The house on Corliss was always alive with people. They had many family visitors and sometimes took in student boarders. Mary was a great cook and often made her own noodles. The two most pleasant meals I remember as a child in my grandmothers house were pot roast and chicken dumplings. She had thick arms and wore her hair in a bun. She was use to hard work like all Laprath women. Mary became known as Nana to her grandchildren. Like the order of the original children first came five granddaughters then four grandsons follows by then seven more grandchildren. Nana lived to see all but the last two. She lived to see four great grandchildren and the union would produce 40 in all. Annual Christmas Eve parties were an occasion for large gatherings of family and friends.
Nana died at the age of 61. She had had high blood pressure most of her life. It was in the Spring and the first death I remember as a child. Barbara and Ruth Marie, her granddaughters, remember being in the kitchen during her illness at the end. A salesman from Washeli Cemetery happened to drop by and when Nana heard who was there, yelled out, "I will not be buried there with all those tombstones." Nana was buried at Acacia overlooking the north end of Lake Washington according to her wishes.
Mary was preceded in death by her father, Mathias, her sister Laura Heald and her brother Gus Laprath. She was survived by her husband, Gus, mother Anna Laprath, sisters Ella Nora Laprath, Louise Brown, Pauline Bryant; and brothers, Henry and Mathias Laprath and half brother Delbert Laprath, 5 children, 14 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren.
Mary and Gus had five children, all linked below: Ruth, Ella, Nora, Bob and Dick. There are 18 grandchildren. 40 great-grandchildren, 70 great great-grandchildren, and 18 great-great=great grandchildren. (2020)
The house on Corliss was always alive with people. They had many family visitors and sometimes took in student boarders. Mary was a great cook and often made her own noodles. The two most pleasant meals I remember as a child in my grandmothers house were pot roast and chicken dumplings. She had thick arms and wore her hair in a bun. She was use to hard work like all Laprath women. Mary became known as Nana to her grandchildren. Like the order of the original children first came five granddaughters then four grandsons follows by then seven more grandchildren. Nana lived to see all but the last two. She lived to see four great grandchildren and the union would produce 40 in all. Annual Christmas Eve parties were an occasion for large gatherings of family and friends.
Nana died at the age of 61. She had had high blood pressure most of her life. It was in the Spring and the first death I remember as a child. Barbara and Ruth Marie, her granddaughters, remember being in the kitchen during her illness at the end. A salesman from Washeli Cemetery happened to drop by and when Nana heard who was there, yelled out, "I will not be buried there with all those tombstones." Nana was buried at Acacia overlooking the north end of Lake Washington according to her wishes.
Mary was preceded in death by her father, Mathias, her sister Laura Heald and her brother Gus Laprath. She was survived by her husband, Gus, mother Anna Laprath, sisters Ella Nora Laprath, Louise Brown, Pauline Bryant; and brothers, Henry and Mathias Laprath and half brother Delbert Laprath, 5 children, 14 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren.
Mary and Gus had five children, all linked below: Ruth, Ella, Nora, Bob and Dick. There are 18 grandchildren. 40 great-grandchildren, 70 great great-grandchildren, and 18 great-great=great grandchildren. (2020)
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Nana
Gravesite Details
wife of Gustave Adolph Egge