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Myrtle Wayne <I>Roddenberry</I> Langston

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Myrtle Wayne Roddenberry Langston

Birth
Sopchoppy, Wakulla County, Florida, USA
Death
8 Apr 2015 (aged 103)
Burial
Sopchoppy, Wakulla County, Florida, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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On April 8, 2015, Myrtle Langston went to be with her precious Lord and Savior.
Myrtle was born in Sopchoppy, FL., to Methodist parents, the late Susie and Stephen Roddenberry, and was the oldest of three and their only daughter. Standing a towering 4'10" inches (5'3" with her beehive hairdo), she recalled a youth full of her favorite passions, including dancing, playing the piano by ear, thumbing through the Sears Roebuck catalog for the latest fashions, and playing basketball.
She married her high school sweetheart, Amos Langston, at the age of 21. Interesting jobs she held during her lifetime included working as a welder on military ships - a true "Rosie the Riveter" - and as a substitute band teacher at Sopchoppy High School. Having converted to the Baptist faith after marrying her husband, she played the church organ at Sopchoppy First Baptist Church for more years than one can count.
In addition to gardening and huckleberry picking, she credited reading her Bible every day and working crossword puzzles as the secrets to keeping her mind and body sharp for all those years.
To her grandchildren she was best known for playing "Hold that Tiger" on the piano, her mouth-watering fried chicken and always serving both biscuits and cornbread at every meal.
She taught them never to play cards or go fishing on Sunday, and always made sure they were "saved" before they left her house. They also fondly remember her using her microwave as a newfangled breadbox and her dishwasher as a giant drying rack. To her neighbors, she was best known for mowing her five-acre lawn while holding a parasol and wearing a #16-lb paper sack over her hair to protect her perfectly molded, blue-rinse hairdo; finally conquering the "crabgrass" that grew in the ditch in front of her house; transplanting more than 5,000 daylilies; growing a garden extraordinaire year-round; and driving her "automobile" around Sopchoppy until she was just over 100 years old.
At 103, she is preceded in death by almost everyone including her husband, Amos Langston, and her brothers, Amos Roddenberry and Alfred Roddenberry.
A celebration of Life was held on Saturday, April 11, 2015 at Sopchoppy Southern Baptist Church, a graveside service at the Sopchoppy Cemetery followed.

From obituary published in the Tallahassee Democrat, April 10, 2015.
On April 8, 2015, Myrtle Langston went to be with her precious Lord and Savior.
Myrtle was born in Sopchoppy, FL., to Methodist parents, the late Susie and Stephen Roddenberry, and was the oldest of three and their only daughter. Standing a towering 4'10" inches (5'3" with her beehive hairdo), she recalled a youth full of her favorite passions, including dancing, playing the piano by ear, thumbing through the Sears Roebuck catalog for the latest fashions, and playing basketball.
She married her high school sweetheart, Amos Langston, at the age of 21. Interesting jobs she held during her lifetime included working as a welder on military ships - a true "Rosie the Riveter" - and as a substitute band teacher at Sopchoppy High School. Having converted to the Baptist faith after marrying her husband, she played the church organ at Sopchoppy First Baptist Church for more years than one can count.
In addition to gardening and huckleberry picking, she credited reading her Bible every day and working crossword puzzles as the secrets to keeping her mind and body sharp for all those years.
To her grandchildren she was best known for playing "Hold that Tiger" on the piano, her mouth-watering fried chicken and always serving both biscuits and cornbread at every meal.
She taught them never to play cards or go fishing on Sunday, and always made sure they were "saved" before they left her house. They also fondly remember her using her microwave as a newfangled breadbox and her dishwasher as a giant drying rack. To her neighbors, she was best known for mowing her five-acre lawn while holding a parasol and wearing a #16-lb paper sack over her hair to protect her perfectly molded, blue-rinse hairdo; finally conquering the "crabgrass" that grew in the ditch in front of her house; transplanting more than 5,000 daylilies; growing a garden extraordinaire year-round; and driving her "automobile" around Sopchoppy until she was just over 100 years old.
At 103, she is preceded in death by almost everyone including her husband, Amos Langston, and her brothers, Amos Roddenberry and Alfred Roddenberry.
A celebration of Life was held on Saturday, April 11, 2015 at Sopchoppy Southern Baptist Church, a graveside service at the Sopchoppy Cemetery followed.

From obituary published in the Tallahassee Democrat, April 10, 2015.


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