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Cecile (Kelly) Brown Whittemore

SALISBURY — Cecile (Kelly) Brown Whittemore died peacefully at Noble Horizons on Nov. 1, 2015. 

She was born Feb. 26, 1922, in Washington, D.C., to Christiane (Demanet) and Col. William Kelly.

“Celie” visited her maternal relatives in Belgium every summer until age 14 and spoke only French before entering kindergarten. Her family moved to Buffalo, N.Y., when her father was hired by Niagara Mohawk Power Company, where he eventually rose to president. 

Celie attended the Buffalo Seminary and graduated from Foxhollow School and Smith College (class of ’43, Zoology). She excelled both in the classroom and in athletics.

In 1944 she married Joseph J. Brown Jr., who was the brother of her best friend, Nancy Brown, at Foxhollow. 

During World War II, Celie worked as a volunteer nurse’s aide while Joe served as a paratrooper in the 101st Airborne and earned a Purple Heart. 

Following the war they resided in Pennsylvania and had two children. In 1947 they moved to South Kent School to join the faculty. Another son and two more daughters completed the family, which became, by dint of numbers, the major focus of Celie’s considerable energy! 

During this time, she was a Girl Scout leader and served on the board at the Kent Visiting Nurse Association. In 1958 she started her long career as a teacher of French and of biology as well as the coach of the JV tennis team. 

In 1976, her husband, Joe, had the first of a series of strokes; Celie began 10 years of devoted care until his death in 1986. Post retirement, she married a South Kent School colleague, Charles P. Whittemore, in 1988. This began a very happy time of extensive travel all over the USA and the world. Charlie introduced her to opera and left wing politics!  As she once commented: “I tell Charlie what everybody knows and he tells me what nobody knows.”

Celie and Charlie moved from Kent to Noble Horizons in 2005. Post-retirement and well into her 80s, Celie greatly enjoyed being a volunteer at both the Audubon Center in Sharon and in the recovery room at Sharon Hospital. Until her early 90s, she was also a Eucharistic Minister at Sacred Heart Church in Kent and later at St. Mary’s in Lakeville.

Celie was a remarkable person in every respect. She was a talented athlete, particularly ferocious on the tennis court. She was an accomplished equestrienne and figure skater. Additionally, she was a prolific knitter of lovely sweaters, hats, socks and mittens for young and old alike. Many lucky babies were ushered into the world with a layette of sweater, hat and booties. In later years she transitioned into needlepoint and populated the chairs, couches and beds of her entire family with her intricate and beautiful pillows. These projects occupied her hands while she and Charlie read hundreds of books together. Celie also was famous in many circles for her chocolate chip cookies, chocolate cake and watermelon pickles.

In spite of her considerable accomplishments, Celie was a very humble and unassuming person with a kind, generous and optimistic demeanor. She was thrilled by the accomplishments of her children and grandchildren (no matter how modest), making each feel important and cherished. Although deeply religious, she did not impose her beliefs on others. She had an incredibly accurate moral compass and was recently excited about Pope Francis and his attempts to make the Church more inclusive and compassionate. 

Celie is survived by her loving husband, Charlie; her five children, Joseph J. Brown  III of Aspen, Colo., Anne B. “Nan” Mason and her husband, Ben, of Charlotte, Vt., William “Beep” Kelly Brown and his wife, Rebecca Wright, of Philadelphia, Pa., Cecile Harmar “Harmie” Brown and her husband, Larry Tomita, of Solvang, Calif., and Juanita Brown “Nita” Howland and her husband, Mark, of Wareham, Mass.; her devoted grandchildren (who knew her as their beloved Boma), Benjamin Silliman “Benjy” Mason and his wife, Katrina Moorhead, of Houston, Texas, Alexander B. “Oopey” Mason of Chicago, Daniel Brown and his wife, Wesley Jacobs, of Aspen, Emma Howland Bell and her husband, Sam, of North Conway, N.H., and Samuel S. Howland and his fiancée, Sara Smoot, of Boulder, Colo. She felt fortunate to be present to welcome two great-grandchildren, Seren Cecile Mason and Dashiel Edwin Mason.

Celie also leaves her admired older sister, Diane Kelly Rittling of Buffalo, N.Y., and many well-loved nieces, nephews and godchildren, whom she showered on birthdays with cards and checks. She was also very fond of Charlie’s niece, Lisa, and nephew, Henry, and their respective partners. 

She had many friends both in Kent and Salisbury, including her dear friend Lib Mankin. 

Suffice it to say that Celie will be greatly missed by all who were lucky enough to know her.

The family wishes to thank each and every staff person at Noble Horizon for their diligent and compassionate ministrations to our mother. Thank you also to the fellow residents and volunteers who kept her supplied with books and up-to-speed on her iPad. She was a prolific and eclectic reader who’d read some 238 books since moving to the skilled nursing facility in April 2014. Celie was very happy to have been part of the Noble Horizons family.  

A memorial service will be held at Noble Horizons on Nov. 21 at 11 a.m.  

In lieu of flowers, gifts in Celie’s honor may be given to South Kent School, Noble Horizon Auxiliary or the Church of St. Mary in Lakeville. The Kenny Funeral Home in Sharon has charge of arrangements. 

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