Exploring Almost Forgotten Gravesites in the Great State of Ohio

Dedicated to cemetery preservation in the great state of Ohio


"A cemetery may be considered as abandoned when all or practically all of the bodies have been Removed therefrom and no bodies have been buried therein for a great many years, and the cemetery has been so long neglected as entirely to lose its identity as such, and is no longer known, recognized and respected by the public as a cemetery. 1953 OAG 2978."

Showing posts with label Franklin County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Franklin County. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 6, 2024

Volunteer opportunities open up at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio - See Facebook Page

 Green Lawn Cemetery on Facebook.:

"Does your company, church or organization need a meaningful volunteer service opportunity?

With over 6000 veterans laid to rest in 7 military sections at Green Lawn Cemetery, we rely on the generosity of volunteers to give their markers the gentle cleaning they deserve.

We provide all supplies, cleaner, and instruction on how to safely and effectively do the job!

Contact us at 614-444-1123 to schedule your volunteer event. Groups of 10-20 people are ideal."

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Green Lawn Cemetery Association

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info@greenlawncemetery.org

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Green Lawn Cemetery on Find a Grave

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Saturday, June 24, 2023

Did this cemetery ever really exist? - VanDillingham Church Cemetery - Perry Township - Franklin County, Ohio - A 1930s WPA Cemetery Plat Map that is unlike any other!

The VanDillingham Church Cemetery shown as being located in Perry Township, Franklin County, Ohio has a W.P.A. cemetery plat map unlike any other!  I couldn't find the cemetery name on Find A Grave, or anywhere else. That was just the start of a journey to learn more about this unusual W.P.A. cemetery plat map - and it hasn't ended yet.  

Fortunately for me, Grace at the Columbus Metro Public Library did help answer the question about the VanDillingham Church Cemetery's existence.  It does exist, but not under that name or in that township!  It is the Old Baptist Church Cemetery in Truro Township, Franklin County.  

It is also called the Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery now on Find A Grave.

See the comparison below.:








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Below is a 3-image collage showing a more close up view of some of the names written on the WPA Cemetery Plat map for this cemetery named "VanDillingham Church Cemetery".

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It is evident from the three photo collage below that the Official Project Numbers of 465-42-3-467 & 665-42-3-232 that are associated with the WPA Program and appears in the "Legend of Wars Box" is missing for this VanDillingham Church Cemetery.   Only a partial listing of the designated numbers for the wars, a short history of the cemetery, and the size of the cemetery are shown there, however.  
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Emphasis appears to be more about the platting of this cemetery as referenced by the "Note:  "Measurements at edges of plat show method of plotting unmapped cemetery."  And, we can see in the very right-hand corner is the tiny, but nevertheless important, notation of:
 "Ohio State W.P.A. Project Number 99".  This Project Number has never been seen on a WPA Cemetery Plat Map before. Thus, additional research is needed; and so this mystery continues!
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Including here is my response from the Franklin Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society to my question.:

"
Consider this a Mystery NO MORE."

We notice that the first drawing you enclosed had 

reference to State Route 256 along the left side

 of the cemetery and Jackson St. on the right side.  


We  were able to triangulate these two roads and

 discovered the Cemetery is Not in Perry Township

 but is actually in Reynoldsburg, Ohio Truro

 Township about 17 miles to the southwest of Perry

 Twp..


S.R 256 is also known in Reynoldsburg as Lancaster Ave. 


This cemetery is now known as the Old Primitive

 Baptist Church Cemetery - GPS

 Coordinates 39.952385, -82.800625.  


You will see a second much bigger cemetery across

the road which is known as the Silent Home

Cemetery.

You can find a number of photos of

 the Primitive Church Cemetery on Find A Grave.


The Reynoldsburg Street Department now

 maintains the Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery,

 Seceder Cemetery, and Hill Road Methodist

 Cemetery.


We found this Online.

“BAPTIST (PRIMITIVE BAPTIST) CEMETERY - Established 1844. Located at the intersection of Route 256 & Jackson street in Reynoldsburg. Still maintained by the church. The Church is still active. GPS Coordinates: N 39° 57.153 W 082° 48.015.  Although the church is called Friendship Primitive Baptist Church, the adjoining cemetery is referred to simply as "Primitive Baptist Cemetery." The stones date from the 1830s. It is small -- approximately 100-150 burials. 

There had not been any burials there for many years until the summer of 2007.  

The cemetery was restored in 1998.


Reynoldsburg was a key spot on the Underground Railroad because of its location and the number of abolitionists here. 

Slaves, traveling north from the Ohio River, were sent from Columbus along East Friend Street (East Main Street) to Reynoldsburg. The David Graham House, 1312 Epworth Avenue, still standing after 150 years, was a major Underground station. There was also a cave off Main Street near Waggoner Road, a room under the Old Primitive Baptist Church on South Jackson Avenue, and the Alexander W. Livingston seed farm, among others, that provided hiding during the day and transportation at night for escaped slaves.

The cemetery was Recorded/Indexed ca 1940.  Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, Also known as Baptist Church Cemetery, Reynoldsburg, Truro Township, Franklin County, Ohio. Earliest burial indexed: 1818.”

Friday, June 23, 2023

The W.P.A. Cemetery Plat Maps for Franklin County have been added to the right sidebar of the blog.

 The W.P.A. Cemetery Plat Maps for Franklin County have been added to the right sidebar of the blog in .jpg format, converted from another format.

As is the case for other Ohio counties, this collection of W.P. A. Cemetery Plat Map albums are grouped under the name of the township where they are located in.

There are page numbers on each page.  

This cemetery map collection does have the Cemetery Index Page, however, there is no cemetery locator map included for it.  

There is a small listing of unknown burial locations for veterans whose names appear on the top right portion of the Cemetery Index Page. Possible burial locations for some of them have been added below. :

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Project Title Page 
(Below)
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The Franklin County W.P.A. Cemetery Plat Maps are quite unique in nature due in large part to the bustling city of Columbus which is not only the county seat but also the State Capitol of Ohio.  

There is a vast variety of types of cemeteries dotting the landscapes of Franklin County.  Each one offers reasons for exploration and expanding one's knowledge about them through studying the lives of those who found peace and rest on their grounds. Each cemetery can rightfully claim its own important place in the history of the city and the county.

The townships in Franklin County, Ohio are.:

Blendon, Brown, Clinton, Franklin, 

Hamilton, Jackson, Jefferson

Madison, Mifflin, Norwich

Perry, Plain, Pleasant, Prairie

Sharon, Truro, Washington

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Referencing the Glenrest (AKA Glen Rest) Cemetery.:

  Glenrest (AKA Glen Rest) Cemetery is shown as situated between Truro Township, Franklin County, and Licking County.


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The following cemeteries have their own dedicated albums in this collection.:

Green Lawn Cemetery which has map pages from 68 through 134; and Green Lawn Abbey with pages 135 and 136 are together and contain the largest number of interments existing in any Franklin County cemetery.  

Noting also that Page 122 - Section 71-  indicates the most veterans burials for a single section. 

(See below). 

 

And, the other cemetery is.:
Union Cemetery in Clinton Township with Pages 221 through 236 are listed in the cemetery's own album.

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For the remainder of other cemeteries in this collection that have multiple section pages, those are included along with map pages of smaller cemeteries under the township where they are located. It is a good idea to check the Key Map Page for a cemetery first to see the sections on a map and their respective page numbers.  

Every township album of cemetery plat maps lists the cemetery pages in page number order from lower to higher in the description box for the album.   

Since there is no Cemetery Locator Map page included with this collection, the Cemetery Index is a crucial tool to reference for locating cemeteries by name and their corresponding page number.  

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There are 22 map pages that are saved in the "Multiple Townships / Smaller Cemeteries" Album.  This indicates that the map pages have more than one cemetery and more than one township name on the map page.

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Note Silent Home Cemetery's Title Page shown below.  Of particular interest is the short but telling statement provided under "History.": 

"Established 6-23-1880.  

Previous Record Destroyed." 

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Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Truro Township is missing its last page which is page number 48.

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Spotlighting the Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery which is of particular interest for those researching Confederate Civil War veterans. It is located in Franklin Township.  The Cemetery Index page shows that the pages are from 20 through 24.  Page 20 is missing, however. It would have been the Title Page.  

Page 21 is the Key Map. 

 
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The above examples in the Franklin County W.P.A. Cemetery Plat Map collection contain only a small fraction of all of the maps that offer unique history and diversity for researchers and those spending time walking the grounds at cemeteries in Franklin County, Ohio.  Many are searching for veteran markers and these maps can help!  

These W.P. A. Cemetery Plat Maps were created during the 1930s - the decade of the Great Depression.  So it is that these many decades later they continue to have their special relevance for us today.  They can serve as a starting point for someone just learning about a cemetery.  They can even pique the interest for those who simply enjoy lingering among the inspiring monuments and reading the touching epitaphs and inscriptions carved on flat and slant style markers. 

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Whatever the reasons, these cemetery plat maps should be preserved and made available for the public to access and view - not hidden away atop a filing cabinet inside a dusty hard-covered book where in some cases, those working around them may not even know they exist or what they are.

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This writer/researcher by the Benjamin Penn Duvall monument at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus. He was my third great-grandfather.


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Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Sharing this story from ColumbusMonthly.com - August 24 2021 - "The Story Behind the Human Remains Found at Upper Arlington High School"

Sharing this latest update about the vanished Litchford Family Cemetery in Upper Arlington, Franklin County, Ohio

The Upper Arlington History Society's website dedicates a page to Pleasant Litchford

A simple "Google search"on this subject provides several links to related news items published during the past two to three years. This current one is an important one to read and include in that collection.

Sunday, July 18, 2021

Save the Date! ~~ Saturday, August 21, 2021 - 9:00AM - 3:30PM - Location: Green Lawn Cemetery - Columbus Ohio - "The 48 State Tour" - Jonathan Appell - Cemetery Preservation Workshop

Check out this year's FREE and OPEN TO THE PUBLIC "48 State Midwest Tour"cemetery preservation workshop conducted by nationally known cemetery conservator, Jonathan Appell, of Atlas Preservation.  

This first workshop on the Midwest 2021 tour schedule will be held at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus on Saturday, August 21st, 2021. It is being co-hosted by the Green Lawn Cemetery Association.

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***Please be sure to scroll down on the FAQ page to learn more about the focus of this workshop, what to bring with you, etc.***

FAQS About this event

MAP

48 State Tour website 

48 State Tour on Facebook

Green Lawn Cemetery on Find A Grave

Green Lawn Cemetery Association

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Cohosted by The Green Lawn Cemetery Association

"We will be meeting at the Huntington Chapel. When you pull into the cemetery, keep driving straight until you see the Chapel. There is plenty of parking & restrooms are available. Bring some water and a chair for breaks!"

The workshop will be held in Section "O".

For further questions about this event contact 

Green Lawn Cemetery at:  614-444-1123

(Below are some photos taken by this author in 1998 for the 150th Anniversary celebration held at Green Lawn Cemetery.)

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Wednesday, April 7, 2021

From the "Columbus Dispatch": "Ohio Humanities grant will help Green Lawn Cemetery add footnotes to its history" - April 7, 2021

 Sharing this wonderful story published online on April 7, 2021 spotlighting Columbus' Green Lawn Cemetery. 

Indeed Green Lawn Cemetery is Ohio's premier cemetery for so many reasons.  

This article by Eric Lagatta details several important ones. 

Included are links to recently published articles about Green Lawn Cemetery and its executive director, Randel L. Rogers, that further highlight the strong preservation efforts happening at Green Lawn Cemetery. 

Green Lawn Cemetery Association

Green Lawn Cemetery on Find A Grave.

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Sharing this spotlight story about Green Lawn Cemetery and Randel "Randy" Rogers whose work at Columbus' Premier Cemetery is a labor of love for him

Columbus Dispatch Reporter, Holly Zachariah, has covered news about Ohio's cemeteries in various types of stories spanning several years.  I can attest that's true; and I'm sure there may be some I missed.

Be sure, though, not to miss reading this one!  

Thanking Holly for bringing us this spotlight story published November 30, 2020 because it is one we so rarely find in content about an Ohio cemetery.  That is because so rarely does someone like Randel L. Rogers come along.  He is the Executive Director of Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus.  

Perhaps better known as Randy Rogers by those who are familiar with him and his dedicated work, he painstakingly preserves the cemetery's grounds.  He gives special attention to the needs of the monuments and markers that identify the gravesites of both the famous and the lesser known souls who found peace and rest at this historic landmark cemetery. 

Be sure to scroll down the page and view the four minute awe-inspiring video interview with Randy Rogers as he describes some of his work with preserving the trees and monuments at Green Lawn Cemetery.  

We hope for more truly inspirational cemetery stories like this one to come along - ones that could only be made possible by someone as uniquely qualified and dedicated as Randy Rogers. 

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   Green Lawn Cemetery on Facebook

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Green Lawn Cemetery Association

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Green Lawn Cemetery has 148,033 memorials posted for it on "Find A Grave."

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Current Green Lawn Cemetery Map


  

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Sharing this heartwarming story about the special caretakers of the Saint James Lutheran Church Cemetery in Hilliard, Franklin County, Ohio

Here is another touchingly heartfelt story from Holly Zachariah, senior reporter with the "Columbus Dispatch." It spotlights three devoted men - one 95 years old - who tenderly care for the gravesites and grounds of Saint James Lutheran Church Cemetery in Hilliard, Franklin County, Ohio.

  

Thanking Holly Zachariah for covering the facts that touch upon the human interest side of the stories.  Many have connections to central Ohio cemeteries.

The Saint James Lutheran Church Cemetery on "Find A Grave" with 269 memorials.

The Saint James Lutheran Church Cemetery on "GenealogyBug.net by David K. and Leona L. Gustafson"

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

"New Albany Board Continues Work on Cemetery Projects" - New Albany, Franklin County, Ohio

Sharing this story from "This Week News" about the restoration work completed at New Albany's Old Burying Ground.  
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Also, more good news this story brings is that there is great hope that the Wagnor Cemetery, also in New Albany, would receive needed preservation work.  So 'stay tuned' for further updates as they are provided! 

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Ethel Marie Rader Geller Yeldem – Telling Her Story

Telling Her Story
of
a mother so distraught she mercilessly murdered 7 of her children and ended her own life soon afterward
By
Linda Jean Limes Ellis
July, 2019
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The above photograph was published
in several newspapers in Ohio
and across the United States
 
Ethel Marie Rader was born January 12, 1885 in Gahanna, Franklin County, Ohio to Peter William Radar and Mary Bobb Rader.

Ethel married Charles Otto Geller on New Year’s Day, 1908 in Franklin County, Ohio.  His parents were Jacob H. Geller, Jr. and Eleanor Elizabeth Patterson Geller – both buried at Sheep Pen Cemetery in Madison Township, Highland County, Ohio. Sheep Pen Cemetery is also known as the Limes, Old Limes, or Gustin Cemetery. 

Personally, I have several collateral line Limes ancestors buried at Sheep Pen Cemetery, and because of that connection, I have an interest in the lives of others buried at Sheep Pen Cemetery.  

Charles and Ethel Rader had five children during their marriage.:


Charles M. Geller – born in 1908 – little is known about Charles M. at this time. His name as Charles M. appears in both the 1910 and 1920 census records for Franklin County, Ohio.



Ervan Reed Geller August 9, 1914

Vernon L. Geller born 1917:

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1918 and 1919:


Ethel’s dizzyingly downward spiral began after the tragic unexpected loss of her husband, Charles Otto Geller, at age 34, on April 18, 1918.   He was a night fireman who died due to heart disease while working at the Jeffrey Manufacturing Plant in Columbus, Ohio where they lived.  She found herself a single mother with 5 young children to care for and raise.

Ethel Geller married rather hastily again on March 8, 1919 to a man apparently who had entered her life and shown her the kind of sympathy she felt she most needed at the time; but a stranger unfortunately she knew little about who he really was or what happened in his past life.  In due time, more about him would be revealed.

1922:

It is important to note, another side of Ethel Marie Rader Geller Yeldem became public in 1922 when it appears she regained stability enough to become involved with other elements that she encountered; even taking extra steps to help others she didn’t know.:

From the “Columbus Evening Dispatch” – September 8, 1922:

“The Dispatch Mailbag”

“WHO IS THE OWNER?”

“To the Editor of the Dispatch”

“Sir:  At the southwest exit of the fair grounds on Monday evening, Aug. 28, at about 10 o’clock, as I was stepping on a street car I found a spectacle case.  On examining it I found it to contain a valuable pair of spectacles.  I have followed up several ads for lost glasses in vain, so have come to the conclusion that they were lost by an out-of-town fair visitor.  I would be only too glad to return them if the owner can be found and am writing the Mail Bag in hopes the owner or  friends will see the letter and call for them.”

Mrs. Yeldem,  393 Belvidere Avenue

1925 and 1926:

However, 1925 and 1926, brought more unforeseen and profoundly sad events that greatly impacted Ethel’s life.

Her 10 month old infant died of cholera on July 25, 1925, Walter Yeldem, whom she had with her second husband Darby “Darb” Yeldem, who later the Columbus Dispatch news reports revealed his real surname was Medley. Yeldem was Medley spelled backwards. 

Then Ethel’s world was shaken with the fact that her second husband had committed the unthinkable criminal act of assaulting  her only daughter from her marriage to Charles Otto Geller, then 13-year old Mildred Geller. Furthermore, various newspaper reports identify Darby Yeldem as a “Negro” or being “colored”.  In one article it is stated that he "claims to be an Indian.”:

From the “Columbus Dispatch”– April 6, 1926.:  Page 34.:

     “Darby Yeldem, age 41, 393 Belivdere Avenue was bound over to the grand jury under bond of $10,000 when arraigned in municipal court Tuesday morning, on a charge of assaulting his 13 year old step-daughter, Mildred Keeler.” *

(*The name “Keeler ” was incorrect for Ethel and the late Charles Otto Geller’s only daughter, who was Mildred Geller.)

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If the grief caused by these events were not enough to overcome, another child suffered serious injuries from an accident that could have easily taken her life, but she managed to survive.:

From the “Columbus Dispatch” – July 9, 1926.  Page 6.:

"CHILD HURT"

     “Running after a ball, which had rolled into the street in the path of an automobile, Thursday evening, Elaine Yeldem, eight-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Darby Yeldem of 393 Belvidere avenue suffered a fractured skull when struck by the machine, which was driven by Mrs. L. E. Scott of 347 Columbian avenue.  The regained consciousness Friday morning, according to a report from Mt. Carmel hospital, where she was taken by Mrs. Scott.  The girl also suffered the fracture of six ribs. 

     The accident happened when the child ran in front of the machine as it was turned from an alley near the Yeldem home, Mrs. Scott told police.”

1928:

Ethel’s father, Peter William Rader, died on May 25, 1928.  He was 68 years old.  Her mother, who was five years younger than her husband, survived.  She lived until 1939.  They were buried in the Mifflin Cemetery.


1930:



The year of 1930 actually started off well for Ethel’s oldest daughter, Mildred that should have made her mother quite proud of her.  

On the January 30, 1930, Page 10B of the Columbus Dispatch there is a feature spotlight story with the title: “Girl Makes Unusual School Record” which includes a pretty photograph of her sharing that she excelled in two categories at Columbus’ Central High School.


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The 1930 U.S. Census enumerated on April 10th, 1930 with Ethel Yeldem who is listed as age 44 and divorced.  Her occupation is listed as “Laundress from home.”  She is still living at 393 Belvidere Avenue in Columbus with the following children.:  Elaine age 10, Eleanor age 9, Byron age 8, Wayne age 6, Alice and Alan (who were twins) age 3-3/12.  Also her Geller children of: Mildred age 17, Ervan age 15, and Vernon age 12.

Charles M. Geller who was Ethel’s oldest child from her first marriage is missing in the family’s census records and has yet to be found where he was living at that time.  However, her son Eldon, age 19, shows up in the 1930 U.S. Census living as an inmate at the Institution for the Feeble Minded located at 1601 West Broad Street in Columbus.

May 6, 1930

Tuesday, May 6, 1930, was the day Ethel Marie Radar Geller Yeldem decided she could no longer endure living and carried out the murders of 7 of her living 11 children because she felt they would be better off not enduring a lifetime of hardships as she had known; she also knew she would be joining them soon herself. She tried to commit suicide the same day but did not actually pass away until May 16th. 

The Columbus Evening Dispatch of course carried the news by May 7 with many follow up articles appearing well beyond. Newspapers across Ohio, and indeed the entire country, also gave extensive coverage of the news because it was so shocking and heartbreaking.  
 
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As might be expected, some readers of the Columbus Dispatch wasted no time writing up and sending in their comments of displeasure about the newspaper's explicit coverage of this sad event to the point of their overdoing it and being in poor taste in the reader's opinion.
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It has to be noted that despite the trauma she experienced in her early life, Mildred Ann Geller went on to lead a highly productive and successful life passing away at the age of 97 in 2010. :  


"Anderson – The family of Mildred A. Lightfoot sadly announces her passing on March 15, 2010, at the age of 97, at her daughter Jean's residence. Mildred was born June 18, 1912 in Columbus, Ohio, to Otto and Ethel Geller. 

She graduated from Central High School in Columbus, Ohio in 1930 and began further education at Ohio State University. 
She moved to Anderson in 1931 to attend St. John's School of Nursing, graduating with honors in 1934. 

During her nursing career, Mildred worked at St. John's Hospital. She enjoyed private duty nursing and was hired as the first Nurse at Madison Heights High School. She was the School Nurse from 1959 to 1967. Mildred and her husband, Clarence E. "Mike" Lightfoot both retired in 1967 and spent over 20 years traveling and spending winters in Clearwater, Florida. They were members of the First United Methodist Church. Mildred was a member of Phi Chi Epsilon Sorority, Tau Chapter, 60 years. She was also active in Bridge groups until two years ago and her wonderfully special "Pixie Club" until one month ago. Mildred is survived by three daughters, Molly Lightfoot Blom and husband Douglas of Eddyville, Kentucky, Jean Lightfoot Faris and husband Joe of Anderson, and Betty Lightfoot and husband Ed of Brownsburg; six grandchildren and eleven great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents, C. Otto and Ethel Geller; husband, Clarence E. "Mike" Lightfoot, and brothers, Vernon and Ervin Geller. Services will be at 10:00 AM on March 19, 2010 at Robert D. Loose Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel; 200 W. 53rd Street; Anderson with Rev. Kaye Casterline officiating. Cremation will follow and burial will be in Knox Chapel Cemetery in Rigdon on Friday, March 19, 2010 Visitation will be 3-7:00 pm, March 18, 2010 at the funeral home. Honorary Pallbearers will be Richard Lightfoot, Ervin "Mickey" Geller, Douglas Blom II, Joe Faris, Ed Beaver, Michael Blom, Douglas Blom III, J.T. Fletcher and Jeff Kasper. 
Memorial contributions may be made to Community Hospital Home Health Services Hospice and The Anderson Public Library.

www.LooseFuneralHomes.com"