Obituaries for Tues., Oct. 16, 2018

Published 2:15 am Tuesday, October 16, 2018

EVA GRACE HARTIN BROGDEN

Eva Grace Hartin Brogden died Sunday, October, 14, 2018, at the age of 100. Funeral will be at Foreman Brown-Service Funeral Home in Andalusia, on Thursday, October 18, 2018, at 11 a.m. Visitation with family will be held one hour prior to services. Burial will be at Andalusia Memorial Cemetery.

Grace spent her working life caring for the medical needs of patients in Covington County; first at Covington Memorial Hospital and later at Andalusia Hospital. She died in Ozark, where she spent her last years living with her son.

She was a child of the Great Depression, growing up in Opp, where her father was a foreman for the L&N Railroad. She played basketball and graduated Opp High School at 16. Following her mother’s policy of children having a “way to make a living”, Grace took a train to Atlanta where she saw her first traffic signal. The city had only one. She lived at the YWCA and studied hairdressing at Rich’s Department Store.

After she finished that course, she took a job in Athens to be near an older sister who taught school at Belle Mina. After a weekly diet of peanut butter, she determined people did not have money for frivolous pursuits. She decided to become a registered nurse.

She entered Charity Hospital and Spring Hill College in Mobile, where two other sisters had graduated. She was joined by a younger sister and Grace began a lifelong love affair with medicine that was second only to her love affair with her husband, Murray Adolphus Brogden. She and Murray met on a blind date. They married secretly in Fairhope, before she finished her education.

After WWII, the couple moved to a family farm near Gantt. They joined Gantt Baptist Church, and she was baptized at Gantt Lake. Later when they built a home in Andalusia, the couple joined First Baptist Church and were members until their deaths. She clung to her Southern Baptist faith and tried to keep her children and grandchildren on the narrow path with letters and religious texts on special occasions. The idea that any happening in her family and extended family did not merit her notice and corrective action was foreign. Her opinions were free and frequent as were her prayers. Her softer side opened her family and home to her mother-in-law, Willie Ruth Brogden, until her death. When they became frail, she nursed her parents, Robert Hilary and Edith Eva Doshia Hartin, in her home until their deaths.

In the years before retirement, she was director of surgery at Andalusia Hospital, where she worked with her sister who was a nurse anesthetist. She also relieved her husband who owned Brogden’s Food Store and raised white baldy cattle on their farms. Her first hospital stint was at Covington Memorial Hospital owned by a sister and her husband. She was director of nursing services there.

After retirement, she grew prize-winning African violets, quilted and knitted baby blankets for grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She battled crippling osteoarthritis that robbed her of her ability to live alone.

She continued paying her bills and directing her finances. She subscribed to newsletters from The Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic to keep up with medical advances. She charted her medicines daily, so she would not overdose. Even near the end she knew her medicines and the amount. She never took a new pill without determining if it interacted with the medication she took.

Grace was preceded in death by her husband, Murray A. Brogden, her parents, Robert H. Hartin and Edith Hartin, two brothers, Andrew Hartin of St. Andrews, Fla., Bill Hartin of Valparaiso, Fla.; four sisters, Emmie Lou Williams of Decatur, Lottie Mae Stanley of Andalusia, Oudia Blackshear of St. Andrews, Fla.; Annie Pearl Gillis of Andalusia, and Jeanette Cowen of Montgomery.

Survivors include a son, Robert (Bob) H. Brogden (Kathy) of Ozark; a daughter, Regina Brogden Wright (Tom) of Decatur; two grandsons, Jason R. Brogden (Casey) of Ozark, David Agan (Meredith) of Ozark; four granddaughters, Regina Lynn Wright of Savannah, Ga.; Mary Grace Deas (Kirk) of Suwanee, Ga., Michele Armstrong (Dale) of Dothan, and Tamala Prickett (Daniel) of Fairhope and 17 great-grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be given to the Dale Medical Center Community Hospice, 318 James Street, Suite C, Ozark, Ala., 36360, or to your favorite charity of choice.

 

MARK BLACKWELL

Mark Blackwell, 58, a resident of Columbus, Ga., and former resident of Andalusia, went to be with his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ on Wed., Oct. 10. He is now cancer free and rejoicing in Heaven.

A celebration of life service will be held on Sun., Oct. 21, at 2 p.m., at Edgewood Presbyterian Church, 3617 Macon Road, Columbus, Ga., with Dr. George Haugen officiating.

Mark was born on June 7, 1960, in Columbus to the late James Donald and Judith Cook Blackwell. His sister, Carol Salter, and infant son, Stephen Blackwell, also preceded him in death. Mark worked at the Alabama Public Service Commission, Uniway of Southwest Georgia, the Greater Columbus Chamber of Commerce, and Sunshine Banners and Signs.

Survivors include his wife of 38 years, Stephanie Ellner Blackwell; a son, Kevin Blackwell (Katie Powell); brother, Bo Blackwell (Patsy); sister, Sandy Smith (Tim); brother-in-law, Ronnie Salter; granddaughter, Symphany Powell; Baby Blackwell due in April; niece and nephews, Phyllis Lewis, Austin Smith, Grayson Smith, Tyler Blackwell; plus a host of cherished aunts, uncles and cousins; as well as special friends Eddie and Lourdes Perez.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in his name to the Amos Cancer Center, Columbus Hospice, or Edgewood Presbyterian Church mission’s fund.

Those who wish may sign the on-line guest registry at www.mcmullenfuneralhome.com.