Her passions included baking and cooking, gardening, reading, listening to classical music, art, travel, playing the piano, bird watching, history, politics, and genealogy.
She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Mrs. Cory was a graduate of St. Scholastica Academy, in Sharon, PA, where she grew up, and attended the College for Women at Western Reserve University in Ohio, as well as Ohio Wesleyan. Her education was interrupted by World War I.
She attended Baptist churches as a child, and was a devout Protestant who attended both Methodist and Presbyterian churches later in life.
She left an incredible legacy to her children, through her beautiful autobiography (posted on Ancestry), and through her recipes, and many letters, and photos (most of which have notes in her own hand on the back).
She was a relation to the Taggarts, Bynons, Edwards, Weavers, Jewells, Javens, and Tuttles, and would be proud beyond words to know that many of us are connecting with family members and researching and sharing family trees.
A darling wife, sister, daughter, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, cousin, and friend; gone but never, ever forgotten.
Her passions included baking and cooking, gardening, reading, listening to classical music, art, travel, playing the piano, bird watching, history, politics, and genealogy.
She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Mrs. Cory was a graduate of St. Scholastica Academy, in Sharon, PA, where she grew up, and attended the College for Women at Western Reserve University in Ohio, as well as Ohio Wesleyan. Her education was interrupted by World War I.
She attended Baptist churches as a child, and was a devout Protestant who attended both Methodist and Presbyterian churches later in life.
She left an incredible legacy to her children, through her beautiful autobiography (posted on Ancestry), and through her recipes, and many letters, and photos (most of which have notes in her own hand on the back).
She was a relation to the Taggarts, Bynons, Edwards, Weavers, Jewells, Javens, and Tuttles, and would be proud beyond words to know that many of us are connecting with family members and researching and sharing family trees.
A darling wife, sister, daughter, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, cousin, and friend; gone but never, ever forgotten.