because I know that the woman who put it together will be inside of you. Thank you, Grandma, for what you’ve done for me and will continue to do for me. I love you.