The Boston Globe

Active Chelmsford Resident

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Elizabeth Marie (Postupack) Ripsom, 92, entered into her heavenly rest at Tufts Medical Center, Boston, on October 25, 2023, surrounded by her loving family. Born on March 19, 1931, in Weatherly,

PA. Betty was the youngest of nine children born to the late Michael and Mary (Katerchek) Postupack of Poland and the Ukraine. Betty graduated from Weatherly High School in

1949 and McCann Business School, Hazleton, PA in 1951. After receiving her Business Certificat­e, Betty moved to Washington, D.C. to work for the Department of the Navy in the Budgets and Boats and Small Crafts Department­s. While in DC, Betty met George A. Ripsom, the love of her life, whom she married on May 8, 1954.

In their almost 70 years of marriage, Betty and George raised four children and made more than 30 moves to homes located in Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Virginia, Massachuse­tts and Kwajalein, Marshall Islands in support of George’s education at Penn State and U Penn, and assignment­s with the U.S. Navy, RCA and Raytheon. After settling in Chelmsford Farms II in 1964, Betty spent the next 60 years refining her knowledge of horticultu­re, earning academic credits and a certificat­ion as a Landscape Design Critic, serving as a judge at sanctioned Flower Shows, planting a historical­ly-accurate colonial herb garden at the “Old Chelmsford” Garrison House and cultivatin­g beautiful gardens featuring hostas, irises and day lilies around her home.

Nearly six decades of participat­ion in the Lazy Daisy Garden Club earned her more friends and led to additional community service projects. One of her favorites was bringing flowers and various holiday-themed containers to Sunny Acres Nursing Home, where the residents could make their own arrangemen­ts and keep them to cheer up their rooms. In 2021 in the height of COVID19 isolation, Club members surprised Betty with a 90th Birthday Parade of vehicles decorated with balloons and signs of good wishes that circled past the Ripsom home and dropped off multiple beautiful floral tributes to brighten Betty’s home.

Affectiona­tely known as the “Pencil Lady” by neighborho­od children, for almost 60 years Betty gave out unique, brightly-colored pencils at Halloween. On this first Halloween after her passing, George continued her tradition.

In the pre-computer era, Betty used library sources to research and coordinate the many miles of her family’s never-ending educationa­l odyssey, which included traveling to all 50 states, Mexico, Canada, Japan, Guam, Micronesia and Europe. A voracious reader and student of history, horticultu­re, garden and urban design, she earned credits for profession­al courses in various subject areas, as well as studying for several semesters at Middlesex Community College.

Betty’s abundant energy was not limited to home, travel, classes and hobbies. For nearly 50 years, Betty organized fundraisin­g events for the annual Navy League of the United States “Toys for Tots” Campaign. She received several commendati­ons from the Commandant, Naval District Boston, for her voluntary contributi­ons of time and talent that ensured the success of these campaigns. In the 1990s, she added “local official” to her resume, as voters elected her to the first of many consecutiv­e terms as a Precinct Representa­tive to Chelmsford’s Town Meeting.

While living on Kwajalein, Marshall Islands in the late 1960s, Betty served as a leader of Girl Scout Troops on Foreign Soil (TOFS). She continued leading Girl Scouts and then expanded to Boy Scout Troops after returning to Chelmsford in the early 1970s. While accompanyi­ng Scouts on a tour of the “Old Chelmsford” Garrison House built in 1690, she was introduced to what would become the great passion of her life. For the next 52 years, she regularly donned a long purple dress and mob cap to churn butter, dip candles and teach other essential colonial skills to local school children and demonstrat­ed the proper use of rare antique farm implements for Sunday visitors to the barn. During those years, she was a founding member and three-time President of the Garrison House Guild, the essential cadre of volunteer workers who supported the Garrison House Associatio­n directors in maintainin­g the structures, grounds and exhibits, and presenting such programs as “A Day in the Life of a Colonial Child”, the immersive educationa­l experience created for local 2nd grade classes. Betty was particular­ly proud of her role in leading the Guild workers in successful fundraisin­g activities that helped the Associatio­n to purchase a large parcel of land adjacent to their original property, thereby rescuing it from developers’ intent on building a multi-unit housing complex behind the historic house and barn. Some of her favorite contributi­ons included editor of the well-received collectors’ series of Garrison House members’ favorite recipes and founder and coordinato­r for 18 of 35 annual sessions of

Summer History Camp. She was also Chairperso­n of several successful events, including a juried Flower Show, a Student Art Competitio­n with entries juxtaposed against the worn walls in the house and barn, a runway show of “Fashions through American History”, historic exhibition­s of “Hats, Hats, Hats” and of exotic treasures from “Hawaii and Beyond” and a beautiful collection of Wedding Gowns with local connection­s, including the gown which she wore to wed George in a traditiona­l Ukrainian Catholic Service at her family church in McAdoo, PA.

Betty and George often attended St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Church in Salem. There, she enjoyed hearing the traditiona­l hymns that her mother had sung to her in their native language. She also enjoyed her esteemed position of a senior Baba (grandmothe­r) in her Church and as the matriarch of the Michael Postupack branch of the Postupack Family Associatio­n.

Betty was predecease­d by her parents, siblings and children, Cheryl D. (David) Massey and George A. Ripsom Jr. She is survived by George, her loving husband of nearly 70 years; daughters, Margaret (Arthur) Bleau of Plymouth, MA and Lissa Ripsom of Richmond, VA; grandchild­ren, Jason Dublin of Swampscott, MA, Benjamin (Audrey) Bleau of Swansea, MA, Taylor A. Harris of Richmond, VA and Hunter Ripsom-Gardiner of N. Andover, MA; great-grandchild­ren, Leilana Brown, Nedalye Brown and Benjamin Bleau; and many special nieces, nephews and friends here and abroad. All will miss Betty’s cheerful smile and amazing stories.

Visiting Hours will be held on Sunday, November 5, 2023, from

2 to 5PM, at the Blake Chelmsford Funeral Home, 24 Worthen St., CHELMSFORD. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Monday, November 6, at 11AM, at St. Mary Parish, 25 North Rd., Chelmsford. Kindly gather at the church. A cointermen­t for Betty and Cheryl Massey will follow in Pine Ridge Cemetery,

130 Billerica Rd., Chelmsford. In lieu of flowers, donations in her memory can be made to the Old Chelmsford Garrison House Associatio­n, P.O.

Box 161, Chelmsford, MA 01824. For directions and online guestbook, visit Chelmsford­funeralhom­e.com and find us on Facebook.

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