Obituary for John Walker Chapman

JOHN WALKER CHAPMAN

John Walker Chapman, 59, passed away unexpectedly on Saturday, August 14, 2021, at his home in Connersville.

The only child of Gary Walker and Eva Marie McFarland Chapman, John was born on September 7, 1961, in Connersville. As a child, he moved to Anaheim, California with his family and graduated from Esperanza High School in Anaheim.

An accomplished auto painter, John was employed for several years in the auto body industry. He operated a radiator shop in Corona, California, and following the death of his parents returned to Connersville and was employed at Progressive Rail of Muncie.

John was an avid fisherman and hunter, holding two fishing records in California for rainbow trout.

Survivors include two children, John Walker (Betty) Chapman, II of Los Angeles, California and Thea Chapman of Connersville; one grandson, Dominik Kreidler of Connersville; two uncles, Luther McFarland and Donald McFarland, both of Connersville; two aunts, Opal Klopp of Connersville and Kelly Stipp of Portland. John was very close to his many cousins, neighbors, friends, and coworkers. He will be deeply missed by them.

Family and friends may call from 4 p.m. until 6 p.m. on Wednesday, August 18, 2021, at Miller, Moster, Robbins Funeral Home. A graveside service will be conducted at Dale Cemetery by Reverend John Reynolds at 11 a.m. on Thursday, August 19, 2021.

Online condolences may be made anytime at millermosterrobbins.com.

Obituary for Helen B. Smith

HELEN B. SMITH

Helen B. Smith, 91, of Connersville, passed away on Sunday afternoon, August 15, 2021, at Majestic Care of Connersville. Helen had been in failing health for the past five years.

She was born on September 11, 1929, in Lancaster, Kentucky, in Garrett County, one of 11 children of Charles and Alice Moody Goins, and moved to Connersville with her family as a teenager.

She was employed for 18 years at Philco-Ford and later was employed for 13years at D&M and its successor White-Westinghouse.

Helen had been a member of Connersville Baptist Temple and also served as the Moose Lodge Chaplain for several years. In her leisure, she enjoyed antique collecting.

Survivors include a son, Bradley E. Smith of Connersville; a sister, Sue Lakes of Liberty; and a niece, Connie Messer.
Helen is preceded in death by her parents and nine siblings, Claude Goins, Walter Goins, Dorothy Crooks, Bill Goins, Charles Goins, Nanny Ray, Margaret Carter, Beatrice Rutherford, and Myrda Underwood.

Friends may visit from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. Friday, August 20, 2021, at Miller, Moster, Robbins Funeral Home. A funeral service will be held the same day at 1 p.m. with Reverend Josh Forrester officiating.

Online condolences may be made anytime at millermosterrobbins.com.

Obituary for Clarence E. Wade

CLARENCE E. WADE

Clarence E. Wade, age 93, of Lowell, died Saturday, August 14, 2021, at the home of his daughter in Brookville.

Born December 6, 1927, in St. Marie, Illinois, he was the son of the late Charles Arthur and Eva Lucile (Lasley) Wade. He was a United States Navy Veteran of World War II.

Clarence was retired from Inland Steel Company where he had been employed for more than 31 years as a Pipe Fitter. He had also owned and operated his own Antenna business in the 1960s.

He was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #6841 in Lowell, where he has served in the offices of Trustee, Chaplain, and Quarter Master. He was also a former Little League Baseball coach for many years. In his leisure time, he enjoyed gardening, fishing, small engine repairs, hunting, and canning food.

Survivors include his daughter and son-in-law, Karen and John Negangard of Brookville; five grandchildren, Shane, Eric and Kevin Negangard; Kellie Mancilla and Mandie Shaver; 12 great-grandchildren.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister, Laverne Ash.

Memorial contributions may be directed to the Salvation Army or the Franklin County Humane Society.

Private memorial services will be held at the convenience of the family.

The staff of Phillips & Meyers Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Clarence Wade, to sign the online guest book or send personal condolences please visit www.phillipsandmeyers.com.

Franklin County Health Officer resigns on the same day he accepted the appointment

By John Estridge

Franklin County had a new health officer for about four hours.

Dr. Dave Jetmore was appointed by the Franklin County Commissioners in a special meeting that took place around 10 a.m., Tuesday, August 17.

Jetmore resigned as the county health officer at 2 p.m.

According to an email he sent to Commission President Tom Linkel, there was too much local opposition in the hiring of a Health Department supervisor and Jetmore having total control over the Health Department, which including the hiring and firing within the department.

“Tom, the resistance to me hiring a supervisor and having control of the health department seems almost visceral,” Jetmore said in an email to Linkel. “I think the best approach for me via this email is to resign. The ISDH can take over the department in the short term until another health officer can be named (hopefully, a local doc). I’ll send someone down to pick up my signature stamp. I enjoyed meeting you and wish you well.

“Best, Dave Jetmore”

An administrator in the Health Department would be a new position.

Commissioners said they supported the hiring of an administrator during the special meeting. At that meeting, Jetmore said it was also important to hire another nurse, and that money could come from grants. However, the administrator’s salary and benefits would have been paid by the county.

Both Jetmore and Linkel agreed at the commissioners’ meeting the Health Department needed a person in a supervisory capacity.

County council is currently holding budget hearings concerning the 2022 budget. Council members were set up in the same room as the commissioners and were not in session during the special meeting.

At this time, the Health Department is operating with just one nurse, and she is working more than 40 hours per week. Because she is salary, she is not receiving overtime pay for her extra hours, she said at the special meeting.

Also, at the special meeting, commissioners accepted the resignations of Jennifer Profitt and Patsy Weileman from the health board. The commissioners then appointed Crystal Halpin and Rachel Ramey, to take Profitt and Weileman’s respective positions. Halpin and Ramey are both RNs with Halpin being employed at Margaret Mary Hospital in Batesville, and Ramey is a nurse at Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis.

Commissioners said they will contact another Health Department board member who is also a commissioner appointee and ask for her resignation so they can appoint another person to her position.

Commissioners said they are actively looking for a Franklin County doctor to be the county health officer.

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EDITORIAL An addendum to my last EDITORIAL about how BTC members have gone insane and want to spend all of our money RIGHT NOW

An EDITORIAL by John Estridge

At the last Brookville Town Council meeting, while the people in the crowd, in a decidedly fruitless endeavor, were trying to get BTC President Curtis Ward to admit there had never been a feasibility study for annexation – even after he told the taxpayers at each meeting for month after month, the study was ongoing — one person was trying to explain to Curtis the meaning of the word “addendum.”

(An aside here: Does Curtis have to purchase a bunch of pants because so many of his pants spontaneously burst into flames?)

One of the reasons Curtis said the nonexistent feasibility study was ongoing (without ever starting, mind you) is because people had sold property up there (Snob Hill) since the latest property taxes came out.

I think I can speak for the entire crowd’s reaction at that point: We were either shocked at his naïveté and/or offended in his assessment of our IQs.

For Curtis: Addendum means “an item of additional material, typically omissions, added at the end of a book or other publication.”

This is one of those. On the record, this is still an EDITORIAL, but as I just said an ADDENDUM to the EDITORIAL. For anyone reading this who does not know what this is an addendum to, I will try to give a very short synopsis.

Brookville Town Council members have gone insane.

They want to purchase a golf course for $1 million without even glancing at any books, refusing to look closely at the course’s immediate infrastructure needs, without a feasibility study (even one of Curtis’ imaginary feasibility studies) or anything even remotely close to showing financial responsibility over our money. Of course, we – taxpayers — have to purchase it RIGHT NOW. Because it is making so much money for the current investors, they are demanding to sell it RIGHT NOW. Personally, I have never promised anybody I would buy the golf course at all and certainly not by a certain time, and I would definitely not cave to someone demanding I buy a deteriorating property financials unseen for $1 million right this minute.

I find that rude.

AND

They also want to buy a property in town for $600,000 that is very, very HOT. That property is so hot, we could not learn what property it was because if it leaked out, it would be purchased right out from under our collective noses. It was a secret. Shhhhh be vewy, vewy quiet. (I am thinking Elmer Fudd there).

And now it is so hot, we have to purchase it RIGHT NOW. If we don’t purchase it RIGHT NOW, a company that would perhaps hire people and pay taxes might purchase it. And good Lord we can’t have that.

But the reasons we are purchasing it RIGHT NOW, so a legitimate business that would hire people cannot, are very sound: We are purchasing it for a town hall because we need a town hall, Curtis said. No, dangit, it is not going to be a town hall. Now, it is going to be a police station that no one, even Curtis, has purported we need plus something for the street department, also, that no one quite understands.

AND

We are going to have a Frisbee golf course that is going to be somewhere in our beautiful town park, that many people dearly love and enjoy, but right now the people who currently use it and love it really don’t matter because Curtis wants a Frisbee golf course, come heck or Stephanie letting a bunch of water out of the lake.

We will know where the Frisbee golf course is going to be when it is completed, because we are not worthy of that knowledge.

(When reading this addendum to the editorial, please understand “we” means taxpayers and those who use the park)

That is the editorial that now needs an addendum.

Golf Course

I chose the golf course to go first because – and this is a tough call – it seems to be the most stupid of the three. I really want to use the word stupidest instead of most stupid because it seems to fit the situation better.

After reading my editorial, many, many people contacted me.

They pointed out Curtis owns a gazillion acres of land up near the golf course and in the immediate vicinity of the golf course in the proposed annexation area. In fact, he is one of the property owners he was talking about that had purchased property after the tax thing, and we had to try to tell him about addendums.

And, some said he had been voting on things without a written conflict of interest disclosure statement actually filed and not just thought about and made up like that feasibility study. I do not know personally if that is true. And, you know, even if that is not so, voting on the golf course and annexation is a really big conflict of interest for Curtis. So much so, I feel unclean watching him do it. Now, not only does he have rich people telling him how high to jump, but he has a financial incentive to jump real high (as in spend our money) and not really think about us.

Another person reminded me of the dog catcher situation.

This is another brief synopsis: the Franklin County Commissioners had their attorney, Grant Reeves, talk to Curtis about the need for some extra money because the commissioners thought the dog catcher (small animal control officer) was having quite a few calls within the town’s corporation limits.

Curtis, fellow member Brooke Leffingwell and her sister took the time to get the small animal control officer time sheets for quite some time in the past until now and analyzed them. I mean really analyzed them. I am wondering how many hours were put into that little exercise. And they found the small animal control officer was not spending a lot of time in Brookville.

In doing that extensive analysis, they saved the town about $1,000, maybe. However, they cannot even do a cursory examination of the golf course’s financial situation before they spend $1 million of our money to buy a golf course, probably most of us have never used. And, that is just the beginning of the costs. Running an operation of that size is going to be expensive. Currently, Curtis said there are two full-time employees and 17 “seasonal” employees. One thing about global warming, the few golfers still among the population are going to be able to be on the links for many more weeks both in the fall and spring, so those seasonal workers may have longer seasons.

And don’t forget the current condition of the golf course. Maybe, we should just tell people it is a facsimile of the moon and get people to pay admission to that.

At that last meeting council member Eric Johnson said we needed to buy the golf course for the thousands of kids that play golf there. I will admit there are young people who play golf there, but thousands? Did you get the memo about the school corporation losing money because we are having fewer and fewer students each and every year?

One of my many, many bad habits is Facebook. I kind of creep around on Facebook. So, I have been reading some of the arguments for buying the golf course.

To date, the ones I have found are developers. That is not a bad word, but in this instance, developers really have skin in the game.

One developer who owns about everything but two parcels in the county, said we shouldn’t even look at the golf course as a golf course but think about the other uses for the golf course. I.E. a development opportunity for more houses.

That is the American way. I am all for it. If the developers want to make the golf course into housing, have at it.

But leave us out of it.

Instead, get a bunch of the developers together and they can throw their money together and buy the golf course from the LLC RIGHT NOW. I’m all for that, and I really hope all of you, Curtis included, make a bunch of money at it. But I do not want my tax money used in land speculation where the end game is for a small group of developers to get richer and the taxpayers to take it, well put whatever anatomy part you want there.

Zimmer property

Really, the Zimmer property should have been first with the title of the stupidest of the three.

I see the golf course because a few people, Curtis included, are in line to make some money using our money. Unfortunately, that is too often the American way. We have come to the point we almost expect that of our government. But this is the first time a local governmental entity has stuck it in our faces like the BTC.

But the Zimmer property? That kind of worries me, because I know there has to be a reason this has been secret from the start and now we have to buy it RIGHT NOW even though we no longer apparently need a new town hall, or a new police station or a new something for the street department whatever that is.

If anybody knows what is driving this, please enlighten me. My only thought is Curtis is really against new businesses moving into town and buying the HOT property, and we have to expend $600,000 to foil them.

Again, like the golf course, $600,000 is just the proverbial tip of the iceberg. That does not include all those little miscellaneous costs such as remodeling, construction and the other things. And don’t forget ongoing maintenance.

Also, has anyone done a brown field study of that property? That property has been commercially-oriented for many years until Curtis put a stop to that.

But like a feasibility study, it would be really nice to know if we need to dig up a bunch of that soil and cart it off to the moon or something.

My big problem with this is three letters: Why?

We really never needed a new town hall even if we were told we did. We do not need a new police station. And since apparently no one knows but Curtis what that street department something is planned to be, we probably don’t need that either.

A person told me on Facebook, we are moving the police station because of parking. He said the officers might be delayed going to a call because they have to back out of tight parking places. I wondered about that person’s reasoning or if he was really being serious. I believe many, many people could suggest parking improvements that would not run $600,000 plus whatever. Then, he seemingly tried to say people against this were against things like expanding the library, building a pool, moving the firehouse and the EMS. I was for all of those things, but apparently he was “painting with a broad brush.”

I had thought this, but I saw it on Fred Neeley’s Facebook post: Why not put the street department down at the new property where the state highway department was? Maybe, you would even save money. I know that seems opposite to the council members’ current mindset of spending our money as quickly and as stupidly as possible almost like they printed it, but how about embracing change people.

And what about the new empty storefront on Main Street caused by the police station moving out of our downtown — we are supposed to promote — and moving to High Street? Our municipal lot will now be flanked by empty storefronts on both sides. I guess we can knock both buildings down, expand the municipal lot and put more parking meters up. We are obviously going to need the money. And that would give the police more parking spaces.

I think the golf course stupidity sometimes overshadows this stupidity. And it shouldn’t. However, we are just inundated with stupid ways to spend our money. RIGHT NOW

One other bothersome little factoid concerning both the golf course and the Zimmer property, they are both privately owned and the property is being taxed. Once they are owned by the town, the taxes on $1.6 million dollars worth of property disappears. Considering the spending habits of this town board, where do you think they will turn to make up that loss of revenue? Grab your billfolds and purses! That is a LOT of money to make up for on the backs of the rest of the taxpayers.

Town Park

Like the Zimmer property, there has to be more here than meets the eye.

Curtis demanded a park board and now a Frisbee golf course. He did not ask any of us for our feelings and opinions.

Also, and I did not make this clear during the editorial, there are going to be sponsors for every hole, meaning advertising signs. Councils in the past have vehemently fought commercializing the park. What is next, neon billboards? If Curtis wants neon billboards down at the park, we will have neon billboards at the park.

My parents, God love them, used to use old sayings that really have a lot of truth to them. One of those is “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

Is it that Curtis has so much energy, he just can’t let things remain the way they are? Or better yet, Curtis, have these ideas and then share them with the people paying the bills and enjoying their property they pay for. And don’t tell them we have to do everything RIGHT NOW.

Better yet again, ask the people what they want to do (if anything) with their property paid for by their money. And don’t be in a hurry.

Breathe Curtis. Think about your Kum Ba Yah speech and go one level farther. Relax. Do some yoga. Take deep breaths. Remember the town’s motto that we paid a bunch of money for: The Rush of Relaxation. As it was explained at the time, rush did not mean for anyone to rush around here, it was just rush to get here so everyone could relax.

You are here. Relax.

AND

This was near the end of the last meeting, and I am going to admit, my brain was overloaded at that point. However, Curtis is not done spending your money without asking you.

Remember the $3 million bridge and trail from the Brookville Town Park to the other side of the river, Curtis wants to do that. It was $3 million last year. You know the costs have gone up. Hopefully, there will be a grant, but the grants include local money. So, if the cost is now $4 million, then we get to pay at least $800,000. I agree that with what the golf course and Zimmer’s property will end up costing us, $800,000 will sound like a bargain, but OMG. When will Curtis stop spending our money on things he wants?

Please, tell him to stop. His fellow council members seem incapable of looking out for our best interests or to be good stewards of our money. We need to stand up and as Nancy Reagan said: “Just say no.”

And that brings up the next issue and it’s the last one I promise:

Apathy

People I really respect have called me up after my last editorial and they all have this refrain: “I would go to the next meeting, but it won’t do any good because this is a done deal.”

Really? That makes me so angry, I have to really take deep breaths and hum Kum Ba Yah after someone says that to me.

There’s a couple of ways to look at this.

Back in early 2008, the powers that were in charge of Franklin County at that time wanted to update the zoning code, and they wanted to make it way more restrictive because – God help us – we might grow as a county if we didn’t do something to stop it.

So, the powers that be, hired a consulting company out of Indianapolis for a zillion dollars. They came and were real bored sitting through meetings around the county that no one showed up for and then they took a finished zoning code that they wrote for say Hendricks County and/or Brownsburg, and they just changed the title to Franklin County.

My boss at the time, Gary, wrote an article and an editorial. They were really good, and I always hate to admit when he does something good, but those were good.

It was so good, 800 people showed up at the public hearing for the proposed zoning code. Prior to the meeting, people were saying “I would go to the next meeting, but it won’t do any good because this is a done deal.”

That meeting changed everything.

The proposed zoning code was dropped. Average citizens got together and wrote up a zoning code meant for Franklin County. Was it perfect? No. But it was much, much better than what they were trying to cram down our collective throats.

And, most of the people in power at that time were replaced at the next election opportunity.

So, don’t give me that apathetic crap. If you don’t show up, you are right, it will not change. But show up. Even if you don’t say or do anything, your presence will be noted. Bring your lawn chairs. Sit outside and look through the windows. Just show up. All of those town council members live here. They are your neighbors. Even the zombie-like rest of the council will have to take note and at least, at least, delay it to think about it.

Here is a suggestion, since the rest of the council members apparently are in agreement, ask them to sell Curtis’ big plans to you. He must surely have them convinced he is doing all the right things. Give them the opportunity to convince you, too. Why should that heavy burden rest solely with Curtis?

We really don’t have to do anything RIGHT NOW except attend that meeting.

And, finally, if they go ahead and buy everything they say they are going to buy and they do what they want to do to our town park, at least you can say you gave it a try. You did your best.

If you stay home, if you say nothing, you get what you get, and you deserve it.

Remember be at the next BTC meeting, which is 7 p.m., Tuesday, August 24, at the Schilling Center.

State Senator Jeff Raatz to meet with area residents Thursday evening, August 19 at Korner’s Kountry Kitchen in Brookville

Sen. Jeff Raatz press release

Indiana State Senator Jeff Raatz (R-Richmond) wants to listen to Franklin County citizens.

Thus, he will meet with residents at Korner’s Kountry Kitchen, in Brookville, at 6 p.m., Thursday, August 19.

According to a press release, this is part of a listening tour that is going throughout Raatz’ senate district.

“Designed to give constituents the opportunity to discuss the issues and challenges facing the district and state of Indiana, Raatz encourages area residents to attend the nearest tour event.” The press release reads.

If anyone has any questions, comments or concerns about the tour, they should:  Senator.Raatz@iga.in.gov or call 317-233-0930. 

Obituary for Rev. Neri Greskoviak OSM

REV. NERI GRESKOVIAK OSM

Rev. Neri Greskoviak OFM, died Sunday, August 15, 2021, at St. John the Baptist Friary in Cincinnati. Born on March 23, 1936, in Minonk, Illinois, Richard Greskoviak was one of four children of Proxida (Nee: Smolinski) and Joseph Greskoviak. He attended St. Patrick Parish elementary school and then graduated from St. Francis Seminary in Cincinnati before entering the novitiate on August 15, 1954, and receiving the religious name “Neri.”

Professing his first vows in 1955, he entered Duns Scotus College in Southfield, Michigan, where he made his solemn vows in 1958. Then, after theology studies, Neri was ordained to the priesthood on June 13, 1963, at St. Leonard College in Centerville, Ohio. Classmate Dennet Jung remembers Fr. Neri most vividly working outdoors with an axe in his hand, a vivid and sarcastic sense of humor and a loud laugh in his belly. These passions continued throughout Fr. Neri’s life.

Fr. Neri spent his entire ministerial life as a parish pastor. His first assignment was in New Mexico. He would go on to serve as associate pastor or pastor at parishes in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. He spent his last 33 years at Illinois parishes. In 2014, he semi-retired at St. Mary’s Friary’s in Bloomington, serving as Parochial Vicar. In 2016, he fully retired to the Holy Family Friary in Oldenburg, helping in the parish and surrounding area as able and needed.

Parishioners loved Fr. Neri’s down-to-earth common touch. He was creative and free-spirited in his preaching using symbols and even stunts to get his message across. Fr. Ric Schneider reflected that parishioners also fondly and patiently remember, with a smile, some of Fr. Neri’s homilies that went on (and on) before finally finding a place to land.

In addition to his parents, he is also preceded in death by his sister Roselyn Renner and brothers Jerome and Arthur Greskoviak. He is survived by his sisters-in-law; friar classmate Dennet Jung and close friend Mary Ellen Gillman, OSF.

A prayer service, sharing of stories and visitation will begin 9 a.m. Wednesday, August 18, at Holy Family Church in Oldenburg. Funeral services follow at 10 a.m. with burial in the church cemetery.

Obituary for Dennis Eugene Davis

DENNIS EUGENE DAVIS

Dennis Eugene Davis, 82, of Batesville, passed away on Sunday, August 15, 2021, at Aspen Place Health in Greensburg. Dennis was born to Charles and Bernice (Brauem) Davis on February 13, 1939. In 1977, he married his wife, Betty (Moore) Davis.

Although he only spent a short time in the military, it was something Dennis was very proud of. He was an avid hunter and enjoyed taking the Gator out for a ride. Of course he loved his tomato plants too.

Dennis will be dearly missed by his children Mike Spurling (Gayle) and Cindy Scudder; grandchildren Michelle Whitis, Tifany Hensley, Curtis Gridley, and Bobbie Gridley; great grandchildren Cody Whitis, Kelsey Davis, Courtney Rapking, Beth Kenman, Holly Karn, Bradley Davis, Skylar Gridley, and Raven Gridley; 15 great great grandchildren; sisters Susanna Davis, Myrtle White, and Violet June Crowdy.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Betty; his parents; daughter Brenda Gridley; brothers Charles and Sonny Davis; sister Rosemary Knipp; and two grandsons Nathan Spurling and Bennie Ray Gridley.

A graveside service will be held on Friday, August 20, 2021, at 11 a.m. at St. John’s UCC Cemetery (Huntersville) in Batesville, with Rev. David Gates officiating. Graveside military honors conducted by the Batesville VFW Post #3183, and the Prell-Bland American Legion post #271.

Memorials in honor of Dennis can be given to the Brenda Gridley Memorial Scholarship Fund. They may be brought to the service or mailed to: Meyers Funeral Home, P.O. Box 202, Batesville, IN 47006. 

Please feel free to leave a memory or a message of comfort for the Davis family here in the online guestbook.

Obituary for Dianna Joyce Crouse

DIANNA JOYCE CROUSE

Dianna Joyce Crouse, 81 of Liberty, passed away peacefully on Sunday, August 15, 2021, at McCullough Hyde Memorial Hospital. She was born on June 30, 1940, to Leslie N. Wood and Alice Mae Pence Wood in Danville.

On February 22, 1964, she married Harold Crouse Jr.; they were able to spend 45 years together before he passed away in 2009.

Dianna was a faithful member of St. Bridget’s Catholic Church, where she served as a Eucharistic Minister since 1987.

Dianna was a member of the Extension Homemakers Progressive Club; she was involved in politics where she served on the election board and Republican Committee as the Vice County President.

Dianna had worked alongside with her husband as co-owners of the Harold Crouse and Sons Trucking Company for many years. After that, she went to work for the Department of Natural Resources at Whitewater Memorial State Park for more than 30 years.

Dianna enjoyed traveling and spending time with her many friends.

Left to cherish her memory are her 13 nieces and nephews and many friends.

Along with her husband, she was preceded in death by her parents, a sister and brother in law, Rebecca Sue and Herman Cull; an uncle, Charles Pence and a niece.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Saturday, August 21, 2021, at 11:30 a.m. at St. Bridget’s Catholic Church, Liberty with Father Dustin Boehm officiating. Burial will follow in Elkhorn Cemetery. Urban Winkler Liberty funeral home is honored to be assisting the family.

Obituary for Phyllis Huber Hildebrand

PHYLLIS HUBER HILDEBRAND

Phyllis Huber Hildebrand, 96, passed away on Friday, August 13, 2021, at her home in Lyonsville. Phyllis was born in Connersville, on July 8, 1925, and is one of eight children to the late Aaron and Minnie Mae (Seal) Huber.

 She married Floyd Hildebrand where they were blessed with five children, they were able to spend nearly 60 years of marriage before he passed away in 2012.

Phyllis had been a member of St. Paul Lutheran church; she raised her children going to the church and was a dedicated member. She spent most of her life being self-employed while raising five children.

Phyllis volunteered on the veteran’s bus, where she would help take them around to various places. Her and Floyd were involved in the food pantry and would spend countless hours helping there. She enjoyed traveling and spending her winters in Florida and Arizona.

Phyllis will be greatly missed by her sons, Daryl (Pam) Hildebrand and Jerry (Barb) Hildebrand; a brother, Benny Huber; eight grandchildren, Meghan Nichols, Lindsey Hildebrand, Celena Fritze, Shawn Hildebrand, Keith Hildebrand, Eric Hildebrand, Stephen Hobby, and Jimmy Hobby.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two daughters, Sue Vogel and Rose Marie Shew; a son, Randy Hildebrand; four sisters, Leone Whetstine, Roxy Clark-Hensen, Charolette Cole, and Nellie Smith; and brothers, Carl Huber and Bud Huber.

Visitation will be held on Friday, August 20, 2021, from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. at Urban Winkler Funeral Home, 513 W. 8th St. Connersville, Indiana 47331. A service will immediately follow at 3 p.m. at the funeral home with Pastor Tim Billups officiating.

To sign the online guestbook or to leave the family a personal message visit www.urbanwinklerfuneralhome.com.