Lucy Frazier

Obituary - Mrs. Lucy (Mullins) Frazier
Mrs. Lucy Frazier who died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. O. Baker, October 15th, was for more than fifty years a devoted and an efficient worker in the Master’s vineyard, taking an active part in church, sabbath school and missionary work. Her implicit faith, unflagging zeal, self-denial, sweet counsel and quiet unassuming manner won the confidence and love of all who knew her. Even after the infirmities of age prevented active work, her gentle Christian influence continued as a positive benediction to her family and a large circle of friends. As physical life became weaker, faith in the Savior grew stronger and stronger until the day He received her into the heavenly home. To her, death was not a door that shut our life, but one that opened into a larger life. It was a home going, a clasping of hands long loved and lost awhile. None will look back on her memory without a feeling that there is such a life as a God-filled life and that the church, home and community have suffered a great loss in her departure. Her remains rest in the Bateman Cemetery, beside those of her husband, beneath the blessing written of the dead who die in the Lord, but she lives - in the Great Beyond with her Lord and loved ones - and in the many lives that remain here on earth, blessed and hallowed by her influence.
Edw. K. Temple, Pastor

[Editor’s note: Lucinda “Lucy” Mullins was born near Clarendon 26 Feb 1848. She 1st married A, W. Youngblood (1842-1846) and 2nd Dr. J. W. Frazier (1826-1912). Lucy died 15 Oct 1916. She was the daughter of Alfred Mullins(1812-1860) and Elizabeth Allen Atkins Mullins (18 Nov 1877, age 58)


Funeral Notice - Died - Mrs. Lucy Frazer -Age 68 yrs. 7 mos. 27 days - Services Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. this afternoon 2:30 o’clock - conducted by Rev. Edw. K. Temple - assisted by Rev. H. B. Trimble - Interment at the Bateman Cemetery October 16, 1916.


Source: Copied from a funeral notice or invitation which was printed on a white card or paper with a black border and was usually delivered to the homes of friends by a messenger wearing white gloves. The ladies carried handkerchiefs which were also white with a black border when they attended funerals.

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