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515 Woodlawn Road
Lincoln, IL

(217) 732-7507

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Helen Trigg

Helen Marian Trigg, 90, of Lincoln died Tuesday (June 17, 2003) at 8:45 p.m. at the Christian Village Nursing Home.

There will be no visitation.

Cremation has taken place, and Mrs. Trigg's ashes have been interred in New Union Cemetery, Lincoln.

A memorial service will be at 11 a.m. Friday at the First United Methodist Church in Lincoln. The Rev. Ray Hudson will officiate.

Holland and Barry Funeral Home of Lincoln handled arrangements.

Mrs. Trigg was a teacher for most of her adult life.

She was born Feb. 9, 1913, in Findlay to Joel Asbury Combs and Anna Marie Henninges Combs. Her parents died when she was in her teens, and she then lived with Ada and Ben Armstrong of Lincoln, her aunt and uncle. She married Frank W. Trigg in 1946, and he died in 1967.

Survivors are one son, Thomas W. Trigg, and two grandchildren, Alison Trigg Conner and Morgan Kelsey Conner Trigg, all of Missoula, Mont.

She was also preceded in death by two brothers, Laurence Asbury Combs and Wayne Maurice Combs.

She described her father, a lumberyard manager, as a gentle man who instilled in her the desire to do her best, to know the difference between right and wrong, never to be afraid of work, and to save regularly. She remembered her mother as a religious person who took her along everywhere she went.

Helen adored her older brothers and envied them for being able to attend school when she was still too young. When her brothers came home from school, they often showed her what they had learned.

Finally, she came home from her own first day of school, full of excitement. She sat next to her mother, who was doing the family's ironing, and read her first-grade reading book aloud from cover to cover. When asked what she did for the rest of first grade, she said, "I read it again."

Her father died when she was 13, and when her mother became ill shortly afterward, Helen nursed her through a protracted final illness. Her mother died when Helen was 16, and she moved to Lincoln to live with the Armstrongs.

Her uncle died shortly after her arrival in Lincoln, but she lived with her aunt longer than she had lived with her own mother. She developed close ties to the Armstrongs' children, Marian, Wayne, Carroll and Lois. Her aunt encouraged her to go to college.

She received an associate of arts degree in 1933 from Lincoln College and a bachelor's degree in 1938 from Illinois State University. She also did graduate work at ISU, although she did not receive a graduate degree.

She began teaching in a one-room, one-teacher, eight-grade rural school near Lincoln. She later taught in Oak Park and in Lincoln until she retired at 65.

Local educators recognized the quality of her work, and she often instructed student teachers in her classroom.

During her later career she taught kindergarten, with classes ranging from 15 to 46 children. Although she recognized the problems of large classes, she remembered with satisfaction the time she succeeded in saying goodbye by name to each of her 89 pupils on their first day of school.

In the mid-1960s, she initiated the Head Start program in three central Illinois counties, but she always said she would rather be a teacher than an administrator.

Following her retirement, she kept in close contact with family and friends, paying special attention to those in poor health. She traveled with friends throughout the United States.

Mrs. Trigg was active in the First United Methodist Church in Lincoln, to which memorials may be made.


Wilford Scroggin

Wilford K. Scroggin Jr., 87, of Mount Pulaski died Thursday (June 12, 2003) at 9:35 a.m. at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital.

Visitation was Tuesday at Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home in Mount Pulaski.

His funeral was Wednesday morning at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church, Mount Pulaski, with Father Thomas Shaw officiating.

Burial, with military rites, was in Steenbergen Cemetery, Mount Pulaski.

Mr. Scroggin was a retired farmer and a fisherman.

He served in the U.S. Army from 1941 to 1945.

He was born Oct. 8, 1915, at Mount Pulaski to Wilford K. and Lois Huck Scroggin Sr. He married Margaret Schick in Elkhart on Aug. 1, 1945.

Survivors are his wife; one son, Karl Scroggin of Springfield; one daughter, Diane Scroggin (and Richard Hackett) of Scottsdale, Ariz.; and one brother, Tom (and Lois) Scroggin of Mount Pulaski.

He was preceded in death by one son, Michael, and one daughter, Nora.

He was a member of Mount Pulaski VFW. He served on the board of the Farmer's Bank of Mount Pulaski and on the Steenbergen Cemetery board.

He was a member of St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church of Mount Pulaski, to which memorials may be made.

Click here to send a note of condolence to the Scroggin family.

 

Romelda Johnson

Romelda G. Johnson, 84, of Cornland died Monday (June 16, 2003) at 4:58 p.m. at St. John's Hospice in Springfield.

Private graveside services at Mount Pulaski Cemetery will be at a later date. Allen Hickerson will officiate. There will be no visitation.

Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Mrs. Johnson was a retired switchboard operator.

She was born March 18, 1919, in Lincoln to John and Clara Wilmert Birnbaum. She married Dale Johnson in Bloomington on Oct. 28, 1965. He preceded her in death.

Survivors are four daughters, Beverly (and Leroy) Ramthun of Cornland, Lanette (and David) Munks of Bend, Ore., Melody Krusz of Astoria, N.Y., and Candace Stoll of Itasca; six grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

She was a member of Cornland Christian Church.

She worked with AARP for a time.

Click here to send a note of condolence to the family of Romelda Johnson.


Margaret Doty

Margaret "Marge" Ann Doty, 88, of Lincoln died Friday (June 13, 2003) at 9:14 p.m. at Hospice Home North of Naples, Fla.

The Mass of Christian burial was on Wednesday morning at Holland and Barry, with Monsignor Edward Higgins officiating. Visitation was on Tuesday at the funeral home.

Burial is in St. Mary's Cemetery, Lincoln.

Mrs. Doty and her husband, Gene, were the owners of Doty's Jewelers, which began operations on Mother's Day in 1946. After her husband died, she continued operating the business with her sons until it closed in 1997.

She was born Jan. 31, 1915, in Blockton, Ala., to Joseph and Ilonka Eltz Resnik. She married Paul Eugene "Gene" Doty in Springfield in January 1940. He died July 20, 1969.

Survivors are two sons, Charles Paul (and Rose) Doty of Lincoln and J. Michael (and Marsha) Doty of Naples, Fla.; two granddaughters; one grandson; three great-grandchildren; one brother, William Resnik of Carterville; and one sister, Frances Sternberg of Warrenville.

She was a member of St. Mary's Catholic Church and then of Holy Family Catholic Church in Lincoln.

She was a past president of the Zonta Club of Lincoln.

Memorials made be made to the building fund of Carroll Catholic School.


Bob Davison

Bob Davison, 71, of Bascom, Fla., died Thursday (June 12, 2003) at 12:06 p.m. at his home.

Committal of ashes will be June 25 at an 11 a.m. service at Irish Grove Cemetery, Middletown. Roger James and Ken Davison will officiate. Military and Masonic rites will be conducted at the graveside.

Holland and Barry Funeral Home in Lincoln is handling local arrangements.

Mr. Davison retired from Caterpillar in Peoria after 34 years and was a truck driver for 14 years.

He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II.

He was born Oct. 6, 1929, in Oakley to Walter Grant and Nettie Banister Davison. He married Clara Rickard on June 2, 1950, in Petersburg.

Survivors are his wife, of Bascom, Fla.; one son, Phillippe I. Davison of Altha, Fla.; one daughter, Angelique Stevenson of Mason City; eight grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; three brothers, Walter Davison of Green Valley, Kenneth Davison of Middletown and Edwin A. Davison of Lincoln; and one sister, Lois J. Boyer of Lincoln.

He was of the Methodist faith.

He was a member of American Legion Post 672, Masonic Lodge 653 of Greenview, the VFW post of Creve Coeur and the Moose Lodge of Marianna, Fla.

 

 

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