Emily (as she was called)was working as a stenographer for a title and trust company in Atlanta, when she married Waymond T. Pickett in Niagara Falls, NY. They soon welcomed two beautiful daughters into their family: Elizabeth and Theodora.
The Great Depression made it necessary for Waymond, a house builder, to follow the work; so the little family moved to Burbank, California which was experiencing a building boom by the end of the 1930s.
Emily adored her daughters and all the grandchildren that came along when the girls married. She is remembered as a kind, gentle woman with a pleasant voice, a lilting laugh, and a patient manner. She was also a talented gardener.
She was taken to heaven on Christmas Day, 1966 at the age of fifty-seven and is missed by her family to this day.
Emily (as she was called)was working as a stenographer for a title and trust company in Atlanta, when she married Waymond T. Pickett in Niagara Falls, NY. They soon welcomed two beautiful daughters into their family: Elizabeth and Theodora.
The Great Depression made it necessary for Waymond, a house builder, to follow the work; so the little family moved to Burbank, California which was experiencing a building boom by the end of the 1930s.
Emily adored her daughters and all the grandchildren that came along when the girls married. She is remembered as a kind, gentle woman with a pleasant voice, a lilting laugh, and a patient manner. She was also a talented gardener.
She was taken to heaven on Christmas Day, 1966 at the age of fifty-seven and is missed by her family to this day.