15. | Ida Marie Hazlet was born on 29 Sep 1898 in Leon, Decatur County, Iowa, USA (daughter of William Hugh Hazlet and Mary Elizabeth McCutchan); died on 24 Jul 2000 in Searcy, White County, Arkansas, USA; was buried in Laurel Land Memorial Park, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA. Other Events:
- Education: Between 1920 and 1923, Harper, Harper County, Kansas, USA; Harper College
Notes:
My grandmother, Ida Hazlet Horton, was a remarkable woman on several counts. I came to know my grandparents well during my time in Dallas - primarily while I was in college and graduate school. They were both conscientious, attentive, and loving - salt of the earth people.
Grandmother was a prototypical mid-20th-century housewife, but also a craftsperson and a - what? - an elocutionist, I suppose. First, the crafts. She seemed always to have projects going - traditional sewing, of course, plus sachet balls, christmas stockings, her marvelous decorated (fabric & baubles over styrofoam) balls and eggs, and even, at the end of her life, her Christmas card placemats. I remember a visit to her when she was 100 years old, and she dropped down onto her hands and knees, pulled a box out from under the bed, and placed it on top of the bed to show me the placemats she was working on.
Young Ida and her sisters were evidently quite an attraction in rural Iowa in the first and second decades of the 20th century, before TV and radio, as they performed regularly at pageants and other events. Yes, they sang, but those were also the days of staged readings and short performances, and Ida was right in the middle of it. When she finished public school, she taught - as I understand it - elocution, and she practiced it all of her life. She knew more poetry and other short readings by heart than I probably ever read, and she was quick to recall and recite passages throughout her life.
In the family, her most celebrated reading was "Esau Wood" which she recited faithfully at her 100th birthday party, and which my niece, Molly, recited to accolades at my mother's 80th birthday party. (I'll add it as a separate story.) She could also be extemporaneous. When she was in her 90's, my young nieces and I played a game of "Encore" with her. Encore which requires the participants to recall songs that fit some category, and to sing at least of few words from each song. It was only after the game that she admitted that she was making up some of the songs which we presumed had come from her youth.
Yes, I realize that she was a stern & scornful mother, but as a grandmother (and as "Ida Momma" to her great-grandchildren), she was a blast.
- Robin Richmond, Sept 2013
Education:
She and Brady met here. I don't believe that she graduated, but she did return to Colorado to teach - as she reported it - elocution, which makes perfect sense for her.
Buried:
GRid=97171884; dual in-ground plaque with husband Brady Horton; photo of elderly Ida; personal biographical sketch.
Died:
Age 101; after a very short illness. I'm don't think that she was ever admitted to a hospital, except when her children were born.
Notes:
Married:
Wedding was on the family farm, whose address put it in Hudson, Weld County, but it was actually in Adams County, where the licence was registered.
Children:
- 7. Valle Beth Horton was born on 24 Nov 1929 in Amarillo, Potter County, Texas, USA; died on 5 Jul 2020 in Searcy, White County, Arkansas, USA; was buried in Antoine Cemetery, Antoine, Pike County, Arkansas, USA.
- Donald Brady Horton was born on 20 Jun 1925 in Denver, Denver County, Colorado, USA; died on 24 Mar 2015 in Lake Forest, Orange County, California, USA; was buried in Riverside National Cemetery, Riverside, Riverside County, California, USA.
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