Happy 50th Anniversary, Steve Quick and Susan Ogle,
and God's Blessings.
greg.jackson.edlp@gmail.com

Showing posts with label Jane Rosborough. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane Rosborough. Show all posts

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Jane Rosborough Jackson - Married 45 Years

Jane Rosborough - MHS 66 - married John Jackson 45 years ago.
Happy Anniversary and God's Blessings for many more.

Happy 45th anniversary to Johnny Honey❣️. My rock! My life changed the day I met you❤️. A motorcycle ride and Dunkin Donuts won my heart ðŸ˜†



 Moliners - especially Garfielders - are especially addicted to donuts.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

In Memory of Martha Getz Cogswell

This photo in the snow was taken at Kathy Wilcox's birthday party in 1963.
Left to right are: Jane Rosborough, Ann Paschall, and Marty Getz.



I am in Michigan and yesterday John and J were lucky enough to be able to drive 60 miles south to a celebration of Marty Getz Cogswell's life at her family's summer cottage.

Marty's sister Pam and brother John were there as were her three children, Sara, Katy and Tim. and so were Marty's grandchildren including 7 month old twins, whom she never got to meet.

Marty was quite the tennis player so the gathering was held next to the tennis courts. Tim Neally was one of the speakers as well as Pam, John and Marty's children.

It was very sad but also very uplifting. I am so glad that I happened to be at our family cottage and could attend this special service.

I also got to connect with Laurie Johnson Manis as her family has a cottage where the Getz family gathers every summer.

Such a tragic loss of life but Marty lived life to the fullest! It is just too bad her grandchildren won't be able to know her and to enjoy her lust for life.

RIP old friend!

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Martha Getz Cogswell 

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Martha Getz Cogswell passed away suddenly but peacefully on November 22, 2011, after a very brief bout with cancer. She was born June 16, 1948, in Davenport, Iowa - the youngest child of the late William A. and Kaye S. Getz. Marty grew up in Moline, Illinois. 

She attended St. Katharine's School in Davenport, Iowa, before heading to Pine Manor College in Massachusetts and then onto the University of Colorado in Boulder. She graduated in 1970 and remained a Buffs fan for life. Marty moved to Colorado Springs in 1974 and has lived here happily ever since. 

She is survived by her children and their spouses, Katharine (Michael) Courtney of Saratoga, California; Sara (Michael) Baker of Shawnee, Kansas; and Timothy (McKinzie) Cogswell of Las Vegas, Nevada, and by her beloved grandchildren, Madison and Chayse Courtney, Cohen Baker, Paizley Cogswell, and twin grandsons due this winter. 

Marty will also be deeply missed by her siblings, Stephanie Sandell, Pamela (Rob) Garton and John Getz; her aunts and an uncle; dozens of lucky cousins, nieces and nephews; many cherished friends, and her good and faithful golden retriever, Bailey. Marty devoted generous energy to causes she cared about, including the Junior League, Penrose Hospital, the YMCA, the Pikes Peak Chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, the Pikes Peak Library, the Olympic Training Center and, nationally, the Alzheimer's Association . 

In 2008, Marty retired from Cheyenne Mountain School District 12, where she'd provided years of care and service to Cheyenne students, parents, teachers and administrators from her post at the district and high school administrative offices. An avid athlete, Marty walked vigorously, skied beautifully, and played tennis with disarming strength and grace. Many of those games were played at Cheyenne Mountain Country Club - a home-away-from-home where she made some of her closest friends. 

Marty spent all the summers of her life on the shores of Lake Michigan. Her days there - with extended family, beach walks, sailboats, lucky glass, sunsets and thunderstorms - were among her happiest. She relished other travel, too - jaunts to visit pretty places and life-long pals and, most especially, to be with her children and grandchildren. They were her highest priority and greatest joy, and she leaves them awash in love and gratitude. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, November 26 at 5:00pm at Chapel of our Savior, 8 Fourth Street, Colorado Springs, Colorado with a reception following. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Penrose Cancer Center, 2222 North Nevada, Colorado Springs, Colorado 80907 or the Alzheimer's Association , Colorado Chapter, 455 Sherman Street, Suite 500, Denver, Colorado 80203.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Moline woman restores 1901 home

Ball-Rosborough House


Moline woman restores 1901 home:


In the late 1800s, a stretch of Moline's 11th Avenue between 7th and 13th streets was dubbed Millionaire's Row, a reference to the magnificent homes that had been built on the bluff by well-to-do business and civic leaders, most of them associated with the John Deere family.

Several of the homes have been lost through the years, but a majority remain under the stewardship of thoughtful owners.

Among them is the 1901 Ball-Rosborough House, named for John Deere's nephew and the nephew's son, located on the corner of 11th Avenue and 13th Street. [C. R. Rosborough - grandfather of Jane Rosborough, MHS 66]

Current owner Jolene Keeney is no relation to the Deeres, but she is honored to live in the old home and intends to restore the turreted, Queen Anne-style brick home to showplace status.

"They (the builders) showed so much strength, love and commitment when they built these old houses, and it is an honor to carry on the traditions that were started here," she said one recent day while giving a tour of her home.

"It really is a family home. It feels so comfortable when my (grown) family and I sit down to dinner in the dining room," she said. "And the house just seems to sigh a relaxing sigh when my little granddaughter is playing with her toys on the huge front porch."

Keeney bought the property in 2008 when she was looking for a "new challenge." She already had re-done three homes, including properties in the Village of East Davenport as well as in Delmar and Bellevue, Iowa.

She wanted a place with "big trees, brick streets and a front porch." When she drove by the house at 11th and 13th, she said to herself, "there has to be something really, really wrong for me not to buy that house."

She was not disappointed. The house is structurally sound, and the slate roof, brick exterior and curved glass windows are in good shape. Inside, the rooms have never been altered for apartments, and the fine red oak woodwork has never been painted.

Although homeless people broke in during a couple of years when the home was vacant, they did no damage. A striking stained-glass window at the second-floor staircase landing remains intact, as do beveled glass doors and windows, two fireplaces with mirrors in the mantels and four sets of working pocket doors.

Among Keeney's first tasks were "a massive tree-removal project" in which she took down the lot's overgrown weed trees, leaving oaks, hickories and other desirables, and fixing a water main that burst 32 days after she moved in.

Still on the list: continuing to repair the wood porch, making storm windows, refinishing the wood floors, and removing old wallpaper and paint.

Being interested in history, Keeney has had great fun researching the life of the home's various owners, finding boxes of original building receipts in the attic and locating Bobby Jo Irish, a former owner and great-granddaughter of the original owner, who has shared stories and pictures of what the home looked like when she and her ancestors lived there.

The home was designated a Moline Historic Landmark in 1993. Keeney is working to have it listed on the National Register of Historic Places because its first two owners were important people in the history and development of Moline.

A downside, as is the case in many old homes, is the kitchen.

Years ago, kitchens were not the showy gathering place they are today; rather, they were where the help cooked meals, so there was no attempt to make them look attractive.

And this home's kitchen has the disadvantage of being split between the butler's pantry with the sink and another room with the stove and refrigerator. Although Keeney finds the arrangement "kind of awkward," she is going to leave it as is except for redecorating.

Other downstairs rooms include a 32-foot-long parlor, a dining room, a half-bath and a library.
The upstairs contains five bedrooms, a bath and a built-in closet.

And with all that, you might think there'd be no need for the attic, but you'd be wrong. The attic was finished to provide living space for the husband-wife housekeeping team that originally lived in the home.

There also are north-facing - that is, Mississippi River-facing - windows where Keeney often sits to enjoy the view (or fireworks), and a library in the turret with bookshelves curved to fit the room.
Does she ever get discouraged with all the restoration work she has to do?

"Oh no!" she said. "This is what I love. This is my fourth home and I'm not discouraged yet."


'via Blog this'

Historic homes of Moline lists the home here.

Zillow links the home here.