In 1946, the couple married and moved to Ft. Washington, Pa. where she raised a daughter and helped keep the accounts for the family company, Crockett Machine Products in Warrington, Pa.
She was a bookkeeper and volunteer who took pride in her British roots.
For the last 50 yrs., Mrs. Crockett was active with the Charnwood Forest Chapter of the Daughters of the British Empire, which she had co-founded. She served on the board of the Victoria Home in New York State and was a member of the Fort Washington Auxiliary of Abington Memorial Hospital and the Ft. Washington Historical Society.
Her husband said she was an excellent cook and enjoyed experimenting with new recipes for the gourmet club they hosted.
Mrs. Crockett is also survived by a daughter, Joyann Cusack and two grandsons.
In 1946, the couple married and moved to Ft. Washington, Pa. where she raised a daughter and helped keep the accounts for the family company, Crockett Machine Products in Warrington, Pa.
She was a bookkeeper and volunteer who took pride in her British roots.
For the last 50 yrs., Mrs. Crockett was active with the Charnwood Forest Chapter of the Daughters of the British Empire, which she had co-founded. She served on the board of the Victoria Home in New York State and was a member of the Fort Washington Auxiliary of Abington Memorial Hospital and the Ft. Washington Historical Society.
Her husband said she was an excellent cook and enjoyed experimenting with new recipes for the gourmet club they hosted.
Mrs. Crockett is also survived by a daughter, Joyann Cusack and two grandsons.
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