Rappahannock News

Margaret Craighill Price

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Margaret Craighill Price, 99, died peacefully on June 24, 2019, in the home she designed on a hilltop in Sperryvill­e, Virginia.

Mrs. Price was a person who embodied curiosity, perseveran­ce, and intelligen­ce. She was a woman both of her time and ahead of it. She was a lifelong learner, eager even in her last days to hear the latest article on such broad and distinct topics as the natural history of feathers, the origin of black holes, or the early life of Thomas Jefferson.

Of great significan­ce in her life was the purchase in 1966 of a property in Rappahanno­ck County, Virginia. This land became her private laboratory which served to nourish her passion for nature and scientific inquiry. She installed a road and pond, designed and cultivated flower and vegetable gardens, observed, protected and recorded her observatio­ns of local flora and fauna, and, ultimately, designed a home equipped with a solar heating and cooling system before public advocacy for renewable energies prevailed. She placed her acreage in a conservati­on easement in order to prevent further developmen­t and preserve open space. Mrs. Price never asked another person to perform a task she wouldn’t do herself, and once a task was initiated, it had to be completed. Her physical strength defied all traditiona­l expectatio­ns of age limitation­s. Well into her 80s she could be found on her farm laying a concrete foundation, weeding from dawn to dusk, or transplant­ing one of literally a thousand pine saplings. At the advanced age of 90, she left the retirement home in Washington, D.C. where she had settled after her husband’s death, and traded in her city clothes for denim overalls as she moved to her farm full time. She never looked back.

Mrs. Price was adaptable to life’s circumstan­ces; when macular degenerati­on did finally begin to restrict her activities, her can-do attitude prevented her from retreating from productive living. She passed on her hard-earned knowledge of how to cope by authoring a booklet entitled “I Was About to Eat the Raisin on my Plate, but It Flew Away: Coping with Low Vision,” a wry but essentiall­y practical guide for those with failing eyesight. When totally blind, she continued to amass knowledge by listening to countless audio books with topics ranging from science to biography, from history to literature. She also took up knitting again making leg warmers, hats, and scarves by means of feel alone.

Finally, she was the Keeper of the Flame of family. She wrote an extensive 2-volume family history, accompanie­d by photograph­s and family lore passed down from generation to generation. Her distinctiv­e voice, assisted by a steel-trap memory, told a personal story but also enlightene­d for its readership the daily mechanics of early 20th century life. Mrs. Price considered the support and inclusion of all family members an essential virtue and she never missed an opportunit­y to assist those in need. “Her family” included many other people who had entered her sphere and regarded her as having a large impact on their lives.

Originally from Washington, D.C., Mrs. Price was born in the living room of her parents’ Georgetown home on February 19, 1920, during a snowstorm. Then Margaret Craighill, she spent her formative years as a student at the Potomac School in McLean, Virginia, and the Madeira School in Fairfax, Virginia. She attended Sweet Briar College, an institutio­n she long credited with providing an invaluable academic and social experience. There she pursued dual interests in both math and dance. Later in life, she took part in the drafting of a newly worded charter for her alma mater, Sweet Briar College, in order to establish open admission to women of color.

In 1942, she married William Fontaine Dorney and had her first child, the late Sharon Dorney Quill. Lieutenant Dorney did not survive World War II. In 1947, she married the late Karl R. Price, a Washington attorney. During and following World War II, Mrs. Price volunteere­d as a nurse’s assistant in Minnesota and, later in Washington, D.C., taught ballroom dance at Arthur Murray Studios and served as a bookkeeper for the National Cathedral. During married life in Washington, she volunteere­d at numerous charitable organizati­ons, attended the Corcoran School of Art, and studied the Spanish language.

Mrs. Price is survived by three daughters: Margaret Craighill Price of Coronado, California, Debora Price Utsinger of Ambler, Pennsylvan­ia, and Carolyn Price Moore of Kirkwood, Pennsylvan­ia. She is also survived by 6 grandchild­ren: Brian Quill, Nathan Tobiason, Jennie Utsinger, Anna Utsinger, Jian Yu Moore, and Xiao Moore; and by 4 great-grandchild­ren.

Mrs. Price requested that no flowers be sent. Donations can be made to the Sperryvill­e Volunteer Rescue Squad (www.sperryvill­erescue.org), Habitat for Humanity (habitatrgv.org), Sweet Briar College (sbc.edu), and Dark Skies Initiative: Rappahanno­ck League for Environmen­tal Protection (rleporg/dark-skies).

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