Obituary index
Victor Dittus
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[June
06, 2011]
ATLANTA --
Victor L. Dittus, 91, of Atlanta, died Sunday, June 5, 2011, at
12:05 p.m. at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital in Lincoln.
Visitation will be 4-7 p.m. Wednesday at Zion Lutheran Church, 205
Pulaski St. in Lincoln. His funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday
at the church, with the Rev. David Ramirez officiating. |
Arrangements were handled by Fricke-Calvert-Schrader
Funeral Home in Lincoln. Mr. Dittus was a farmer.
He was born on Oct. 27, 1919, in Chestnut. He was
the youngest son of William F. and Emma Volle Dittus.
He married Shirley Kaminski of Decatur on
Valentine’s Day in 1954.
He is survived by his wife; one son, Lyndon (and
Nola) Dittus of Heyworth; two daughters, Vicki (and
Shane) Miller of Bloomington and Michele Dittus of
Decatur; six grandchildren, Riley Victor, Emily
RuthAnn and Abby Lee Dittus of Heyworth, M. Kitti
Victoria Miller of Bloomington, Ben of New York and
Genny of Paris, France; and two nieces.
Mr. Dittus was an elder and Sunday school
superintendent at Zion Lutheran Church in Lincoln
and a member of the Lutheran Laymen’s League. He was
a member of the Lawndale and Chester-East boards of
education.
He was baptized and confirmed in Chestnut Zion
Lutheran Church. He was educated in Chestnut during
grade school and three years of high school,
traveling to and from school by horse and cart. He
graduated from Beason High School in 1937. He and
his brother, Wilford, drove a car to Beason for
their senior year.
Victor attended Millikin University and enlisted
in the Air Force as an aviation cadet.
He and his wife moved to the Barbara and Adella
Gehlbach farm, south and east of Lawndale, with an
Atlanta address. They set up housekeeping, remodeled
and continued to live in their honeymoon cottage,
now named Candle Stick Lane Farm. |
Each year at Christmas, 12 large candles lit the
lane of the family farm. There was a lighted
Nativity with choir singers and a Santa with sleigh.
The evergreen trees, shrubs and house were outlined
with hundreds of Christmas lights visible to
travelers along Interstate 55. Many children came
through the lane, and Victor was Santa and treated
them to candy canes.
He was a loving husband, dad and grandpa, and he
didn’t know a stranger. He was born with a green
light on -- always on the "GO." He loved the fairs,
National Farm Machinery Show and Farm Progress Show.
He will be greatly missed by all who know him.
Memorials may be given to Zion Lutheran Church in
Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital or
Generation Rescue, an autism organization.
Click here to send a note of condolence to the
Dittus family. |