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Patty Shafer posted a condolence
Friday, February 21, 2014
January 23 was a glorious day for our mother and your friend, Kathryn. She looked upon the face of Jesus, the one with whom she has walked since she was 12 years old - for nearly 76 years - three quarters of a century. But she also saw for the first time in 27 years her beloved husband, Bob, as well as her parents, and so many others who have gone to heaven before her.
As all of you who knew her know, Mother was a homemaker. Except for a very few years when she worked outside the home from necessity, she spent her life caring for her home and attending to her family. Nearly every morning she was up preparing breakfast for us before we left for work/school/or whatever. At the end of the day, we all returned to supper prepared for our family meal together - or in the later years, for Mother and Daddy together. Outside the home, Mother's life revolved around her church. She was active in all of the churches she and Daddy attended, involving herself in the music ministry, in Sunday School, in church governance, and certainly in the services. When Mother and Daddy would relocate she would sometimes say they weren't going to get so involved in the new church - but they always did! And she loved it and the many, many friends she made through the years through the churches. Up until Mother's recent decline over the last two years, I can safely say she spent nearly every Sunday morning in church. My earliest church memory is Mother driving our car, picking up her parents, and all of us going to Sunday School and Church.
Most of you are aware of Mother's personality and demeanor. She was friendly, kind, helpful, willing. She was a good listener - especially on telephone calls from her friends - and she kept confidential what was told her in confidence. These traits developed from a childhood that was described to me as one of perfect behavior! If I was told once, I was told at least several dozen times by my father that "your mother never talked back to her mother!" You can imagine the infraction I had committed that elicited that statement!
Many of you are aware that Mother gave piano lessons to students up into her 80s. While there were several years when she took a break from that, I have early memories of students coming to our home for their lesson. It was sometime shortly after we moved into our first home in 1949 that Mother got her piano (the same one that is still in the home where she lived with our sister Debby) and she gave lessons in order to make the payments on it.
The last 27 years without her beloved Bob were difficult for Mother. She depended on him in so many ways and having to take responsibilities he had formerly handled was not easy for her. But she adapted and we were proud of her for that. Many of you in her church family - and some who are now in heaven - helped Mother from time to time. I especially remember Foster Welch putting in her window air conditioner each summer and removing it each fall. Several of you men assisted when Mother moved from Lemont Furnace to Industry Lane. Libby, Debby, and I thank you dear friends who helped Mother along the way.
But we also thank all of Mother's friends - men and women - who made Mother's life so meaningful in the activities of which she was a part. You included her when you went out to dinner and when you ate in your homes, you introduced her to dinners at the Grange, you took her to various community plays and musicals, and you were there for her for conversation. We thank you for the 30 plus years of friendship she had in Uniontown and the wonderful memories she enjoyed.
Yes, January 23 was a glorious day for Mother. Her memory is now clear, her infirmities are removed, and we look forward to seeing her again when we finish our life here and God calls us home.
L
Libby Moore Street posted a condolence
Thursday, February 20, 2014
There are so many things about a person that one doesn't truly appreciate until they're gone. For the last two or more years, our Mother has been gone from us, having been lost to the ravages of dementia and so I can already tell you what I'll miss:
I, like Patty and Debby, stand in awe of our mother's perfect faith. Until a year ago, she would still try to say grace and even though the words didn't always come out right, her prayers were precious. I already miss that.
Perhaps most of all, I miss her incredible skill as a pianist and accompanist andsomething most of you don't know about her and this is thanks to our dad--her ability to play ragtime on the piano every bit as well as she played hymns.
I miss her (virtually always failed) efforts to get jokes that our husbands or we would tell despite her best efforts.
I miss her love of flowers and her skill with them, particularly her African violets.
I miss her impatience--which she could never really disguise--when anyone left limbs or leaves strewn about in their yards for more than ten minutes.
I miss her disgust when people would drive "too fast" or make "too much noise" on Morgantown Road particularly when she was out on her porch trying to read her paper.
I miss her empathy for my bird phobia which she also had and I'm pretty sure she's the reason I have it.
I miss her insistence that the only good fish is one that doesn't "taste fishy."
I and her grandson John Borrelli will forever miss her applesauce and chocolate chip cookies which no one can make quite like she made them.
I miss her beautiful handwriting which only Patty, of her three daughters, appears to have perfected.
For many years now, I have missed the smell of Sunday dinner cooking on the stove when I would get up on Sunday morning.
Also for many years, I have missed our mother's incredible skill in playing jacks. Some of you may know that she grew up in a home where playing cards was forbidden, but she and her sisterour Aunt Junewere permitted to play jacks. She was amazing, and each time I see a set of jacks, which is becoming rarer, I think of her.
I'm sure there is more. There always is. There are those unexpected times when some seemingly innocuous event brings back a flood of memories about those we have held so dear. Even though they threaten to make me weepy, I look forward to them because they are a wonderful way to keep her memory alive. I know each of you will have your own moments of remembrance as well.
Saturday
1
February
First Visitation
11:00 am - 1:00 pm
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Great Bethel Baptist Church
47 W. Fayette Street
Uniontown, Pennsylvania, United States
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Saturday
1
February
Service Information
1:00 pm
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Great Bethel Baptist Church
47 W. Fayette Street
Uniontown, Pennsylvania, United States
Need Directions?
Interment Information
Mt. Calvary Cemetery
Morgantown, West Virginia, United States
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Online Memory & Photo Sharing Event
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About this Event
In Loving Memory
Kathryn Moore
1926 - 2014
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Family and friends are coming together online to create a special keepsake. Every memory left on the online obituary will be automatically included in this book.