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Elizabeth <I>Thompson</I> Barry

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Elizabeth Thompson Barry

Birth
Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa, USA
Death
1 Mar 2013 (aged 91)
Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Elizabeth "Liz" Thompson Barry, 91, of Cedar Rapids passed away March 1, 2013 at her home after several years of living with cancer. Visitation will be held from 9 to 11 AM on Saturday, March 9, 2013 at Cedar Memorial Park Funeral Home and graveside service to follow at Oak Hill Cemetery. A memorial service will be scheduled at a later date.

She was preceded in death by her parents Alice and Malcolm Thompson, her brother Malcolm Thompson, and her husband, Donald S. Barry. She is survived by her two sons, Donald (Roxy) Barry of Andover, Massachusetts, Steven (Nancy) Barry of Marion, three grandchildren, Ivan (Rebekah) Barry of Carpinteria, CA, Heather Barry of Washington D.C., Keziban Barry of NYC, two great grandchildren, Kiyan and Aydin Barry, her sister, Alice Smith of Cedar Rapids, and two nieces, Cynthia (Janak) Thompson-Adhikari of Cedar Rapids, and Nancy Thompson of NYC.

Liz was born September 4, 1921 in St. Luke's Hospital in Cedar Rapids. She graduated from Franklin High School in January of 1939 as the valedictorian, attended Lindenwood College for 1 year and graduated from Carleton College in 1943 with a B.A. in botany. After working for Dow Chemical in Midland, MI for a year, she returned to Cedar Rapids, rolled bandages for the Red Cross, and took flying lessons to the extent of flying solo to Marshalltown and back. She met Don Barry when he was home on furlough prior to serving as a flight engineer on a B-29. They had a week of dates, digging postholes and flying (literally) around eastern Iowa. They were married on May 25, 1946. In the summer of 1946 they started the Don Barry Construction Company, builder of residential homes in northeast Cedar Rapids. In order to help her husband's business, Liz started taking accounting courses at Coe College in the 1950's, and from Coe she earned a second B.A. in 1984 with a major in business administration. Early in their marriage Liz wrote a play for the radio and several plays for Play Time Poppy. She also loved to write poetry. Over the years she served as treasurer of such organizations as the White Cross Society and the Junior League. She was a member of First Presbyterian Church since 1935, serving as a trustee, an elder, and treasurer. Her mother's father had helped establish the Cedar Rapids Gazette and her family had a life-long relationship with the paper. In 1975 she was elected to the Board of Directors of the Gazette Company and served as secretary of the corporation until her retirement in 2009. All her life she read the Gazette thoughtfully from page to page and was remarkably knowledgeable about issues in Cedar Rapids. She was very proud of Cedar Rapids and loved this town dearly. She was equally proud of Iowa. Liz was a member of PEO FO, tourist club, and various book and bridge clubs. She was an avid reader of all sorts of books ranging from Sue Grafton to Patrick O'Brian. She was an excellent cribbage and bridge player and she loved playing golf, bowling, and growing vegetables. She had a vegetable garden for 65 years, producing a delicious crop of Celebrity tomatoes even in the summer of 2012. Her major in botany served her well for she was remarkably knowledgeable about plants. Liz was also an avid fisherman, fishing on Deer Lake in Wisconsin from 1923 through the summer of 2012, a summer in which she caught 6 bass and hooked a musky during one glorious 45 minute evening. She loved sports, particularly Iowa football, but she also loved watching Iowa basketball, both the men's and women's teams. At age 16 she came home one day with a bloody nose, told her mom that she'd been playing football with the guys, so her mom put a stop to that, but Liz retained her love of sports all her life. She and her husband often traveled out west to visit his sister and her family, and they also journeyed to Istanbul, Turkey and Cambridge, England to visit their son Don and his family. In the summer of 2006, Liz traveled the length and breadth of Scotland with Don and Roxy, a trip she dearly loved. We will miss her greatly.
Elizabeth "Liz" Thompson Barry, 91, of Cedar Rapids passed away March 1, 2013 at her home after several years of living with cancer. Visitation will be held from 9 to 11 AM on Saturday, March 9, 2013 at Cedar Memorial Park Funeral Home and graveside service to follow at Oak Hill Cemetery. A memorial service will be scheduled at a later date.

She was preceded in death by her parents Alice and Malcolm Thompson, her brother Malcolm Thompson, and her husband, Donald S. Barry. She is survived by her two sons, Donald (Roxy) Barry of Andover, Massachusetts, Steven (Nancy) Barry of Marion, three grandchildren, Ivan (Rebekah) Barry of Carpinteria, CA, Heather Barry of Washington D.C., Keziban Barry of NYC, two great grandchildren, Kiyan and Aydin Barry, her sister, Alice Smith of Cedar Rapids, and two nieces, Cynthia (Janak) Thompson-Adhikari of Cedar Rapids, and Nancy Thompson of NYC.

Liz was born September 4, 1921 in St. Luke's Hospital in Cedar Rapids. She graduated from Franklin High School in January of 1939 as the valedictorian, attended Lindenwood College for 1 year and graduated from Carleton College in 1943 with a B.A. in botany. After working for Dow Chemical in Midland, MI for a year, she returned to Cedar Rapids, rolled bandages for the Red Cross, and took flying lessons to the extent of flying solo to Marshalltown and back. She met Don Barry when he was home on furlough prior to serving as a flight engineer on a B-29. They had a week of dates, digging postholes and flying (literally) around eastern Iowa. They were married on May 25, 1946. In the summer of 1946 they started the Don Barry Construction Company, builder of residential homes in northeast Cedar Rapids. In order to help her husband's business, Liz started taking accounting courses at Coe College in the 1950's, and from Coe she earned a second B.A. in 1984 with a major in business administration. Early in their marriage Liz wrote a play for the radio and several plays for Play Time Poppy. She also loved to write poetry. Over the years she served as treasurer of such organizations as the White Cross Society and the Junior League. She was a member of First Presbyterian Church since 1935, serving as a trustee, an elder, and treasurer. Her mother's father had helped establish the Cedar Rapids Gazette and her family had a life-long relationship with the paper. In 1975 she was elected to the Board of Directors of the Gazette Company and served as secretary of the corporation until her retirement in 2009. All her life she read the Gazette thoughtfully from page to page and was remarkably knowledgeable about issues in Cedar Rapids. She was very proud of Cedar Rapids and loved this town dearly. She was equally proud of Iowa. Liz was a member of PEO FO, tourist club, and various book and bridge clubs. She was an avid reader of all sorts of books ranging from Sue Grafton to Patrick O'Brian. She was an excellent cribbage and bridge player and she loved playing golf, bowling, and growing vegetables. She had a vegetable garden for 65 years, producing a delicious crop of Celebrity tomatoes even in the summer of 2012. Her major in botany served her well for she was remarkably knowledgeable about plants. Liz was also an avid fisherman, fishing on Deer Lake in Wisconsin from 1923 through the summer of 2012, a summer in which she caught 6 bass and hooked a musky during one glorious 45 minute evening. She loved sports, particularly Iowa football, but she also loved watching Iowa basketball, both the men's and women's teams. At age 16 she came home one day with a bloody nose, told her mom that she'd been playing football with the guys, so her mom put a stop to that, but Liz retained her love of sports all her life. She and her husband often traveled out west to visit his sister and her family, and they also journeyed to Istanbul, Turkey and Cambridge, England to visit their son Don and his family. In the summer of 2006, Liz traveled the length and breadth of Scotland with Don and Roxy, a trip she dearly loved. We will miss her greatly.


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