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Daisy Lee <I>Thomas</I> Fuller

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Daisy Lee Thomas Fuller

Birth
Venus, Johnson County, Texas, USA
Death
1 Sep 2000 (aged 81)
Gainesville, Cooke County, Texas, USA
Burial
Gainesville, Cooke County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Obituary from Gainesville Daily Register:

Graveside services for Daisy Lee (Thomas) Fuller, 81, of Gainesville, are set for 2pm Sunday at Fairview Cemetery with Percy Parrish, minister of Commerce Street Church of Christ, officiating. Arrangements are under the direction of the Geo. J. Carroll and Son Funeral Home.

Mrs. Fuller died September 1, 2000, at the Renaissance Care Center. She was born February 14, 1919, in Venus, Texas, to Joseph Henry and Daisy Lee (Hamm) Thomas. On June 20, 1938, she married James D. Fuller in Marietta, Oklahoma. She was a homemaker and a member of the Commerce Street Church of Christ. She was a long-time resident of Gainesville, having graduated from Gainesville High School in 1936. She was Past Noble Grand of May Star Rebekah Lodge, Past Oracle of Royal Neighbors Lodge; and a member of the Ladies Auxiliary United Transportation Union.

Survivors include her sons and daughters-in-law, Dennis and Glenda Fuller of Gainesville, and Bobby and Kay Fuller of Valley View; six grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband on January 06, 1997; son, Johnny D. Fuller on April 30, 1996; and one grandson.
End of Obituary


Daisy Lee was my grandmother and I have many fond memories of her. She was an only child but always said she wished she had had a sister. She loved to watch scary movies, listen to rock music, and get together with family. You hardly ever saw her without a piece of Doublemint gum.

Before I was born, Daisy loved being involved with the Lodges so she could spend time with other women she was friends with. She liked to gather and share food at the meetings. Daisy wasn't much of a cook but she could make a wonderful Ambrosia fruit salad or Vanilla Wafer Cake.

Daisy had the support of her mother, who she shared her name with, and her father. She lived near them until the passing of her mother and relied on them to help her raise two boys while her husband was in Germany during WWII.

As a child, I remember my grandmother as a fun loving person who liked to play games. She allowed her grandchildren to draw on her tile floor with chalk and play TV Guide baseball in the house. She also enjoyed reading, doing crossword puzzles, and always loved dogs.

In her later years, Daisy developed dementia and it slowly stole her memory from her. She also battled with Diabetes that later claimed her life. She was a wonderful woman, friend, wife, mother, and grandmother.
Obituary from Gainesville Daily Register:

Graveside services for Daisy Lee (Thomas) Fuller, 81, of Gainesville, are set for 2pm Sunday at Fairview Cemetery with Percy Parrish, minister of Commerce Street Church of Christ, officiating. Arrangements are under the direction of the Geo. J. Carroll and Son Funeral Home.

Mrs. Fuller died September 1, 2000, at the Renaissance Care Center. She was born February 14, 1919, in Venus, Texas, to Joseph Henry and Daisy Lee (Hamm) Thomas. On June 20, 1938, she married James D. Fuller in Marietta, Oklahoma. She was a homemaker and a member of the Commerce Street Church of Christ. She was a long-time resident of Gainesville, having graduated from Gainesville High School in 1936. She was Past Noble Grand of May Star Rebekah Lodge, Past Oracle of Royal Neighbors Lodge; and a member of the Ladies Auxiliary United Transportation Union.

Survivors include her sons and daughters-in-law, Dennis and Glenda Fuller of Gainesville, and Bobby and Kay Fuller of Valley View; six grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband on January 06, 1997; son, Johnny D. Fuller on April 30, 1996; and one grandson.
End of Obituary


Daisy Lee was my grandmother and I have many fond memories of her. She was an only child but always said she wished she had had a sister. She loved to watch scary movies, listen to rock music, and get together with family. You hardly ever saw her without a piece of Doublemint gum.

Before I was born, Daisy loved being involved with the Lodges so she could spend time with other women she was friends with. She liked to gather and share food at the meetings. Daisy wasn't much of a cook but she could make a wonderful Ambrosia fruit salad or Vanilla Wafer Cake.

Daisy had the support of her mother, who she shared her name with, and her father. She lived near them until the passing of her mother and relied on them to help her raise two boys while her husband was in Germany during WWII.

As a child, I remember my grandmother as a fun loving person who liked to play games. She allowed her grandchildren to draw on her tile floor with chalk and play TV Guide baseball in the house. She also enjoyed reading, doing crossword puzzles, and always loved dogs.

In her later years, Daisy developed dementia and it slowly stole her memory from her. She also battled with Diabetes that later claimed her life. She was a wonderful woman, friend, wife, mother, and grandmother.


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