"GRANDMA" NAN SUGGS OBITUARY ----------------------------------------------------------------- Submitted by: Rebecca Shannon Email: sshannon@artelc.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free Information on the Internet, data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or for presentation by other persons or organizations. Files may be printed or copied for Personal use only. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for purposes other than stated above must obtain the written consent of the file contributor. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Van Buren County Paper 1936 Volume XXV "Grandma" Nan Suggs Died Saturday Night Nancy L. Suggs, Choctaw township's oldest citizen, Peacefully passed away at the home of he daughter, Mrs George Arnold, with whom she made her home at 10:35 o'clock Saturday night, January 18, 1936, aged 87 years 10 months and 8 days. The body was interred in the Huie Cimetery Sunday afternoon beside that of her husband, following an inpressive funeral service at the home conducted by Elder Ross of Harding College, Searcy. "Grandma Nan" as she was known to her many friends, was born in Southwest Missouri March 10th, 1848, the daughter of Richard and Elizabeth Fisher. On March 8, 1868 she was married to Charles L. Suggs and immediately following the ceremony they started to Arkansas to establish a home. The trip was made in a wagon and said to have been the first thimble skein wagon ever brought to Van Buren Co. They arrived on Holly Mountain, northeast of Clinton, March 28, where they stopped for a few months, later settling on a homestead in Choctaw township just north of the present home of C. L. Kidd, one of their grandsons. Eighteen years later they moved across the Choctaw at what was later known as the Sam Jennings farm. Four children were born to this union, all of whom survive As follows: Mrs Lucy Arnold and Mrs Betty Kidd of Choctaw, Mrs. Dovie Fisher of Arizona, and Miles Suggs of Choctaw. The husband father passed away April 10, 1922. Seventeen grandchildren, 34 great-grandchildren also survive. Fifty-six years ago, 1880, she made profession of her faith In Christ uniting with the Christian church at Choctaw with which organization she continued to hold her membership until the day of death. On June 5, 1934, she suffered a paralytic stroke and from then on was bedfast and helpless. During these many months she bore her suffering with patience and was fully prepared to meet her Savior when the hour came. "Grandma" was a good woman, a kind neighbor and a true friend, posessing those characteristics which endeared her to her family and friends. No doubt in recent months, due to her continued illness, she sometimes longed for the hour of sleep. It has come - all the tired muscles of her body are at rest. The anxious hours of anxiety, fears and troubles have past. "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth; yea saithe the spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and their works do follow them."