Mae attended school through the 8th grade, then went on to Iowa Southern Normal School in Bloomfield to become a school teacher. She taught for one year in a one room country school then married Raleigh (Rollie) Hiram DeVault, also a school teacher. Raleigh was 14 years older than Mae. They began their married life as farmers in the S.E. Bloomfield area and had three children: Donald Raleigh (1916), Dorothy Mae (1918) and Mary Lucille (1920). In 1922 they moved to town. She cared for her children and her invalid mother-in-law.
In later life Mae lived in Ottumwa with her daughter Lucille and eventually became a resident at the Keystone Care Center in Keystone, IA. She was a member of the Bloomfield Methodist Church and had been a member of the Rebeccah Lodge in earlier years.
A record from Linda Wild, in honor of Willie Mae Benge Devault. A brick was placed with her name in the Plaza of Heroines at Iowa State University
Mae attended school through the 8th grade, then went on to Iowa Southern Normal School in Bloomfield to become a school teacher. She taught for one year in a one room country school then married Raleigh (Rollie) Hiram DeVault, also a school teacher. Raleigh was 14 years older than Mae. They began their married life as farmers in the S.E. Bloomfield area and had three children: Donald Raleigh (1916), Dorothy Mae (1918) and Mary Lucille (1920). In 1922 they moved to town. She cared for her children and her invalid mother-in-law.
In later life Mae lived in Ottumwa with her daughter Lucille and eventually became a resident at the Keystone Care Center in Keystone, IA. She was a member of the Bloomfield Methodist Church and had been a member of the Rebeccah Lodge in earlier years.
A record from Linda Wild, in honor of Willie Mae Benge Devault. A brick was placed with her name in the Plaza of Heroines at Iowa State University
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