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Patricia Vance “Pat” <I>Moyer</I> Parker

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Patricia Vance “Pat” Moyer Parker

Birth
Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
15 May 2016 (aged 90)
Danville, Montour County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Published May 16, 2016 - Press Enterprise

Patricia (Moyer) Parker, age 90, a longtime resident of Bloomsburg and Fernville, died of natural causes Sunday, May 15, 2016, at her home at 5 Grotto Drive, the Meadows at Maria Joseph Manor, Danville.

Pat was born on Sept. 20, 1925, in the Bloomsburg home of her parents, the late William Vance and Whilhelmine (White) Moyer. When she was five years old, that same site was seized through eminent domain by the federal government and has since been the location of the Bloomsburg Post Office.

Following graduation from Bloomsburg High School in 1943, she attended Syracuse University, where she received a double major degree in history and journalism, graduating in 1947.

With the exception of attending college in New York and living for five years in Illinois in the 1950s, Pat spent her entire life in Columbia County, where her ancestors settled in the early 1800s.

Upon her return from Syracuse to Bloomsburg, she was hired by the Eyerly family as the Women’s Program Director and host of the show, “Pat and Her Mike” on radio station WCNR. In 1948, the late Harry L. Magee hired her as the creator of the Pat “Potluck” Parker variety program on his newly established radio station, WLTR and shortly thereafter the station call letters were changed to Harry’s initials, WHLM. She then took time off to start her family and moved to Kankakee, Ill., for a few years. In 1960, she returned to Bloomsburg and was once again hired by Harry Magee as the curator of the former Magee Museum on Main Street and later as the tour director of the former Magee Transportation Museum on Millville Road.

Following the Hurricane Agnes Flood of 1972 that destroyed the Transportation Museum, and the subsequent death of her employer, Harry Magee, she joined the Press Enterprise as a news reporter, social page editor, and columnist for the newspaper. Later she authored several books, including “Do You Remember Fernville?”; “Fernville — 2007 Still Hangin’ In !”; “The Museums of Harry L. Magee, Or What Became of the Trolleys?” and a number of children’s books, which are on the shelves of the children’s library at the Bloomsburg Public Library.

Pat was a member of the Scottown/Fernville Flood Survival Committee; the Concerned Citizens of Hemlock Township and, although a strong advocate for flood protection, she was a perennial protagonist in opposition to the original design of the floodwall for Bloomsburg/Fernville as proposed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Pat was a life member of the First Presbyterian Church; the Bloomsburg Hospital Auxiliary, and the Columbia County Historical and Genealogical Society, the latter where she served on the library, newsletter and publication committees. She was also a former Girl Scout and Cub Scout leader, and a devoted Meals on Wheels deliverer for over 25 years. Her hobbies included swimming, baking and gardening, but her passion, up to her final days, was playing and teaching bridge, at which she excelled. She also loved watching British comedies and Penn State football on TV.

Pat is survived by and will be greatly missed by her daughter, Pamela Jean (Parker), and her husband, Timothy Holmes, Bloomsburg; daughter-in-law, Debra B. Parker, Portland, Tenn.; brother-in-law, John Kaelberer, Takoma, Wash., and numerous beloved nieces, nephews and their children.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Barbara Lynne Parker; her son, William Vance Parker; her sisters: Mary Doris “Molly” Kistler and Barbara Gay Kaelberer; her son-in-law, James W. Longenberger; and her brother-in-law, William “Webbie” Kistler.

Visitation for family and friends will be held on Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. in the Dean W. Kriner Inc. Funeral Home & Cremation Service, 325 Market St., Bloomsburg. Burial will be made at the convenience of the family in Old Rosemont Cemetery.
Published May 16, 2016 - Press Enterprise

Patricia (Moyer) Parker, age 90, a longtime resident of Bloomsburg and Fernville, died of natural causes Sunday, May 15, 2016, at her home at 5 Grotto Drive, the Meadows at Maria Joseph Manor, Danville.

Pat was born on Sept. 20, 1925, in the Bloomsburg home of her parents, the late William Vance and Whilhelmine (White) Moyer. When she was five years old, that same site was seized through eminent domain by the federal government and has since been the location of the Bloomsburg Post Office.

Following graduation from Bloomsburg High School in 1943, she attended Syracuse University, where she received a double major degree in history and journalism, graduating in 1947.

With the exception of attending college in New York and living for five years in Illinois in the 1950s, Pat spent her entire life in Columbia County, where her ancestors settled in the early 1800s.

Upon her return from Syracuse to Bloomsburg, she was hired by the Eyerly family as the Women’s Program Director and host of the show, “Pat and Her Mike” on radio station WCNR. In 1948, the late Harry L. Magee hired her as the creator of the Pat “Potluck” Parker variety program on his newly established radio station, WLTR and shortly thereafter the station call letters were changed to Harry’s initials, WHLM. She then took time off to start her family and moved to Kankakee, Ill., for a few years. In 1960, she returned to Bloomsburg and was once again hired by Harry Magee as the curator of the former Magee Museum on Main Street and later as the tour director of the former Magee Transportation Museum on Millville Road.

Following the Hurricane Agnes Flood of 1972 that destroyed the Transportation Museum, and the subsequent death of her employer, Harry Magee, she joined the Press Enterprise as a news reporter, social page editor, and columnist for the newspaper. Later she authored several books, including “Do You Remember Fernville?”; “Fernville — 2007 Still Hangin’ In !”; “The Museums of Harry L. Magee, Or What Became of the Trolleys?” and a number of children’s books, which are on the shelves of the children’s library at the Bloomsburg Public Library.

Pat was a member of the Scottown/Fernville Flood Survival Committee; the Concerned Citizens of Hemlock Township and, although a strong advocate for flood protection, she was a perennial protagonist in opposition to the original design of the floodwall for Bloomsburg/Fernville as proposed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Pat was a life member of the First Presbyterian Church; the Bloomsburg Hospital Auxiliary, and the Columbia County Historical and Genealogical Society, the latter where she served on the library, newsletter and publication committees. She was also a former Girl Scout and Cub Scout leader, and a devoted Meals on Wheels deliverer for over 25 years. Her hobbies included swimming, baking and gardening, but her passion, up to her final days, was playing and teaching bridge, at which she excelled. She also loved watching British comedies and Penn State football on TV.

Pat is survived by and will be greatly missed by her daughter, Pamela Jean (Parker), and her husband, Timothy Holmes, Bloomsburg; daughter-in-law, Debra B. Parker, Portland, Tenn.; brother-in-law, John Kaelberer, Takoma, Wash., and numerous beloved nieces, nephews and their children.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Barbara Lynne Parker; her son, William Vance Parker; her sisters: Mary Doris “Molly” Kistler and Barbara Gay Kaelberer; her son-in-law, James W. Longenberger; and her brother-in-law, William “Webbie” Kistler.

Visitation for family and friends will be held on Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. in the Dean W. Kriner Inc. Funeral Home & Cremation Service, 325 Market St., Bloomsburg. Burial will be made at the convenience of the family in Old Rosemont Cemetery.


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  • Maintained by: Barb
  • Originally Created by: ElaineR
  • Added: May 15, 2016
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/162639924/patricia_vance-parker: accessed ), memorial page for Patricia Vance “Pat” Moyer Parker (20 Sep 1925–15 May 2016), Find a Grave Memorial ID 162639924, citing Old Rosemont Cemetery, Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by Barb (contributor 47923800).