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Beulah Madeline <I>Lewis</I> Bell

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Beulah Madeline Lewis Bell

Birth
Harrison County, Kentucky, USA
Death
10 Sep 2013 (aged 88)
Kentucky, USA
Burial
Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.0617611, Longitude: -84.5121306
Memorial ID
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Eldest daughter of Almond and May Wilson, she was preceded in death by: her parents; her husband of 58 years, Franklin D. Bell; and five younger siblings. She is survived by: a son and his wife, Jeffery and Marie Bell, of Nolensville, Tennessee; and two granddaughters, Lydia Nichole and Rachel Elizabeth Bell, both of Knoxville, Tennessee. A devoted wife and mother, she lived a lifetime of service to others, helping numerous family members and friends with needs both great and small. She was a member of Woodland Christian Church since 1958.

One of her lasting legacies is 42 years of volunteer service to Cardinal Hill Hospital where, among other things, she started and managed the hospital gift shop in order to raise money to buy hospital equipment. She served as president of the Hospital Auxiliary, and was an integral part of the hospital annual telethon. On a yearly basis, she procured enough donations of food from local businesses to support the army of telethon volunteers. In 1989, she was nominated for the LOV award by the Volunteer Center of the Bluegrass.
Eldest daughter of Almond and May Wilson, she was preceded in death by: her parents; her husband of 58 years, Franklin D. Bell; and five younger siblings. She is survived by: a son and his wife, Jeffery and Marie Bell, of Nolensville, Tennessee; and two granddaughters, Lydia Nichole and Rachel Elizabeth Bell, both of Knoxville, Tennessee. A devoted wife and mother, she lived a lifetime of service to others, helping numerous family members and friends with needs both great and small. She was a member of Woodland Christian Church since 1958.

One of her lasting legacies is 42 years of volunteer service to Cardinal Hill Hospital where, among other things, she started and managed the hospital gift shop in order to raise money to buy hospital equipment. She served as president of the Hospital Auxiliary, and was an integral part of the hospital annual telethon. On a yearly basis, she procured enough donations of food from local businesses to support the army of telethon volunteers. In 1989, she was nominated for the LOV award by the Volunteer Center of the Bluegrass.


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