| Service:  
							Lake Bank Cemetery on Monday, April 5th at 10 a.m.  
							Funeral home:
							Fricke-Calvert-Schrader, Mount Pulaski 
							Obituary  
							 
							Maxine Downing of Mount Pulaski 
							passed away on March 27, 2021 at Vonderlieth Living 
							Center.
 She was born Maxine Rachel Campbell on May 18th, 
							1921 in a two-room unpainted frame house belonging 
							to her grandfather in Nicut, Braxton County WV. The 
							second of eleven children born to Carl Herschel and 
							Tina Mae Hall Campbell. She passed away peacefully 
							at Vonderlieth Living Center on March 27th, 2021. 
							Her family would like to thank the staff at 
							Vonderlieth Living Center for the wonderful care she 
							received there. She is survived by one sister, Dolly 
							Buckles of Mount Pulaski and two brothers, Stan 
							Campbell of Servia, WV and Eddie (Doris) Campbell of 
							Goleta, CA. a son Michael (Janice) Schultz of Cape 
							Fair, MO; daughter Denise Schultz of Harwich, MA, a 
							step-son Bill (Diana) Downing of Redmond, WA; 
							several grandchildren, great grandchildren, and 
							great-great grandchildren.
 
 She married Charles Dean Schultz June 7th, 1939 in 
							Palmyra, MO. Dean passed away on December 11th, 
							1963. She married Eugene Downing of Mount Pulaski on 
							January 26th, 1967. Gene preceded her in death on 
							July 6th, 2007. Maxine was a lifelong member of the 
							Mount Pulaski Christian Church, Loyal Daughters, 
							Eastern Star, American Legion Auxiliary, founding 
							member of the Mount Pulaski Historical Society, past 
							president and district department chairman of the 
							Mount Pulaski Women’s Club. She loved reading and 
							music. Her soprano voice stood out in the church 
							choir. She loved to garden in the summer and 
							complete her handmade quilts in the winter.
 
 Determined to continue her education, she left her 
							rural West Virginia home at 14 to attend high school 
							as the closest high school was 15 miles away. Maxine 
							stayed with one of her teachers during this time and 
							kept house to earn her room and board. Then in the 
							summer of 1938 her aunt thought traveling to 
							Illinois with her aunt’s brother (Dr. Dennison) and 
							his brother-in-law (John Tendick) would be a nice 
							trip. No interstates, and all two-lane roads made 
							for a very long trip. Once she got to Illinois, she 
							decided this was where she wanted to stay. No family 
							to speak of, but she knew how to cook and maintain a 
							household.
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							Dr. Dennison lived in Lake Fork which 
							made for quite a distance to get to Mount Pulaski to 
							attend high school. Wanting to be closer to the high 
							school, and working with the high school principal, 
							Lucy Jane Ellis Whitaker asked her to come stay with 
							her and her husband. Maxine paid her own way by 
							doing the household chores. 
							 
							After Dean passed away Maxine took 
							over running the drug store (Dean’s Sundries). While 
							Dean was alive, she would help out at the drug store 
							while he was eating lunch or otherwise busy, but as 
							to the inventories, profits, paying vendors-all of 
							this was unknown to her. With two kids to raise, she 
							took this on and succeeded in making the store 
							provide for her and her family of two (Mike 16 & 
							Denise 13). 
							 
							All those who knew Maxine know she 
							was a strong-willed lady who was never afraid of 
							work. She learned to manage a household, sew, work 
							in a café as a waitress, and run a retail store on 
							her own. Whatever it would take to provide for her 
							and/or her family she would learn or already have 
							experience in doing.
 While married to Gene, she got to see a great deal 
							of the world outside of her West Virginia and 
							Illinois comfort zones. She enjoyed the travel and 
							was able to make new friends and acquaintances 
							anywhere. Her time was filled with volunteer work at 
							the Christian Church, and Vonderlieth Living Center 
							otherwise any “idle” time was spent in the garden or 
							quilting. She loved books, any book as she was a 
							voracious reader.
 
 Graveside services will be held at Lake Bank 
							Cemetery on Monday, April 5th at 10 a.m.
 
 In lieu of flowers, donations in Maxine’s honor can 
							be made to the Mount Pulaski Christian Church, Logan 
							County Foodbank or the Mount Pulaski American 
							Legion.
 
            
            				
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