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Nancy Gullion Services Held Last Week
Taught School In County Many Years
The little community of Sparta received a great
shock on last Saturday, January 13 when Mildred Louise Riley come into
the home of Mrs. Nancy Gullion and found her remains lying partly across
her bed.
Mrs. Gullion had gone to Cincinnati, O., on the
Thursday morning preceding her death, to file her income tax report and
told her friends that she would not return until Friday evening. She
returned as planned, and apparently had spent a few hours in putting
away her purchases. It was evident that she had died of a heart attack
sometime before midnight on January 12.
Nancy Rainey Gullion was born in Gallatin County
near Sparta on the John C. Hamilton farm. She was the eldest child of
Mrs. Margaret McDowell Rainey and John H. Rainey; attended school at the
old Hamilton School, later went to Richmond College and took extension
work. She taught school for a number of years at Hamilton, Craigs Creek,
Union, Lowe and Glencoe Schools.
On April 7, 1902, she married Curtis M. Gullion at
Verona in the St. Patrick Catholic parsonage, the ceremony being
performed by Rev. John P. Cavanaugh. One child born in 1903, died one
year later.
Mrs. Gullion lived at the Eagle Valley farm, near
Sparta, for more than 30 years, moving to Sparta three weeks before the
death of her husband, which occurred on January 29, 1936. Until the time
of her death she had lived at the home purchased shortly before the
death of her husband.
She had been ill for several years but was able to
be about her work and take an active part in the affairs of the
community.
She was an active member of the Carroll County
Woman’s Club, and vice president of the Altar Society of St. Joseph’s
Catholic Church, Warsaw, where she was in regular attendance.
A Requim High Mass was sung by the Rev. George
Stier and the choir, of St. Joseph Church, on Tuesday morning from the
Carlton Fjneral Home with burial in Carrollton Cemetery. Surviving are
two sisters, Mrs. Thomas Deatherage, Sanders; Mrs. Lawrence Hanson,
Spokane, Wash; two nephews, Golden Smith, Cincinnati, O., and Tilman
Smith of Sanders; one brother, John Rainey of Pendleton, Oregon. It can
be truthfully state that Mrs. Nancy knew every foot of land in Gallatin
County.
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