Her father worked at a grain elevator, so the family did not endure the hardships of the Depression.
After high school, she became a licensed hairdresser and worked at up-scale shops.
She married Joseph Suhi on May 10, 1940. They had three daughters.
Joe died in 1956. Annabelle had three small children and – like women of her generation – hadn't work after the birth of her first child. She went to work at Western Electric, which the manufacturing unit of the telephone company, and retired in 1978.
She enjoyed her retirement and delighted in her seven grandchildren, great-granddaughter, and great-grandson. She was looking forward to two more great-grandsons, but she passed away a few months before they were born.
She was a strong woman, ahead of her time in forwarding thinking, and quite remarkable.
Her father worked at a grain elevator, so the family did not endure the hardships of the Depression.
After high school, she became a licensed hairdresser and worked at up-scale shops.
She married Joseph Suhi on May 10, 1940. They had three daughters.
Joe died in 1956. Annabelle had three small children and – like women of her generation – hadn't work after the birth of her first child. She went to work at Western Electric, which the manufacturing unit of the telephone company, and retired in 1978.
She enjoyed her retirement and delighted in her seven grandchildren, great-granddaughter, and great-grandson. She was looking forward to two more great-grandsons, but she passed away a few months before they were born.
She was a strong woman, ahead of her time in forwarding thinking, and quite remarkable.
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