Albuquerque Journal

Obenshain, Virgina "Toots" Rideout

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Virginia "Toots" Rideout Obenshain died quietly on September 10 in her South Valley home after a courageous twoyear battle with pancreatic cancer with her loving family by her side.

Toots was born in Boston, MA on May 12th, 1937 to Virginia Stull Rideout and Richard Lunt Rideout. At age four, she, her mother and sister left Boston and split time between Washington, D.C., where her mother began working for the federal government and the fledgling airline industry, and Buchanan, Virginia, where her mother had grown up. In the sixth grade, Toots moved permanentl­y to Buchanan and was primarily raised by her aunt, Mary Aiken ("Chugga") Carson and her family.

Toots attended Radford College, where she met her future husband, Samuel Scott Obenshain, on a Baptist Student Union scavenger hunt. Scott was a student at Virginia Tech in his hometown of Blacksburg, VA. They were married in Buchanan in 1959 and began their life together in Winston-Salem, NC, where Scott was studying medicine. There Toots began her teaching career teaching developmen­tally delayed students. While in Winston-Salem they welcomed their first child, Sarah Adair ("Dair") Obenshain. During summer vacations she worked at R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, which hired teachers to cover regular employees’ vacations. Two months sorting cigarettes paid as much as nine months of teaching.

The budding family followed Scott’s medical career across the country, from Cleveland, OH to Palo Alto, CA, where their second child, Rebecca ("Becky") Obenshain O’Gawa, was born. Scott then served two years in the Army at Fort Riley, Kansas. While there not only did they bring Samuel Stull Obenshain into the world, but also created some memorable stories that captured Toots’ spirit of fairness and advocacy for those facing challenges in their lives. One was the now "infamous" letter she wrote to President Lyndon Johnson in 1966 regarding the casually dismissive treatment by the Fort Riley Officers’ Wives Club of their Jewish members, which had a quick and effective response.

Scott, Toots, and family then moved back to Cleveland for Scott’s pediatric fellowship, where Rachel Scott Obenshain Landavazo was born. Toots continued her career teaching children with special needs, part of her legacy of fighting for those less fortunate and her reputation for unyielding compassion mixed with a sense of humor second to none!

In 1970, when Scott was offered a position in the Pediatrics Department at The University of New Mexico School of Medicine (UNMSOM), Toots reportedly accepted the position and the family uprooted themselves once again and moved to the Southwest. Albuquerqu­e remains the Obenshain family home to this day. While Scott settled into his work at UNMSOM, Toots revived her teaching career by working with students with special needs. As an educator, she spent years working with APS students who required special attention, focus and patience. She thrived on every tearjerkin­g and/or side-splitting story because of her uncanny people-smarts, love and (sometimes scandalous) humor. Toots, they say, got called to the Principal’s office more often than her students. Her work inspired her own children’s careers in innumerabl­e ways, within and outside of the Albuquerqu­e Public School system. Toots loved her students as her own, but consistent­ly mentioned during the last few months of her life that she was most proud of raising four wonderful children.

A friend has written, "It’s hyperbole to say that the Obenshain family saved my life, but… to be honest, not by much... I’d never seen such a close-knit — and yet welcoming and ever-expanding — family; it was foreign to me and frankly pretty magical. To this day, the ‘Obenshain Compound,’ expanded with homes for the grown kids and their families, has some sort of "everything’s going to be OK" fairy-dust dome over it for so many."

As an advocate for underdogs, outcasts, and overlooked people of all stripes, Toots was unstoppabl­e. She became president of ABQ Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) within a short time of her own daughter’s coming out. Toots marched with PFLAG and the Raging Grannies in ABQ’s Pride parade many a time and one year was the parade’s grand marshal, riding on the back of a convertibl­e with her grandkids in her lap and her family strewn throughout the parade route cheering her on! Although the parades were a blast, Toot’s real advocacy came at the New Mexico State Legislatur­e where she was a constant presence championin­g the rights of all. Later in her life, after retiring from APS, Toots joined the Albuquerqu­e Assistance League and managed the Operation School Bell program acquiring and delivering school uniforms for almost 4000 children whose families could not afford to buy school uniforms, making her again well known among Albuquerqu­e schools.

Toots never met a stranger. She had a seat reserved at Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas for anyone who didn’t have a place to go or a family with whom to celebrate. There are too many stories to tell about this amazing person who graced us with her laughter, smile, larger-than-life heart, and love for her family.

Toots is survived by her loving husband of 57 years, Scott; her daughter Dair and her partner Mary Ramos, their children Benjamin and Emily; her daughter Becky and her husband Mark O’Gawa, and their children, Richard and Daniel; her son Samuel and his wife Kory Obenshain, and their children, Carleigh and Teegan; her daughter, Rachel and her husband, Daryl Landavazo, and their children, Julia, Sami Jo, Jaime and Louisa, all in Albuquerqu­e, and her sister, Nancy Parker, of Annapolis, MD. She is also survived by an extended family of relatives and friends across the United States and the world who understand what it means to have Toots lodged deeply in their hearts forever.

A memorial service in Toots’ honor will take place on Sunday, Nov. 13 from 1:00-3:00 p. m. at the Pete and Nancy Domenici Hall at the UNM School of Medicine. Memorial contributi­ons for Virginia ’Toots’ Obenshain may be made to The Assistance League of Albuquerqu­e’s Operation School Bell Program at 5211 Lomas, NE, Albuquerqu­e, NM 87110, or to the Obenshain Family Scholarshi­p Fund of La Tierra Sagrada Society at UNM School of Medicine Fitz Hall, Room 182B, MSC 08 4720, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerqu­e, NM 87131.

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