Obit: Rena Cox Boney
- Madison Parish, LA Submitted by:
Richard P. Sevier Midland, Texas
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From Tallulah Madison
Journal, July 16, 1941
RENA COX BONEY
The passing of one of Madison Parish's
beloved citizens saddened many hearts when news came of the death Sunday
afternoon, July 13, of Mrs. R. K. Boney, in the Vicksburg Sanitarium.
Mrs. Boney had
recently celebrated her 75th birthday, when her personal popularity was
attested by many friends.
Funeral services were
held Monday, July 14, at 5:00 p. m., from the Presbyterian Church of Tallulah,
with Rev. David E. Holt, son-in-law of Mrs. Boney, and rector of the Texarkana
Episcopal Church and Rev. H. N. Alexander of the Tallulah Presbyterian Church
officiating. Choirs of the Presbyterian and Episcopal Churches sang. Interment
followed in Silver Cross Cemetery.
Mrs. Boney was born
in Clinton, Mississippi, February 14, 1866, and attended Hillman College and
after graduation from this institution, taught in the college the following
year.
She was before her
marriage, Rena Belle Cox, and was married to the late Richard K. Boney
April 27, 1896. After living in Washington for three years
Mr. and Mrs. Boney moved to the Duckport Plantation, Madison Parish, where they
made their home until 1922, when they moved to Tallulah.
Mrs. Boney lost a
daughter, Dorothy,
in 1912, who died at 11 years of age, while the family
lived on Duckport Plantation. The sad and untimely death of her only son, Owen Hamilton
Boney, occurred in Panama in 1940. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Will
Sevier, Jr., and Mrs. David E. Holt
of Texarkana, and four grandchildren, Dick Sevier, Dorothy Sevier, Sherrill
Sevier and David E. Holt, Jr., of Texarkana.
Pallbearers were: Dr.
H. S. Provine, C.C. Adams, Barton Sevier, Ralph
Taylor, Tom Fortner of Monroe, Don Sevier of Vicksburg, and Albert Kirsch of
Mound.
An outstanding club
woman, Mrs. Boney has endeared herself locally in her untiring work in the Book
Club, Garden Club, Eastern Star, American Legion Auxiliary, Cemetery
Association and Presbyterian Church and Madison Parish Unit of the Louisiana
Society for Crippled Children. She has served as officer in each of these and
became prominent in state and national club work when, after serving as
President of the Tallulah Book Club for two terms from 1926 through 1928, the
attractive club house was built the following year. She was then elected to the
office of president of the fifth district of Louisiana and in 1930 was elected
state president of Louisiana Federated Clubs and was reelected the following
tear. In this capacity, Mrs. Boney distinguished herself as a club woman,
through the combination of her ability and her womanly charm. She later was
named on the board of directors from Louisiana General Federation.
When the charter for
the American Legion Auxiliary was made, Mrs. Boney was named first president,
and after numerous other presidents she was again re-elected, and was the
president of this organization for the past two years.
Typifying the
southern lady, Mrs. Boney was at all times gracious, generous and thoughtful of
others, both in her personal and public contacts.
In her private life
she was a beloved wife and parent and was herself, ever loyal and devoted to
her family.
From November 29,
1929 Madison Journal
NEW FEDERATION
PRESIDENT WANTS ACTIVITY TO BEGIN
Mrs. Boney Asks Clubs
To Support Convention Findings
(Times-Picayune)
A plea that
organizations in the Louisiana Federation of Women's Clubs take cognizance of
the recommendations and the resolutions adopted at the recent convention in
Baton Rouge and plan effective work along those lines has been made by Mrs.
Richard K. Boney of Tallulah, new President, in her first official
post-convention statement.
Activities during the
year will include completion of the Louisiana Federation's endowment fund,
organization of junior clubs if possible in connection with every adult club in
the state, application of the universal membership basis to affiliated
associations throughout Louisiana; and more thoroughly organized and active
district federations, as suggested by the outgoing President in her convention
address.
"The aftermath
of a convention is retrospection and introspection,” Mrs. Boney writes.
"In introspection one looks back on solved problems and the results
developed and obtained. The retiring President, Mrs. A. M. Arthur, who has been
so faithful to the aims and growth of the federation through the past four
years, should be justly proud of achievements during her regime.
"Among them are
the establishment of the Louisiana Clubwomen, which had been a federation
project for years; the adoption of a recommendation for universal membership, which will give Louisiana
increased representation in the General Federation and place the state in line
for more appointments to general offices; and completion of the $10,000 loan
scholarship fund, so ably managed for so many years by Mrs. John Shuttleworth of Shreveport.
"The endowment
fund is almost completed and it is the present hope that our organization shall
be on sound financial basis within the next two years."
The Louisiana
Federation is composed of 136 clubs, all of which are working along community,
social, literary, civic and educational lines.
Music Wanted
Mrs. Boney, in asking
the cooperation of clubs in carrying out the convention recommendations,
especially urged attention to Miss Mary Mims' plea for "a singing
federation" and to the need for a study of niothereraft
and health, which was stressed by both Dr. Marie Long of Millikin, La., and
Miss Agnes Morris of New Orleans and the State Board of Health.
The new President was
First-Vice-President at the time of her election. She had been President of
the Fifth District Federation for three years and is a member of the Tallulah
Book Club, of which she has been a member for eight years. She is Secretary of
Christian education and ministerial relief for the Red River Presbytery of the
Southern Presbyterian Church, and is a worthy matron of the Order of Easter
Star.
She is a witty
President too. Her bon mot at the convention banquet was so spicely offered that it was happily received. It came after
a certain amount of bickering on the part of one or two members during the
daily session and also after the introduction of Mrs. Ben Hooper, General
Federation Chairman of International Relations, who would talk at the night
session on "Worldy Amity."
"If we fight for
anything," she declared, "let us fight for peace."