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Mary Williams <I>Ward</I> Shanor

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Mary Williams Ward Shanor

Birth
Wards Corner, Pender County, North Carolina, USA
Death
19 Sep 2011 (aged 95)
Florida, USA
Burial
Wallace, Duplin County, North Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Mary Shanor, who led an exuberant life as a loving wife, mother and grandmother and a residential real estate agent in Gainesville, Florida for many years, died peacefully at Shands Hospital on Monday, September 19, 2011 at the age of 95. Coldwell Banker M. M. Parrish, where she spent much of her career, said Mary was perhaps the most successful salesperson in the Gainesville area over the course of her long career. Her motto was "A wrong sale is worse than no sale."

Born April 22, 1916 in Pender County, NC, Mrs. Shanor was the daughter of the late Algernon Daniel and Mary Catherine Ward.

Mary Williams Ward was born on a family farm at Ward's Corner, about twenty miles South of Wilmington, North Carolina. As a child, she adored her cousin and best friend, Jane Highsmith, as well as Jane's brothers, George Jr. and Charles Ward. She made all A's in the Pender County Schools, and played half�court women's basketball. She recalled years later spitting watermelon seeds, eating ice cream, riding in a Model T, and driving on the country roads when she was only 12 years old.

Passionate about learning and academics, Mary spent two years at Judson College in Marion, Alabama, a Baptist women's college, then another two years at Women's College at the University of North Carolina. In 1939, she received her Master's Degree in Mycology at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill and taught at Judson College for one year following graduation.

While at Chapel Hill, she met a PHD student, Leland Shanor, whom she married in June 1940. Even though he was a yankee from Butler, Pennsylvania, they were devoted and inseparable until his death in 1993. Her long life encompassed three careers: scientist, mother, and realtor.

Mary and Lee lived their first years together in Washington, D.C., where Mary worked at the Department of Agriculture doing statistics research and at the Office of Scientific Research and Development at George Washington University. When Lee joined the faculty at the University of Illinois in Urbana, Mary did natural history survey research until World War II broke out.

Mary went with Lee, who was a field grade officer, to Bara Colorado Island in Panama where, as she recalled, "We had a big house with strings of bananas you couldn't believe." While in Panama, she became pregnant with her first child and, as the war was ending, she returned to Ward's Corner to be with family amid familiar surroundings for the birth of her first son, Charles, in September 1946.

Lee returned to teaching at the University of Illinois in the fall of 1946, and Mary followed two months later on the train with her infant son. In August, 1949, Mary's second son, Paul, was born in Urbana, where the family lived until 1956.

Mary moved to Tallahassee, Florida, in 1956 and found a house a block from her older sister, Rebecca Reynolds, who was raising her family with two sons, Bill and Paul Jr., who were close in age to Charles and Paul. During the next decade, Mary played bridge, was a Sunday School mother at the First Presbyterian Church, was active in the FSU Women's Club and Garden Club, and did volunteer work with the March of Dimes.

Following Charles' graduation from Leon High School in 1964, Mary moved with Lee and Paul to Gainesville. She completed her real estate certificate after Paul graduated from P. K. Yonge High School and joined the firm of Greene and Rowe.

For the next four decades, both while her husband was chair of the Biology Department at the University of Florida and following his death in 1993, Mary was one of the Gainesville area's most successful residential realtors. Mary combined southern charm and a love of people with a quick mind that navigated flawlessly through the financing and legal aspects of residential real estate. Starting with new arrivals to the University of Florida, working tirelessly and networking naturally, she formed friendships across a broad swath of people from all walks of life. She carried the love of real estate with her to the end, making referrals and passing the real estate board exam after her 95th birthday. For relaxation, she and Lee loved to spend time at the beach in St. Augustine, Florida and in the mountains in Highlands, North Carolina.

Not long before she turned ninety and after Lee's death, Mary bought a condominium at Oak Hammock, a new concept in retirement living affiliated with the University of Florida. Among friends old and new, and with reduced responsibilities for maintaining a house, Mary loved Oak Hammock. Weeks before her death, when asked what was her favorite music, Mary surprised one of her sons and a granddaughter when she said "opera." They learned that she had been regularly attending the Metropolitan cinema matinees on Saturday at Butler Plaza near where she lived.

When her health started failing in 2011, an old friend, Karen Larsen, assisted Mary, caring for her with the love and attention she would have given her own mother. Karen and her husband Jack were a godsend to both Mary and sons Charles and Paul, who live with their families in Atlanta, Georgia.

Mary was devoted to her children and her four grandchildren, Amanda, Nathan, Rick and Leigh, regaling all who would listen about their academic and athletic successes. Amanda graduated from Yale College and Yale Law School, Nathan is a sophomore at Davidson College, Rick is a freshman at Carnegie Mellon University, and Leigh is a Junior at the Westminster Schools in Atlanta. Mary is survived by her sons, Charles and Paul, their wives, Susan and Jennie, and by her grandchildren.

A graveside service was held at 11:00 a.m. at Rockfish Church Cemetery in Wallace, North Carolina on Saturday, September 24, 2011. The Reverend Dr. Martha Highsmith officiated. A memorial service for all of Mary's Gainesville friends was held at Oak Hammock on Saturday, October 8, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. followed with ample refreshments just before her friends watched Gator football as she would have done.

Quinn-McGowen Funeral Home of Wallace, NC served the family.
Mary Shanor, who led an exuberant life as a loving wife, mother and grandmother and a residential real estate agent in Gainesville, Florida for many years, died peacefully at Shands Hospital on Monday, September 19, 2011 at the age of 95. Coldwell Banker M. M. Parrish, where she spent much of her career, said Mary was perhaps the most successful salesperson in the Gainesville area over the course of her long career. Her motto was "A wrong sale is worse than no sale."

Born April 22, 1916 in Pender County, NC, Mrs. Shanor was the daughter of the late Algernon Daniel and Mary Catherine Ward.

Mary Williams Ward was born on a family farm at Ward's Corner, about twenty miles South of Wilmington, North Carolina. As a child, she adored her cousin and best friend, Jane Highsmith, as well as Jane's brothers, George Jr. and Charles Ward. She made all A's in the Pender County Schools, and played half�court women's basketball. She recalled years later spitting watermelon seeds, eating ice cream, riding in a Model T, and driving on the country roads when she was only 12 years old.

Passionate about learning and academics, Mary spent two years at Judson College in Marion, Alabama, a Baptist women's college, then another two years at Women's College at the University of North Carolina. In 1939, she received her Master's Degree in Mycology at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill and taught at Judson College for one year following graduation.

While at Chapel Hill, she met a PHD student, Leland Shanor, whom she married in June 1940. Even though he was a yankee from Butler, Pennsylvania, they were devoted and inseparable until his death in 1993. Her long life encompassed three careers: scientist, mother, and realtor.

Mary and Lee lived their first years together in Washington, D.C., where Mary worked at the Department of Agriculture doing statistics research and at the Office of Scientific Research and Development at George Washington University. When Lee joined the faculty at the University of Illinois in Urbana, Mary did natural history survey research until World War II broke out.

Mary went with Lee, who was a field grade officer, to Bara Colorado Island in Panama where, as she recalled, "We had a big house with strings of bananas you couldn't believe." While in Panama, she became pregnant with her first child and, as the war was ending, she returned to Ward's Corner to be with family amid familiar surroundings for the birth of her first son, Charles, in September 1946.

Lee returned to teaching at the University of Illinois in the fall of 1946, and Mary followed two months later on the train with her infant son. In August, 1949, Mary's second son, Paul, was born in Urbana, where the family lived until 1956.

Mary moved to Tallahassee, Florida, in 1956 and found a house a block from her older sister, Rebecca Reynolds, who was raising her family with two sons, Bill and Paul Jr., who were close in age to Charles and Paul. During the next decade, Mary played bridge, was a Sunday School mother at the First Presbyterian Church, was active in the FSU Women's Club and Garden Club, and did volunteer work with the March of Dimes.

Following Charles' graduation from Leon High School in 1964, Mary moved with Lee and Paul to Gainesville. She completed her real estate certificate after Paul graduated from P. K. Yonge High School and joined the firm of Greene and Rowe.

For the next four decades, both while her husband was chair of the Biology Department at the University of Florida and following his death in 1993, Mary was one of the Gainesville area's most successful residential realtors. Mary combined southern charm and a love of people with a quick mind that navigated flawlessly through the financing and legal aspects of residential real estate. Starting with new arrivals to the University of Florida, working tirelessly and networking naturally, she formed friendships across a broad swath of people from all walks of life. She carried the love of real estate with her to the end, making referrals and passing the real estate board exam after her 95th birthday. For relaxation, she and Lee loved to spend time at the beach in St. Augustine, Florida and in the mountains in Highlands, North Carolina.

Not long before she turned ninety and after Lee's death, Mary bought a condominium at Oak Hammock, a new concept in retirement living affiliated with the University of Florida. Among friends old and new, and with reduced responsibilities for maintaining a house, Mary loved Oak Hammock. Weeks before her death, when asked what was her favorite music, Mary surprised one of her sons and a granddaughter when she said "opera." They learned that she had been regularly attending the Metropolitan cinema matinees on Saturday at Butler Plaza near where she lived.

When her health started failing in 2011, an old friend, Karen Larsen, assisted Mary, caring for her with the love and attention she would have given her own mother. Karen and her husband Jack were a godsend to both Mary and sons Charles and Paul, who live with their families in Atlanta, Georgia.

Mary was devoted to her children and her four grandchildren, Amanda, Nathan, Rick and Leigh, regaling all who would listen about their academic and athletic successes. Amanda graduated from Yale College and Yale Law School, Nathan is a sophomore at Davidson College, Rick is a freshman at Carnegie Mellon University, and Leigh is a Junior at the Westminster Schools in Atlanta. Mary is survived by her sons, Charles and Paul, their wives, Susan and Jennie, and by her grandchildren.

A graveside service was held at 11:00 a.m. at Rockfish Church Cemetery in Wallace, North Carolina on Saturday, September 24, 2011. The Reverend Dr. Martha Highsmith officiated. A memorial service for all of Mary's Gainesville friends was held at Oak Hammock on Saturday, October 8, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. followed with ample refreshments just before her friends watched Gator football as she would have done.

Quinn-McGowen Funeral Home of Wallace, NC served the family.


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  • Created by: John Evans
  • Added: Sep 23, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/77007015/mary_williams-shanor: accessed ), memorial page for Mary Williams Ward Shanor (22 Apr 1916–19 Sep 2011), Find a Grave Memorial ID 77007015, citing Rockfish Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Wallace, Duplin County, North Carolina, USA; Maintained by John Evans (contributor 47071981).