World War II found her working at the Quincy Shipyard in Massachusetts inspecting aircraft parts. After the war, she worked for the Woodward and Lothrop department store in Washington, D.C. for sixteen years. Upon retirement in 1961, she returned to Brooksville where she lived until moving to Meadow View Apartments in Ellsworth, residing there twenty-seven years. She attended church and sang in the choirs and as soloist at the United Methodist Churches in both Brooksville and Ellsworth. She was a member of the United Methodist Women of Brooksville and the Brooksville Historical Society.
She is predeceased by her twelve siblings but is survived by many nieces and nephews and great nieces and nephews who she dearly loved. Eugenie was a loving, caring lady and she will be greatly missed and long remembered by her family and friends.
Interment will be at Lakeview Cemetery, Brooksville. (Jordan-Fernald Funeral Home on-line
World War II found her working at the Quincy Shipyard in Massachusetts inspecting aircraft parts. After the war, she worked for the Woodward and Lothrop department store in Washington, D.C. for sixteen years. Upon retirement in 1961, she returned to Brooksville where she lived until moving to Meadow View Apartments in Ellsworth, residing there twenty-seven years. She attended church and sang in the choirs and as soloist at the United Methodist Churches in both Brooksville and Ellsworth. She was a member of the United Methodist Women of Brooksville and the Brooksville Historical Society.
She is predeceased by her twelve siblings but is survived by many nieces and nephews and great nieces and nephews who she dearly loved. Eugenie was a loving, caring lady and she will be greatly missed and long remembered by her family and friends.
Interment will be at Lakeview Cemetery, Brooksville. (Jordan-Fernald Funeral Home on-line
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