Betty Louise McDonald
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Betty Louise McDonald
July 11, 1934 - November 12, 2016
Betty Kirkland McDonald, 82,
passed away November 12, 2016. She was
born on July 11, 1934, in Lufkin, to James and Lillie
Kirkland. A longtime resident of Port
Neches and Nederland in Jefferson
County, Betty lived her last ten years
in Village Mills, Hardin
County. Like her family ancestors reaching back to
the early 1800’s, she was a lifetime resident of East
Texas.
Betty graduated from Port Neches High School (now Port Neches-Groves
High School) in 1952.
She dedicated the following ten years to mothering her family—five children, in
all—then soon began her career outside the home. An exceptionally intelligent person, Betty worked
diligently to improve her position.
Early jobs included cooking donuts at a Woolworth’s lunch counter and
selling Avon door to door. She then gained employment as a county
welfare caseworker. She continued to be
promoted in her work, eventually retiring in 1994 as a supervisor for the Texas
Department of Human Services in its Jefferson
County offices.
Betty led a life of quiet service
to others. She was devoted to her
children, for whom she was a single parent for years, steadfastly teaching them
the virtues of responsibility and ethical behavior. She often helped friends and neighbors
threading their way through the intricacies of Medicaid disability assistance
and other bureaucratic systems, both private and public. After retirement, she served as a volunteer
for twenty years with the Al-Anon information center in Beaumont.
Known to family, friends, and
colleagues for her resilient and independent character, Betty also was known to
think for herself while declining to impose her thinking on others. She held strong views but did not advertise
them. She was a private person with a
sharp sense of humor, and held a short attention span for boasters and chronic
complainers. She adhered to the values
of discretion and loyalty. She took
great joy in her children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.
Betty also had a passion for
reading and gardening. She was an
accomplished cook, with a fondness for fried shrimp and fresh salad and iced
tea—or any meal celebrated over a family gathering, of which there were
many. Her children, though spread far
and wide geographically, from New Mexico to Wisconsin to Europe,
always remained close to her. Betty
especially enjoyed traveling, and did so frequently until a disabling accident
in 2014 left her, for the most part, homebound.
Her last two years were difficult but she remained as resilient as
ever. She died at home with family,
where she wanted to be.
Surviving family members include
husband, Dennis McDonald; children, Christopher Cook, Wayne Cook, Sidney Cook,
Sheila Ellingson, and Scott Cook; grandchildren, Athena Gerbsch-Cook, Cameron
Cook, Carson Cook, Conor Cook, Benjamin Julik, Alison Vruno, Aubrey Cook, Josh
Cook, and Constance Cook; and great-grandchildren, Asa Christopher Montie,
Christopher Joseph Vruno, Andrew Joseph Vruno, Kirkland Cook, Jordyn Kay Cook,
and Eva June Cook.
Betty's funeral service will be held Saturday, November 19, 2016, at Wildwood
Village Mills
United Methodist
Church, 5934 FM 3063, Village Mills. An open-casket viewing to say good-bye will
begin at 10:00 a.m., with her funeral service at 11:00 a.m., at the church,
under the direction of Broussard’s, Kountze.
There will be an informal lunch gathering of
family and friends at the church afterward to celebrate Betty’s life, with her interment to follow at 2:30 p.m., at Oak Bluff
Memorial Park, Port
Neches, Texas.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Wildwood Village Mills
United Methodist
Church, or to an organization of one’s choice.
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