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Condolences to Nuke
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<blockquote data-quote="GTNavyNuke" data-source="post: 582607" data-attributes="member: 322"><p>Thanks. We are approaching it as a celebration. She just plain wore out her body; the only thing I'm upset by is that the human body evolved to fail after procreation. She went well beyond that.</p><p></p><p>Here's the back story to the excerpt from her obit below. She was born with a silver spoon as the daughter of a founding VP of Westinghouse Electric. She fell in love with my Dad who didn't have any money and was disinherited after her Dad died. She never really complained about it but it went on about life as she wished.</p><p></p><p>"<em>She was born July 7, 1921 in Manhattan, New York, daughter of Reginald and Bertha Mildon. She graduated from Connecticut College where she met her husband, Cecil Eugene Meree Jr (Bud). They were married in 1943 in Hingham, Massachusetts. She traveled the world with her husband for 33 years, as he served in the United States Coast Guard. Together, they had six children; ....... She was predeceased by her husband in August of 1989 while living in South Yarmouth Massachusetts.</em></p><p></p><p><em>In 1992, she started living at Heron Point in Chestertown, Maryland. She traveled extensively to all the major continents (Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America and South America). Some highlights included finishing school and dressage at the Sorbonne in Paris, living in Naples Italy, the North Pole on a working scientific expedition vessel, attending the Danish Royal Needlework School, dog sledding in Northern Minnesota, Tibet, Falkland Islands and fluency in five languages. She loved her family and enjoyed the time she spent with her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She was an Embroiderers Guild of America (EGA) Master Craftsman and Judge; and her work was included in several well-known exhibitions. Her volunteer work in the Episcopal Church, environmental and military societies is too numerous to list."</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GTNavyNuke, post: 582607, member: 322"] Thanks. We are approaching it as a celebration. She just plain wore out her body; the only thing I'm upset by is that the human body evolved to fail after procreation. She went well beyond that. Here's the back story to the excerpt from her obit below. She was born with a silver spoon as the daughter of a founding VP of Westinghouse Electric. She fell in love with my Dad who didn't have any money and was disinherited after her Dad died. She never really complained about it but it went on about life as she wished. "[I]She was born July 7, 1921 in Manhattan, New York, daughter of Reginald and Bertha Mildon. She graduated from Connecticut College where she met her husband, Cecil Eugene Meree Jr (Bud). They were married in 1943 in Hingham, Massachusetts. She traveled the world with her husband for 33 years, as he served in the United States Coast Guard. Together, they had six children; ....... She was predeceased by her husband in August of 1989 while living in South Yarmouth Massachusetts.[/I] [I]In 1992, she started living at Heron Point in Chestertown, Maryland. She traveled extensively to all the major continents (Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America and South America). Some highlights included finishing school and dressage at the Sorbonne in Paris, living in Naples Italy, the North Pole on a working scientific expedition vessel, attending the Danish Royal Needlework School, dog sledding in Northern Minnesota, Tibet, Falkland Islands and fluency in five languages. She loved her family and enjoyed the time she spent with her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She was an Embroiderers Guild of America (EGA) Master Craftsman and Judge; and her work was included in several well-known exhibitions. Her volunteer work in the Episcopal Church, environmental and military societies is too numerous to list."[/I] [/QUOTE]
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