Daily Oklahoman, The
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
March 6, 2008
Edith Zelma Veith Honea was born in McAlester, OK, on July
18, 1915, the youngest of four girls. She excelled academically,
first enrolling in college classes with her older sisters during
the summer of her 14th year. Skipping two years of high school,
she graduated Valedictorian of her class at age sixteen. By
necessity, the four sisters all worked while attending college
part-time. Edith graduated from Southeastern State College in
1938. Upon graduation, she secured a teaching position in Harrah
and resided with her aunt and uncle, the Porters'.
It was her cousin, Felix Porter, who introduced her to his
classmate and her future husband, S.M. Honea , Jr. of Harrah.
Edith taught 3rd grade her first year at Harrah, and later math
and history. A minister and friend of her family married Edith &
S.M. on December 26, 1940 in Atoka. After honeymooning in Texas,
the couple settled in Harrah where S.M. owned a trucking line.
As WWII approached, S.M. waived his farm deferment and enlisted.
Edith followed him to training camps in Fort Hood, Texas and
Camp Forrest, Tennessee then returned to her family in McAlester
while S.M. was shipped overseas. Upon returning from the war in
December 1945, the couple settled in Harrah. They purchased a
home from S.M.'s aunt & uncle and lived there for the remainder
of their lives. Edith was a housewife and supporting partner in
the couple's business dealings-farming, cattle ranching, and
later operating Honea Implement Co. from 1968-1987. Three
children were added to the family from 1946 to 1952. The couple
always made time to take family vacations and traveled the U.S.
extensively. They were active members of the Harrah First
Baptist Church. Edith was recognized, during the church's
centennial year, as the member with the longest continuous
service. S.M. preceded her in death in January 1994. Edith will
be remembered for, first, her endless supply of homemade
chocolate "dot" cookies for Vacation Bible School, Falls Creek
and school events and also her pecan pies and holiday-baked
goodies.
Survivors include daughters, Linda and her husband Budd
Parrish, Kathy Honea and her husband Bob Teas; son S.M. Honea
III; and granddaughter, Anna Honea -Wyatt and her husband Blue
Wyatt. Edith left us on Monday, March 3, 2008, after an extended
recuperation following a hip fracture. The family wishes to
extend their heartfelt thanks to the administration and staff of
Bellevue Health & Rehabilitation Center, who cared for our
mother with dignity & kindness.
The funeral services will be held at Bill Eisenhour Northeast
Funeral Home Chapel, 8805 NE 23rd, Oklahoma City, OK, Friday,
March 7, 2008, at 1:00 pm with interment to follow at Harrah
Memory Lane Cemetery. Visitation for Mrs. Honea will be Thursday
from 12:00 noon - 9:00 pm at Bill Eisenhour Funeral Home.
Daily Oklahoman, The
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
January 12, 1994
Sion Milton, Honea Jr., died January 11, 1994 in
Midwest City Hospital at the age of 77. He was born in Harrah,
Oklahoma on April 11, 1916, the youngest of four sons of Sion
Milton and Katie Mae Grimes Honea , Territorial pioneers. Mr.
Honea graduated from Harrah High School and was a lifelong
resident of Harrah. He operated a farm and raised cattle most of
his life, and also owned and managed a farm implement business
for many years. He was a member of the First Baptist Church of
Harrah and the Jones Masonic Lodge No. 537, was a 32nd degree
Scottish Rite Mason at the Valley of Guthrie, and was a member
of the James F. Smith Memorial Post No. 15 of the American
Legion.
In addition to his wife of fifty-three years, Edith Veith
Honea , he is survived by a son, Sion M. Honea III of Rochester,
N.Y.; daughter and son-in-law, Budd and Linda Parrish of Harrah;
daughter, Mary Kathleen Hart of Ft. Wayne, Indiana; and a
granddaughter, Anna Kathaleen Hart also of Ft. Wayne.
Services are under the direction of As a Smith and will be
held at 2:00 p.m. on January 13 at the First Baptist Church of
Harrah with interment in
Memory
Lane Cemetery in Harrah.
Complied and transcribed by Marti Graham, 2009.
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