Advertisement

Cynthia <I>Whitbeck</I> Risk

Advertisement

Cynthia Whitbeck Risk

Birth
Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
13 Mar 2009 (aged 84)
Cummington, Hampshire County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Tuxedo Park, Orange County, New York, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.1962637, Longitude: -74.185907
Plot
Columbarium (Unmarked)
Memorial ID
View Source

Cynthia Risk, former Town Clerk

CUMMINGTON - Cynthia Whitbeck Risk, of Cummington, died at home on March 13, 2009.

The daughter of Sterling and Virginia Eastman Whitbeck, she was born in Northampton on July 10, 1924.

She graduated from The Northfield School and Smith College. She received a master's in economics from Yale University.

She worked in financial institutions in New York City and Chicago.

At Yale, she met her husband, Donald Thomas Risk, of Winetka, Ill. They had six children, including two sets of twins.

Later she worked in the trust department of the First National Bank of Northampton and was Cummington Town Clerk.

Mrs. Risk's artistic gifts shown through in many ways. She was an inspired and generous chef, needlepoint artist and gardener. Among her many custom designed pieces is the needlepoint kneeler still used at the altar rail in St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo, Tuxedo Park, N.Y.

She raised herbs, vegetables, and fragrant and beautiful flowers which she loved to give as gifts. Throughout her life she created beauty wherever she was.

Mrs. Risk was an enrolled member of the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe (Dakota). Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman (Ohiysea), the first Native American to receive a medical degree, and the doctor who reported on the massacre of Wounded Knee, was her grandfather. She spoke fondly of trips camping and boating with her Grandpa and Uncle Oji (Jr.) on Lake Huron.

Mrs. Risk leaves six children, four grandchildren and one great-grandchild. [names omitted for privacy reasons] Her husband, Donald, died in August 1978.

Mrs. Risk's ashes will rest with those of her husband in the columbarium of St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo.

Donations may be sent to Highland Ambulance EMS Inc. (serving the Hilltowns), 56 Main St., Goshen, MA 01032, 268-7272. www.peaseandgay.com


Printed in the Hampshire Gazette March 16, 2009

text Courtesy of the Cummington Historic Commission

Cynthia Risk, former Town Clerk

CUMMINGTON - Cynthia Whitbeck Risk, of Cummington, died at home on March 13, 2009.

The daughter of Sterling and Virginia Eastman Whitbeck, she was born in Northampton on July 10, 1924.

She graduated from The Northfield School and Smith College. She received a master's in economics from Yale University.

She worked in financial institutions in New York City and Chicago.

At Yale, she met her husband, Donald Thomas Risk, of Winetka, Ill. They had six children, including two sets of twins.

Later she worked in the trust department of the First National Bank of Northampton and was Cummington Town Clerk.

Mrs. Risk's artistic gifts shown through in many ways. She was an inspired and generous chef, needlepoint artist and gardener. Among her many custom designed pieces is the needlepoint kneeler still used at the altar rail in St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo, Tuxedo Park, N.Y.

She raised herbs, vegetables, and fragrant and beautiful flowers which she loved to give as gifts. Throughout her life she created beauty wherever she was.

Mrs. Risk was an enrolled member of the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe (Dakota). Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman (Ohiysea), the first Native American to receive a medical degree, and the doctor who reported on the massacre of Wounded Knee, was her grandfather. She spoke fondly of trips camping and boating with her Grandpa and Uncle Oji (Jr.) on Lake Huron.

Mrs. Risk leaves six children, four grandchildren and one great-grandchild. [names omitted for privacy reasons] Her husband, Donald, died in August 1978.

Mrs. Risk's ashes will rest with those of her husband in the columbarium of St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo.

Donations may be sent to Highland Ambulance EMS Inc. (serving the Hilltowns), 56 Main St., Goshen, MA 01032, 268-7272. www.peaseandgay.com


Printed in the Hampshire Gazette March 16, 2009

text Courtesy of the Cummington Historic Commission



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement