| Service:
							Friday, December 21,2018 at 2 p.m. at Holy Family 
							Catholic Church in Lincoln Rosary at 1:30 p.m. Burial will be Saturday 
							December 22 at Noon in the Calvary Cemetery in 
							Newton 
							Funeral home:
							Fricke-Calvert-Schrader, Lincoln    
							 
							Obituary  
							 
							Kathleen McCullough passed away 24 
							October 2018 in Sykesville, Md at Copper Ridge 
							Nursing home. Raised in Newton, she was born to the 
							late Francis (Duffy) and Anna (Franke) McCullough. 
							Kathy is survived by her sister Roseanne (Tom) Judd, 
							five daughters Shawn, Bridget (Steve), Molly, Annie 
							(Al) Webster, Katie; six grandchildren Maggie 
							(Scott) Bourne, Joe Davidson, Anna and Emma Weaver, 
							Hannah and John Webster, and two great 
							grandchildren, Virginia and Bridget Bourne. A mass 
							and celebration will be held to honor her life in 
							Lincoln in December. Details are forthcoming.
 Her life of 87 years was filled with family, 
							adventure, children, travel, friendships, 
							compassion, and activism. Spending her adult years 
							from 1957 to 2009 in Lincoln, she raised five 
							daughters, with John McCullough. She 
							enthusiastically campaigned, rallied, and organized 
							husband John’s judicial campaign in 1960 while also 
							caring for her young family. She was constantly 
							busy. In addition to her family life, she 
							passionately followed the Apollo moon race, taught 
							French to 2nd graders after school, held numerous 
							nighttime lectures to her 5 ‘captive’ daughters on 
							the constellations in the Lincoln College ball 
							field, authored the Hale-Bopp Herald (a monthly 
							newsletter on the famous 1997 comet visit), and led 
							a 4-H club. Kathy filled her home with family 
							friends and children for no-bridge bridge club, 
							weight loss club, skits for Ozark vacations, 
							Saturday night happy hours, Kentucky Derby parties, 
							and countless other children’s birthday parties and 
							events. Upon retirement she took full advantage of 
							the Elder Hostel trips going to the Apollo Space 
							Camp, Polar Bear Camp, and working on sailing ship 
							in the Puget Sound! She also successfully fought to 
							add girls’ sports to the high school, was elected to 
							the high school board of education, worked in the 
							Lincoln College Finance Department for 10 years and 
							her last job, where she served as the administrator 
							for 5 central Illinois counties with JTPA (Job 
							Training Placement Act) to find jobs for the 
							unemployed.
 
 Becoming a foster parent at age 55, she provided a 
							home, friendship, parental guidance, and love to 
							Vietnamese boys through Catholic Relief Services. 
							Phuong, Hai, Tri, Binnie, Truyen, Thi (Kevin), Binh, 
							Hien, their eventual spouses and children were an 
							immense source of love and friendship in her later 
							years.
 
            
            
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                    Mom taught English, helped them achieve their 
					GED’s, found grants for college attendance, earned their 
					acceptance at trade schools, and found homes and 
					neighborhoods to settle down and raise their families in 
					America. 
							 
                    If any child needed help whether it was 
					driving somewhere or a financial or emotional crisis, Mom 
					was there. Phuong married Myhanh, also a foster child in 
					Lincoln and with daughter LeAnne they cared for mom in 
					retirement, taking her to church, to Carroll Catholic School 
					athletic games, preparing Sunday dinners, fixing household 
					issues and being her first caretaker in the Alzheimer’s 
					journey. 
							 
							Another important person in mom’s 
							life is Pema Chosang, who was a pen pal from a 
							Tibetan camp in Southern India introduced through 
							the Christian Children’s Fund. Pema, age 10 and mom, 
							age 60 became fast friends 10,000 miles and cultures 
							away in 1991. Mom’s support to Pema included 
							completing nurse’s degree in India at age 19. There 
							was an eventual joyous meeting in with Pema’s move 
							to Colorado and a visit with mom in Lincoln, in 
							2006. 
 Kathy’s final years were spent in Copper Ridge 
							Nursing home near Bridget and Shawn, where she 
							became loved and cared for by staff, volunteers, and 
							other families. She communicated through twinkling 
							eyes, frowning faces, a tap on the backend, or a big 
							smile and nod.
 
 She was courageous to the end, going on her own 
							terms, and leaving behind a world of thankful and 
							grateful friends. She was deeply loved and will be 
							greatly missed.
 
 Donations may be given in her memory to:
 
							Catholic Relief Services https://www.crs.org/
 
							or Logan County Humane Societyhttps://hslclincoln.org/
 
 
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