She was a member of the Shockeysville United Methodist Church.
She married Marcus M. Adams in 1955. Mr. Adams was a beef cattle farmer and owner of the Esso station on Amherst Street. They raised two children. She was also a dedicated volunteer at Winchester Medical Center for 22 years.
Mrs. Adams is survived by a son and a daughter.
She was preceded in death by brothers, Elber, Lynn, John, Harold, Phillip and sisters, Mildred, Gyla Grace, and Maxine.
As a young woman, Mrs. Adams set out to see the world with friends taking jobs in only the best resorts from Maine to Florida.
She enjoyed travelling and visited Hawaii and many countries in Europe. In 2004 she travelled back to Maine with her daughter to see the resort of Poland Springs where she once worked.
She resided at Westminster Canterbury for the last five years and travelled around on her scooter with a Sam and Omies bumper sticker, her favorite breakfast spot in Nags Head.
She was a member of the Shockeysville United Methodist Church.
She married Marcus M. Adams in 1955. Mr. Adams was a beef cattle farmer and owner of the Esso station on Amherst Street. They raised two children. She was also a dedicated volunteer at Winchester Medical Center for 22 years.
Mrs. Adams is survived by a son and a daughter.
She was preceded in death by brothers, Elber, Lynn, John, Harold, Phillip and sisters, Mildred, Gyla Grace, and Maxine.
As a young woman, Mrs. Adams set out to see the world with friends taking jobs in only the best resorts from Maine to Florida.
She enjoyed travelling and visited Hawaii and many countries in Europe. In 2004 she travelled back to Maine with her daughter to see the resort of Poland Springs where she once worked.
She resided at Westminster Canterbury for the last five years and travelled around on her scooter with a Sam and Omies bumper sticker, her favorite breakfast spot in Nags Head.
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