Alton Leon Durham, age 81, of Alto, Georgia, went home to be with the Lord on Saturday, November 18, 2023.
Mr. Durham was born on January 13, 1942, in Demorest, Georgia, to the late Hubert Durham and Julia Hollifield Cobb.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister-in-law, Clorenda Durham, and his beloved granny, Nora Hollifield.
Alton was a former professional racecar driver, pushing the limits and embracing the thrill of the open road. In addition to the fast-paced excitement of the racetrack, Alton found solace in the simplicity of life’s pleasures, enjoying the serenity of hunting and fishing.
Survivors include his loving wife of 56 years, Patricia Durham. His daughter, Danielle Hyett, and her husband, Eddie, as well as his son, Shane Durham. His memory lives on through his grandchildren, Alec and Ethan Glass, and Alayna and Brett Durham. He is also survived by his daughter-in-law, Jessica Durham, his brother, Ray Durham, and numerous nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews.
A Private Family Memorial Service will be held at a later date.
The family would like to extend their gratitude to the Alto City Police Department and Habersham Emergency Services (EMS) for their support and comfort during this difficult time. A special acknowledgment goes to Shawn from the Alto Police Department for the compassion shown to the family.
Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone 706-778-7123.
A wreck Saturday morning east of Clarkesville claimed the life of a 22-year-old Mt. Airy man. The Georgia State Patrol has identified the deceased driver as Francisco Matias.
The accident happened on Highway 17/Toccoa Highway near Jess Kinney Road. It was reported to 911 as a rollover wreck just before 9 a.m. on Nov. 18.
According to the Georgia State Patrol, Matias was negotiating a curve in a Hyundai Veloster and lost control of the car in a curve.
The vehicle traveled off the west shoulder of the highway, where it struck a mailbox and a ditch. This caused it to vault across Jess Kinney Road. The vehicle then rolled several times up an embankment, ejecting Matias from the vehicle.
He died at the scene.
State troopers from Georgia State Patrol Post 7 in Toccoa investigated the wreck. They say Matias was wearing his seat belt, but it broke during the crash.
The accident temporarily shut down the section of highway near the crash site as law enforcement investigated and crews cleared the scene.
Paul Brown, age 64, a cherished member of our community, passed away peacefully at Hospice of the Upstate in Anderson, South Carolina, with his wife and daughter by his side on November 11 after a short but courageous battle with cancer.
Son of Aubrey L. and Myrl W. Brown, Paul was born in Seoul, South Korea, on June 12, 1959.
Growing up, Paul enjoyed travels with his parents and spent time living in Georgia, North Carolina, Colorado, New Mexico, and Florida; he especially loved the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina. He graduated early from Highland High School in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1975. He graduated in 1978 from Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia, where he met Deborah, the love of his life.
Paul was an avid lover of nature and especially enjoyed wildflowers and waterfalls. He leaves his wife with many treasured memories of hikes together in the Georgia and Carolina mountains and South Carolina Lowcountry.
From an early age, Paul was fascinated with old coins and took employment in stamp and coin shops in Melbourne, Florida, and the Atlanta Metropolitan Area, becoming manager of Stamp and Coin at Gwinnett Place Mall. He later owned and operated Collection Connection in downtown Toccoa, Georgia, selling comic books and sports memorabilia. He retired from Sage Automotive, where he worked for over 30 years as an automotive interior technician.
Paul was a faithful member of St. Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church. He was a licensed lay reader and led morning prayer on many occasions with inspiring recitations. An enthusiastic helper among his church family, he participated whenever able in fellowship and community oriented activities.
Paul is preceded in death by his parents, grandson Constantine J. Furst, special aunt Shirley Wilemon Ramsey, and numerous other aunts, uncles, and cousins. He is survived by his loving wife, Deborah; cherished daughter, Jessica Furst (John); two brothers-in-law, Robert Frady and Richard Frady; nephew Vance Frady (Kim); nieces Allison Nissen (Thor) and Lindsay Thomas, great-nephews Graham Nissen, Reid Nissen, Holden Thomas, and JW Thomas, and beloved cat Agatha.
A requiem mass for Paul will be held on November 29 at 3 p.m. at St. Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church in Alto, GA, followed by a visitation with the Brown family in the parish hall. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church or Habersham County Animal Shelter.
Paul’s kindness and generosity left an indelible mark on those who knew him. May we find comfort in the memories of a life well lived and in the rest he shares with his Father. Rest in peace, Paul.
ATLANTA — Ceremonies celebrating the life of former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, who passed away Sunday at age 96, will take place from Monday, Nov. 27, through Wednesday, Nov. 29, in Atlanta and Sumter County, Georgia.
The Carter family invites members of the public to pay their respects at the repose at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum and to view the family motorcade.
Guidance on the motorcade routes and repose can be found here: https://rosalynncartertribute.org/. Ceremonies will be broadcast on major television networks and streamed online.
MONDAY, NOV. 27 Wreath-Laying at Georgia Southwestern State University and Repose at Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum
10:25 a.m.: The Carter family motorcade will arrive at Phoebe Sumter Medical Center in Americus. Mrs. Carter’s remains will be transferred to a hearse, accompanied by past and present members of her U.S. Secret Service detail.
10:40 a.m.: The motorcade will depart the grounds of the medical center on a public route to nearby Georgia Southwestern State University in Americus, Georgia. The public is invited to pay respects along the motorcade route, which will be shared later.
11 a.m.: Motorcade arrives at the Rosalynn Carter Health and Human Sciences Complex at Georgia Southwestern State University, where wreaths will be laid.
11:15 a.m.: Motorcade departs for The Carter Presidential Center in Atlanta.
3:15 p.m.: Arrival ceremony at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum.
3:30 p.m.: Repose service in lobby of the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum.
6-10 p.m.: The Carter family invites members of the public to pay their respects as Mrs. Carter lies in repose at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum. Parking and a shuttle will be available at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 435 Peachtree St. NE, Atlanta.
TUESDAY, NOV. 28 Carter Center Departure Ceremony and Tribute Service
11:30-11:45 a.m.: Carter Presidential Center departure ceremony. Motorcade proceeds to Glenn Memorial Church at Emory University.
1 p.m.-2:30 p.m.: Tribute service at Glenn Memorial Church at Emory University with invited guests.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 29 Funeral Service and Interment
10:55 a.m.: The funeral procession arrives at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains.
11 a.m.: A service for family and invited friends takes place at the church.
12:30 p.m.: The casket will be transferred to a hearse and depart for private interment at the Carter family residence.
The public is welcome to line the family motorcade route as it proceeds from the church, down Bond Street, and along Hwy. 280 in downtown Plains. Viewing areas will be designated. Everyone is expected to respect private property and park only in designated areas.
The family’s official online condolence book, schedule updates, official biography, and a tribute to Rosalynn Carter’s life and legacy can be found on the Carter Center tribute page.
In lieu of flowers, donations should be sent to the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers, P.O. Box 647, Americus, GA 31709, or the Carter Center Mental Health Program, 453 John Lewis Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, GA 30307. Donations can also be made online at www.rosalynncartertribute.org.
Condolence books will be available to sign at Georgia Southwestern State University, the Plains Welcome Center, Plains High School, and the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum.
Newlyweds Diane Bayne and Bob Renaud cut the cake at their wedding celebration at the White County Senior Center on Friday, Nov. 17, 2023. (WRWH.com)
CLEVELAND, Ga. – The White County Senior Center’s theme is, “We’re here to make good things happen.” For Diane Bayne and Bob Renaud, the Center more than lived up to its promise.
Both have been attending the Center for several years; it’s where they met. On Friday, they said, “I Do.”
Bayne and Renaud exchanged wedding vows on Nov. 17 in a ceremony hosted at the Senior Center on Helen Highway. Friends and family gathered to celebrate, but only after the day’s regular activities had ended.
This is the fourth time in the Center’s history that it’s been used as a wedding venue. Senior Center Director Barbara Overton says it’s a place where friendships of all kinds are formed.
“Friends and neighbors from years past are reunited, and new friendships are formed at the Senior Center all the time.”
Overton did not divulge where the couple spent their honeymoon. We wish them the very best!
Habersham County Commissioners will meet Monday November 20 at 6:00 p.m. at the Habersham County Courthouse. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Habersham County is expected to sell back to the school board property it purchased on Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway to build a 911 center. County officials decided against building on the former Demorest Elementary School soccer fields and, instead, plan to build the center on property purchased about a mile up the road on GA 365 North, near Double Bridge Road.
The county decided against using the property at 3116 Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway because the parcel is too small and sits in a hole. Building a road into the property would have been costly, and sources say the steep grade would have made it difficult for fire trucks and ambulances to get in and out of that location. People also raised concerns about traffic congestion at the site near the GA 365 intersection and two county schools.
The Habersham County Board of Education has reportedly agreed to take back the property for the same price the county paid for it, which was just over $252,000.
“X” marks the school board property where the county was going to build its E-911 center. The property outlined in blue shows where the center is now going to be located. (Image Source: qPublic)
The school board site is one of two property sales commissioners are expected to approve at their monthly meeting on Monday, Nov. 20. They’re also expected to sign off on a deal to sell a county-owned building at 1387 Washington Street in downtown Clarkesville.
Formerly home to the county elections office, the building most recently housed the Soque River Watershed Association office. Habersham County bought the 1,314-square-foot building in 1985. It sits on a .04-acre lot. The county is selling it “as-is” with no warranty.
Last month the county showed the property and accepted bids.
The county is selling the building with the green awning located at 1387 Washington Street in Clarkesville. (Habersham County photo)
Contracts and comments
Also, at Monday night’s meeting, commissioners are expected to approve a contract with Intercontinental Commercial Services to waterproof and paint the Ruby C. Fulbright Aquatic Center. They’re set to approve engineering services for the Safe Streets for All transportation grant and renew the lease on the Habersham County DFCS office at 1045 Hollywood Highway in Clarkesville.
No public hearings are scheduled for Monday, but members of the public are invited to speak. Those signed up to do so include Eugenia Almand, who will propose an alternative use for the Old Courthouse, and Cassie Head, who will advocate for preventative maintenance and facilities staff for the Aquatic Center.
Commissioners will consider alcohol license renewals and applications for 15 businesses: Express Mart #6, Demorest Business LLC, Chicago’s Pizza Inc, Shore’s Country Store, Clarkesville Chevron, Raina Rakin Enterprises LLC, Glenn Ella Springs Inn, Duncan Bridge Market, Circle K Stores Inc, One Stop, Haye’s Country Corner Store, A to Z Grocery, Nacoochee Valley Grill LLC, Cool Springs Exxon, and Riverbend Convenience.
Other business
In other business, Habersham County commissioners are expected to:
Approve the purchase of a 2022 Ford F-250 for Animal Control and consider IT’s purchase requests for FY24 computer upgrades.
Consider a request to accept three roads in the Hearth Stone Subdivision into the County Road Maintenance System.
Hold the first reading of an amendment to Chapter 62 of the Habersham County Code of Ordinance to add a section on tow trucks and wreckers services.
Address construction contracts for the Airport Runway Overlay Project.
The regular commission meeting will be held at 6 p.m. at the Habersham County Courthouse in the Jury Assembly Room at 295 Llewellyn Street in Clarkesville.
Fulton County Superior Judge Scott McAfee (Jason Getz/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)
(GA Recorder) — Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee has scheduled a hearing for Tuesday afternoon to consider prosecutors’ request to revoke Harrison Floyd’s bond for allegedly making incendiary statements about witnesses in the 2020 presidential election interference case.
McAfee’s ruling will determine whether the ex-director of Black Voices for Trump will have to return to the same Atlanta jail where Floyd spent several days in August after a grand jury indicted him on charges alleging that he, Donald Trump, and 17 of their co-defendants illegally conspired to try to reverse the GOP incumbent Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss to the Democrat’s presidential nominee Joe Biden in Georgia and several other states.
Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis cited in her Nov. 15 court filing recent comments Floyd made about former Fulton County election worker Ruby Freeman, who the state is expected to call to testify at trial about how he allegedly tried to pressure her to falsely admit to committing voting fraud while counting absentee ballots at State Farm Arena following the Nov. 3, 2020, general election. He has also launched verbal attacks against Georgia election officials, including Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
Floyd, a former U.S. Marine and mixed martial arts fighter, was released from custody from the Rice Street jail on Aug. 29 after posting the $10,000 cash or property collateral required as part of his $100,000 bond on charges of racketeering and conspiracy, influencing a witness and solicitation to make false statements and writings.
Floyd was the only defendant out of the 19 charged in the sweeping racketeering case who spent time in custody following the August 14 grand jury indictments.
According to Willis, Floyd has repeatedly violated a bond agreement prohibiting him from publicly referring to co-defendants and potential witnesses.
Upon Willis’ filing of the bond motion, Floyd compared his treatment to Clarence Thomas’ claims of a “high tech lynching” at his U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings in 1991 when he was confronted with allegations of sexual harassment.
Willis also cited Floyd’s recent postings on social media about Jenna Ellis, a former Trump campaign attorney who recently pleaded guilty in the Fulton case. Floyd has contended that he is using social media to explain the roles that some of the state’s witnesses had in voting fraud that cost Trump the 2020 election.
Ellis was among four of the co-defendants who have provided prosecutors with videotaped statements as part of their plea agreements that require them to cooperate with prosecutors.
Additionally, Floyd is facing federal charges for confronting two FBI agents sent to serve him with a grand jury subpoena at his Maryland apartment.
Freeman has spoken publicly about how the allegations spurred so many threats from election deniers that she had to move from a Fulton County home that she lived in for two decades.
Biden was certified the winner in Georgia with a nearly 12,000 vote edge over Trump.
Fulton DA predicts trial will run through 2024 election
In a motion filed Friday afternoon, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis petitions for the trial for Trump and his co-defendants to start on August 5.
This date matches Willis’ prediction earlier this week that the trial for Trump and his remaining co-defendants would extend beyond the Nov. 5 election, in which Trump is currently favored to beat Biden again.
During a Washington Post event last week, Willis surmised that the intensive trial might last through the early January presidential inauguration. Willis had previously advocated for a March start for a four-month trial with 150 state witnesses taking the stand.
According to Willis, the later trial start should eliminate any scheduling conflicts with other legal cases Trump is facing, including a federal election interference case in Washington D.C.
Aug. 5 is several weeks after the dates set for the Republican National Convention where delegates will select the GOP presidential candidate in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Recent polls show Trump as holding a significant lead over his Republican rivals for the nomination.
“I believe the trial will take many months and I don’t expect that we will conclude until the winter or the very early part of 2025,” Willis said last week.
Trump has pushed for the beginning of his trial to be delayed until after the end of his campaign to win a second term in the White House.
More plea deals looming?
Booking photos from the Fulton County conspiracy case charging Donald Trump and allies with trying to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results. Top row, from left Jeffrey Clark, Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, Michael Roman, Ray Smith, David Shafer, Sen. Shawn Still. Center row, from left, Mark Meadows, Rudy Giuliani, Donald Trump, John Eastman, Kenneth Chesebro. Bottom row from left, Robert Cheeley, Harrison Floyd, Stephen Lee, Scott Hall, Misty Hampton, Cathleen Latham, Trevian Kutti. As of Oct. 24, Powell, Ellis, Chesebro and Hall have pleaded guilty to various charges; the rest are awaiting trial. (Photos from Fulton County Sheriff’s Office)
CNN cited sources last month claiming that Fulton prosecutors have discussed plea agreements with at least six other co-defendants in an attempt to get as many co-defendants to turn against Trump as possible.
Ex-Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter and other legal experts have predicted that more co-defendants will seek deals similar to the ones reached over the last month by co-defendants and attorneys Ellis, Sidney Powell, Kenneth Chesebro, and Atlanta bail bondsman Scott Hall.
Porter told the Georgia Recorder that Fulton prosecutors are likely to be in favor of more co-defendants avoiding prison if they provide information that implicates Trump’s role as a leader of a multi-state election interference plot.
(GA Recorder) — Former first lady Rosalynn Carter leaves behind a rich legacy of championing mental health and women’s rights.
She will be buried at the ranch house in Plains she and former President Jimmy Carter built in 1961. She died Sunday, just days after the family announced she had entered hospice at the home.
Rosalynn was married for 77 years to Jimmy Carter, who is now 99 years old and entered hospice early this year.
“Rosalynn was my equal partner in everything I ever accomplished,” Jimmy Carter said in a statement on the center’s website. “She gave me wise guidance and encouragement when I needed it. As long as Rosalynn was in the world, I always knew somebody loved and supported me.”
Tributes poured in from across the political spectrum Sunday, a testament to her broad popularity that transcended partisan politics and her enduring contributions to causes and charities that stoked her passion.
President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden on Sunday were at Naval Station Norfolk in Norfolk, Virginia, participating in a Friendsgiving dinner with service members and military families from the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower and the USS Gerald R. Ford.
“Time and time again, during the more than four decades of our friendship – through rigors of campaigns, through the darkness of deep and profound loss – we always felt the hope, warmth, and optimism of Rosalynn Carter,” the president said in a statement. “She will always be in our hearts. On behalf of a grateful nation, we send our love to President Carter, the entire Carter family, and the countless people across our nation and the world whose lives are better, fuller, and brighter because of the life and legacy of Rosalynn Carter.’’
Georgia Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff said Georgia and the country are better places because of Carter’s contributions.
“A former First Lady of Georgia and the United States, Rosalynn’s lifetime of work and her dedication for public service changed the lives of many,’’ Ossoff said. “Among her many accomplishments, Rosalynn Carter will be remembered for her compassionate nature and her passion for women’s rights, human rights, and mental health reform.’’
Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp paid tribute to her, recalling her service as Georgia’s first lady during Jimmy Carter’s term as governor starting in 1971.
“A proud native Georgian, she had an indelible impact on our state and nation as a First Lady to both,” Kemp said in a statement. “Working alongside her husband, she championed mental health services and promoted the state she loved across the globe. President Carter and his family are in our prayers as the world reflects on First Lady Carter’s storied life and the nation mourns her passing.’’
Former President Donald Trump said on X that he and his wife, Melania, joined in mourning Carter.
“She was a devoted First Lady, a great humanitarian, a champion for mental health, and a beloved wife to her husband for 77 years, President Carter,” said Trump.
Georgia GOP Congressman Rick Allen posted on the X social media platform: “Rosalynn was a beloved Georgian and dedicated her life to serving others. Our nation will miss her dearly, but her legacy will never be forgotten.”
Former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called Carter “a saintly and revered public servant” and a leader “deeply driven by her profound faith, compassion and kindness.”
Pelosi, a California Democrat, recalled how Carter, while her husband was serving as Georgia governor, was moved by the stories of Georgia families touched by mental illness and took up their cause, despite the stigma of the time.
“Later, First Lady Carter served as honorary chair of the President’s Commission on Mental Health: offering recommendations that became the foundation for decades of change, including in the landmark Mental Health Systems Act,” Pelosi said. “At the same time, First Lady Carter was a powerful champion of our nation’s tens of millions of family and professional caregivers.”
The eldest of four children, Rosalynn was born at home in Plains on Aug. 18, 1927. One of her best childhood friends was Ruth Carter, Jimmy’s younger sister. Jimmy Carter’s mother, Lillian, was a nurse who treated Rosalynn’s father when he was ill with leukemia.
Rosalynn enrolled at Georgia Southwestern College in 1945 after she graduated from Plains High School with honors.
Jimmy Carter was home on leave from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis that fall when he asked her to go to a movie. By Christmas, he’d proposed to her, but she turned him down because things were moving too fast for her. He soon asked again, and the couple married at Plains Methodist Church on July 7, 1946, a month after Jimmy graduated from Annapolis.
As Jimmy Carter climbed the Navy’s ranks, the couple started a family with sons John William arriving in 1947, James Earl III (“Chip”) in 1950, and Donnell Jeffrey in 1952. Daughter Amy was born in 1967.
Carter was accepted into an elite nuclear submarine program, and the young family then moved to Schenectady, N.Y. But when his father fell ill, Jimmy left his commission and moved back to Plains to take care of the family’s peanut business.
Rosalynn was an active campaigner during her husband’s political climb, beginning with his run for state senator in the early 1960s. By the time he was elected president in 1976, she vowed to step out of the traditional first lady role.
Five weeks after Inauguration Day, the President’s Commission on Mental Health was established with Rosalynn serving as honorary chairperson. The Mental Health Systems Act that called for more community centers and important changes in health insurance coverage, passed in 1980 at her urging.
In 1982, the couple founded the Carter Center in Atlanta, with a mission to “wage peace, fight disease and build hope.” She later founded the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregiving at the school now known as Georgia Southwestern State University, her alma mater. The institute was renamed the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers in 2020.
She was also an active partner in her husband’s philanthropic support for Habitat for Humanity, often joining him in framing houses for charity.
Three months after Jimmy entered hospice in February, the Carter family announced Rosalynn had dementia. She entered home hospice on Nov. 17.
Rosalynn Carter is survived by her children — Jack, Chip, Jeff, and Amy — and 11 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.
The Carter family requests that, in lieu of flowers, people consider a donation to the Carter Center’s Mental Health Program or the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers.
SALEM, Va. – The Piedmont women’s basketball team won the Roanoke Classic Championship defeating Stevenson 74-50 Sunday in Virginia. Andelin Hill earned tournament MVP honors thanks to her 14 points and seven rebounds which led the Lions in both categories.
It was a balanced scoring attack for the Lions as 11 different players scored. Newcomer Kennedi Henson was the only other Lion to reach double figures, as she added 12 points off the bench on 5-of-7 shooting to earn All-Tournament Team honors.
Piedmont fell behind Stevenson early by a 13-8 margin. However, the Lions closed the first quarter on a 10-0 run over the final 2:27 to grab a 23-15 advantage. The run was sparked by a Colby Reed three-pointer.
The Lions continued to slowly extend out their lead during the second quarter, leading by double digits for the first time on a Hayley Borino jumper with 3:32 left in the half. From there, dominant play inside from Hill and another Reed three-pointer gave Piedmont a 43-25 edge at the break.
The third quarter saw the Lions push the lead to over 20 as the Mustangs were never able to mount a charge. The lead stretched to as much as 27 late in the third quarter and Stevenson never got the score to under 20 points the rest of the way.
Up next, Piedmont will return home to host the Piedmont Classic where they will face Birmingham-Southern on Saturday, November 25 at 2 p.m.
TURNING POINT:
–Piedmont held an impressive 18 point lead at the half 43-25.
STANDOUT PERFORMANCES:
—Andelin Hill was named Tournament MVP as she led the team with 14 points while adding seven rebounds and making all four of her free throw attempts.
—Kennedi Henson earned all-tournament honors with another impressive performance adding 12 points as she was 5-of-7 from the floor.
INSIDE THE BOX SCORE:
–The Lions were rock solid from the free throw line, connecting on 16-of-19.
-Piedmont’s stifling defense forced 27 turnovers by the Mustangs.
NEWS AND NOTES:
–This marks the second time in the past three seasons that the Lions have started a season 4-0.
Rosalynn Carter, partner of 39th U.S. President Jimmy Carter, changed the way Americans view mental health, and spent decades reducing stigma and fighting diseases through her work at the Carter Center.
She passed away Sunday, Nov. 19, at 2:10 p.m. at her home in Plains, Georgia, at the age of 96. She died peacefully, with family by her side, a statement from the Carter Center said.
After President Carter began hospice care in February 2023, the Carter family stated in May that the former first lady had dementia and continued to live happily at home with her husband, enjoying Plains and visits with loved ones. The family shared the news in hopes of increasing important conversations about mental health at kitchen tables and in doctor’s offices around the country.
Mrs. Carter began hospice care at home on Nov. 17, 2023. She and President Carter were last seen in public together while riding in the back of a Suburban with the windows down during the Plains Peanut Festival in September.
“Rosalynn was my equal partner in everything I ever accomplished,” President Carter said in the statement. “She gave me wise guidance and encouragement when I needed it. As long as Rosalynn was in the world, I always knew somebody loved and supported me.”
She is survived by her children — Jack, Chip, Jeff, and Amy — and 11 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. A grandson died in 2015.
“Besides being a loving mother and extraordinary First Lady, my mother was a great humanitarian in her own right,” said Chip Carter. “Her life of service and compassion was an example for all Americans. She will be sorely missed not only by our family but by the many people who have better mental health care and access to resources for caregiving today.”
In recognition of her tireless fight for mental health and unwavering dedication to improving the lives of others, Rosalynn Carter was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 2001, becoming only the third first lady ever inducted, joining Abigail Adams and Eleanor Roosevelt. (Credit: GPB File)
Early life
Eleanor Rosalynn Smith lived her life as a love story. She wrote in her 1984 autobiography, First Lady From Plains, that she grew up three years and 3 miles apart from Jimmy Carter. Their more than 77 years together was the longest-lasting presidential marriage in history.
But Rosalynn Carter’s legacy is more than what she accomplished alongside her partner in the Georgia governor’s mansion or in the White House. She leaves a legacy of caring, compassion and community with the Carter Center.
Carter was born during the summer of 1927 — just two years before the Great Depression. Her family knew hardship in their small South Georgia city of Plains.
Kathryn E. Cade, who served on Mrs. Carter’s staff in the White House, also served as vice chair of the Carter Center’s Board of Trustees and a member of the Center’s Mental Health Task Force.
“We’ve often talked about her growing up, you know, her childhood and growing up in Plains,” she said. “And the two things that she always says is ‘We were poor’ and ‘We didn’t know it.'”
Carter became a caretaker for her siblings after her father died.
“I think that what shaped her concern for vulnerable people was really this upbringing where you took care of one another,” Cade said, “that that was part of the ethos of being raised in a small town.“
This photo was taken on July 7, 1946, when Rosalynn Smith and Jimmy Carter were married in Plains, Ga. (Credit: Jimmy Carter Library)
Rosalynn Smith married James Earl “Jimmy” Carter, then a newly commissioned officer just out of the Naval Academy, in 1946. For the next seven years she followed her husband from one Navy base to next, raising three sons, many times on her own as her husband pursued his naval career.
But when Jimmy Carter’s father died in 1953, Jimmy decided to move his family back to Plains without discussing it with Rosalynn.
For the next 10 years she worked side by side with her husband in the family peanut farming business.
In 2002, Mrs. Carter told GPB, “When we came back to Plains, [he and I] started keeping our books at our farm supply business,” she said. “And pretty soon he was asking me questions about the business because I knew a lot about it on paper.”
From 1963 to 1974, Jimmy Carter announced his political ambitions by running for the Georgia state Senate, and the governor’s office twice, winning in 1970. During this time Rosalyn gave birth to their only daughter, Amy, and found that she had a knack for politics.
“She was seen as Jimmy Carter’s secret weapon,” journalist Jonathan Alter said. “Rosalynn Carter allowed her husband to essentially be in two places at the same time, could campaign in two places at the same time. That’s a huge asset in politics.”
Georgia had one of the worst mental health care programs in the nation in the decades leading up to Jimmy Carter’s run for governor in the early 1970s. And so when mental health became an issue on the campaign trail, Rosalynn noticed.
She also found her lifelong calling while talking with voters about their concerns as she campaigned for her husband eventually surprising him at one of his rallies.
In a 2012 town hall on mental health in Americus, she recalled how she snuck into the crowd listening to a stump speech to get then candidate Jimmy Carter on the issue and on the record.
“Well, [Jimmy Carter] reached for my hand before he looked before he knew who I was and he said, ‘What are you doing here?’ And I said, ‘I want to know what you’re going to do for people with mental illnesses when you’re governor of Georgia.’ And he said, ‘We’re going to have the best program in the country and I’m going to put you in charge of it.'”
Rosalynn Carter indeed advocated for better mental health care during the years in the Georgia capital.
Later, less than a month after Jimmy Carter won the presidency in 1976, she convinced her husband to create a presidential commission on mental health.
During the 1970s, Rosalynn Carter chairs a meeting in Chicago for the President’s Commission on Mental Health. (Credit: Courtesy of the National Archives)
A trailblazer
Already President Carter’s most trusted advisor, she became the first first lady to have an office in the East Wing.
Rosalynn Carter held hearings across the country, testified before Congress and spearheaded passage of the Mental Health Systems Act of 1980.
She traveled to South America and the Caribbean on a diplomatic mission for the president, campaigned states to adopt early child immunization programs, endorsed and lobbied for the Equal Rights Amendment, and pushed her husband to add more women and minorities to his cabinet and federal judgeships.
Often considered to be more politically savvy than her husband, she sat in on cabinet meetings and the White House staff grew to respect her candid and sometimes tough advice on issues. She soon earned the nickname of the “Steel Magnolia” in the East Wing.
After losing to Ronald Reagan in the 1980 election, the Carters found themselves at a crossroads.
“I was bitter about being defeated; yes,” Mrs. Carter told GPB. “And, well, first we wrote books and in writing the books, we realized how being in the governor’s mansion, the White House had broadened our view of what was important in the world. And I know I woke up one night, Jim was sitting straight up in the bed. I thought he was sick because he always sleeps all night long. And he said, I know what we can do at the presidential library. We can have a place to resolve conflict. So it really started to solve conflicts.”
They formed the Carter Center in 1982, and it quickly moved beyond just resolving conflicts. They soon expanded their work to include disease eradication, election monitoring, building homes with Habitat for Humanity, and high-profile peace missions.
Mrs. Carter also created the Carter Center’s Mental Health Program, promoting mental health programs and policy around the world, as well as founding the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers at Southwest Georgia State University.
In 1999, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom as well as being inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 2001.
February 8, 2007. Tingoli Village, Northern Province, Ghana. President Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn arrive and greet villagers and dignitaries in this village where great strides have been made in the fight against trachoma.
A champion
For the next five decades Rosalynn Carter would work diligently to remove the stigma of mental illness.
Rosalynn Carter was the nation’s leading mental health advocate for much of her life. First in the Georgia Governor’s Mansion, then in the White House, and later at The Carter Center, she urged improved access to care and decreased stigma about issues surrounding mental health. One in 10 older Americans have dementia, a condition that affects overall mental health.
Cade says in part because of Mrs. Carter’s work, the way that people think about mental health and mental illness today is dramatically different from the way that people thought about it just 50 years ago.
“Today, most people are not afraid to seek help,” Cade said. “They’re not afraid to admit they need help. And today, most people can recover from mental illnesses. So, the hope of recovery is real and tangible.”
Grandson Jason Carter, chair of the Carter Center Board of Trustees, said, “I think the work of the Carter Center is really testament to my grandfather’s ability and my grandmother’s ability to see the humanity in people far across the world in far different situations than they are and understand that those are people just like them. And whether that comes from their faith, their experience or the combination thereof … it’s become a powerful, powerful motivator and a powerful tool to do real good in the world.”
Eve Byrd, who worked as director of the Mental Health Program at the Carter Center, said that as passionate as Mrs. Carter was advocating for those with mental illness, she was most proud of her family.
“I can’t tell you how many times she would, after a meeting, would say that she was getting together with everybody here at the Carter Center, all of her children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren for a dinner,” Byrd said. “And we would tease and I’d say, ‘Well, I better let you get on with your way and do some cooking, right, Mrs. Carter?’ And we would kind of laugh together.
As the founder of the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers, Mrs. Carter often noted that there are only four kinds of people in this world: those who have been caregivers; those who are currently caregivers, those who will be caregivers, and those who will need caregivers.
Rosalynn Carter leaves a family legacy of four children, 12 grandchildren and many great-grandchildren.
When asked how she would like to be remembered, Rosalynn Carter once said, “ I would like for people to think that I took advantage of the opportunities I had and did the best I could.”
This article comes to Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News
Members of the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church gather in Athens on Saturday, Nov. 18, to vote on the disaffiliation requests of 265 UMC churches. (North Georgia Conference photo)
Fifty-seven area churches will leave the United Methodist Church at the end of this month. They’re among 265 congregations in North Georgia and metro Atlanta that voted to disaffiliate from the denomination largely due to a split over LGBTQ issues.
Members of the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church ratified the disaffiliation requests of 261 of those churches on Nov. 18 during a special called session at the Classic Center in Athens.
“I realize how sad this time is for many, including myself. I just hate that those who are leaving us, I will not have the opportunity to meet or to be with,” said conference leader Bishop Robin Dease.
Conference members did not ratify the requests of four congregations following discussion by members of the Annual Conference. Those churches are The Fountain UMC at Sugarloaf in Duluth, McEachern Memorial UMC in Powder Springs, Trinity UMC in Rome, and Griffin First UMC.
A ‘solemn day’
The 261 churches that are leaving the conference account for a sizable percentage of its nearly 700 churches. Their exit marked a “solemn day,” church leaders said in a news release.
The disaffiliations become effective on Nov. 30. After that, the departing churches may no longer use the “United Methodist” name nor the denomination’s logo. They will have 30 days to fulfill their financial obligations to the UMC, including purchasing church property if their congregation chooses to keep it. And they’re prohibited from pursuing further litigation against the conference.
Hundreds of congregations in Georgia and across the country sued for the right to have their disaffiliation requests heard.
The church disaffiliations in North Georgia come after 193 congregations once belonging to the UMC South Georgia Conference left the denomination in May, also due to the ongoing debate over LGBTQ issues.
A church divided
In 2019, the United Methodist Church strengthened its bans on gay clergy and same-sex weddings, prompting a backlash from more progressive congregations. Some churches viewed the measures as punitive and discriminatory and left the denomination because of them. Many progressive UMC church leaders refused to enforce the rules. That, in turn, upset the more conservative congregations. They’re now leaving the denomination because of its failure to uphold the church’s stated belief that “homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching.”
Bishop Robin Dease, leader of the North Georgia Conference of The United Methodist Church. (Conference photo)
As of early August 2023, over 6,200 of the UMC’s 30,000 congregations in the United States had been approved for disaffiliation since 2019, according to the UMC’s website.
In a briefing ahead of the Nov. 18 vote, Bishop Dease told conference members, “This is a difficult season in the life of the church and we all are grieving, and yet we know who the healer is.”
“I just want you to be reminded and to please know and to be assured that the sun will rise on November 19,” Bishop Dease said. “And on December first and on January first, and on each of those mornings, like every morning, I will give thanks for the United Methodist Church and our connection.”
The North Georgia Conference followed Dease’s lead in looking ahead to the future.
“In December, approximately 440 North Georgia Conference churches will continue the work of fulfilling the mission of the United Methodist church in our communities and beyond,” the news release said. The conference said it anticipates opening “several new United Methodist churches” next month.
List of disaffiliated churches in North Georgia
Central East District Barrow, Clarke, Oconee, Gwinnett, and Walton Counties
Atlanta Bethany UMC Buford
Bishop UMC Watkinsville
Campton UMC Monroe
Korean UMC of Hamilton Mill Buford
Monroe First UMC
New Pentecost UMC Winder
New Prospect UMC Athens
Norcross First UMC
Pentecost UMC Winder
Pleasant Valley UMC Monroe
Rays UMC Bishop
Snellville UMC
St James UMC Athens
Statham UMC
Sugar Hill UMC
Trinity UMC Duluth
Walnut Grove UMC Loganville
Young Harris Memorial UMC Athens
Central North District Fulton and Clayton Counties
Alpharetta First UMC
Antioch UMC Fairburn
England Chapel UMC Jenkinsburg
Mt Pisgah UMC Johns Creek
Mt Zion UMC Atlanta
New Hope UMC Clayton County
St James UMC Alpharetta
St John UMC Atlanta
Central South District DeKalb, Henry, Newton, and Rockdale Counties
Bethel UMC Stockbridge
Conyers First UMC
Harvest Point UMC Locust Grove
Jodeco Road UMC Stockbridge
Julia A. Porter Memorial UMC Porterdale
Mt Carmel UMC Hampton
Philadelphia UMC McDonough
Red Oak UMC Newton County
Rockland UMC Lithonia
Shiloh UMC
Skyland UMC Brookhaven
Turners UMC McDonough
Union UMC Stockbridge
Central West District Carroll, Cobb, Douglas, Haralson, and Paulding Counties
Bethel UMC Hiram
Bethel UMC Tallapoosa
Bethlehem UMC Bremen
Buchanan UMC
Carrollton First UMC
Center Point UMC Temple
County Line UMC Acworth
Covenant UMC Smyrna
Crawford Chapel UMC Bremen
Due West UMC Marietta
Flint Hill UMC Hiram
Hope UMC Dallas
Kennesaw UMC
Lithia Springs UMC
Mountain View UMC Marietta
Mt Nebo UMC Dallas
New Beginnings UMC Kennesaw
New Covenant UMC Douglasville
New Hope UMC Carrollton
Old Camp UMC Carrollton
Pleasant Grove UMC Temple
Pleasant Hill UMC Villa Rica
Poseyville UMC Bremen
Shiloh UMC Carrollton
Shiloh UMC Kennesaw
Smyrna UMC Dallas
St Stephen UMC Marietta
Tallapoosa First UMC
Temple UMC Carroll County
Victory UMC Carrollton
Wesley Chapel UMC Villa Rica
North East District Banks, Dawson, Habersham, Hall, Habersham, Hart, Forsyth, Franklin, Jackson, Lumpkin, Madison, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union, and White Counties
Antioch UMC Clayton
Arbor Pointe UMC Hoschton
Bethel UMC Dawson County
Bethesda UMC Hartwell
Bold Spring UMC Carnesville
Clarkesville UMC
Clemons Chapel UMC Gainesville
Cleveland UMC
Colbert UMC
Commerce First UMC
Confidence UMC Stephens County
Confidence UMC Union County
Cool Springs UMC Clarkesville
Creekside UMC Cumming
Dahlonega UMC
Ebenezer UMC Cumming
Ebenezer UMC Hollywood
Ebenezer UMC Jefferson
Gordon’s Chapel UMC Athens
Hartwell First UMC
Hickory Flat UMC Lula
Holly Springs UMC Jackson County
Homer UMC
Jones Chapel UMC Danielsville
Lebanon UMC Gillsville
Liberty Hill UMC Hartwell
Loudsville UMC Cleveland
Lula UMC
Macedonia UMC Cleveland
Macedonia UMC Hart County
McKee’s Chapel UMC Dawsonville
Midway UMC Gillsville
Mountain City UMC
Mt Bethel UMC Commerce
Mt Pleasant UMC White County
Mt Zion UMC Alto
Nacoochee UMC
New Hope UMC Dillard
New Salem UMC
Pennington Chapel UMC
Piedmont UMC
Providence UMC Hart County
Providence UMC Stephens County
Providence UMC Union County
Redstone UMC
Redwine UMC Hart County
Redwine UMC Gainesville
St James UMC Toccoa
St Paul UMC Lumpkin County
Sunshine UMC
The Highlands UMC
The Vine UMC
Tiger UMC
Toccoa First UMC
Union Hill UMC Hiawassee
Vanna UMC
Wesley Chapel UMC Dahlonega
North West District Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cherokee, Fannin, Floyd, Gilmer, Gordon, Polk, Murray, Pickens, Walker, and Whitfield Counties
Aragon UMC
Ball Ground UMC
Barnsley UMC Kingston
Bethel UMC Morganton
Bethel UMC Summerville
Big Springs UMC Woodstock
Blue Ridge UMC
Canton First UMC
Cedartown First UMC
Center Valley UMC Chatsworth
Chatsworth First UMC
Elizabeth Lee UMC Chickamauga
Eton UMC
Fairmount UMC
Farmville UMC Calhoun
Five Springs UMC Dalton
Hillside UMC Woodstock
Jackson Chapel UMC Cave Spring
Kingston UMC
Kresge UMC Cedartown
Liberty Hill UMC Morganton
Lindale UMC
Little River UMC Woodstock
Lyerly UMC
Macedonia UMC Alpharetta
Menlo UMC
Mineral Springs UMC Dalton
Mizpah UMC Kingston
Mt Gilead UMC Woodstock
Mt Pleasant UMC Rome
Mt Zion UMC Chatsworth
New Echota UMC Calhoun
New Haven UMC Dalton
Oostanaula UMC Rome
Orange UMC Canton
Plainville UMC
Pleasant Grove UMC Dalton
Rock Spring UMC
Rockmart First UMC
Rush Chapel UMC Rome
Shannon UMC
Silver Creek UMC
Sixes UMC Canton
Union Hill UMC Canton
Varnell UMC Cohutta
Wesley Chapel UMC Calhoun
West Rome UMC
White UMC
Williamstown UMC McCaysville
Woodstation UMC
South East District Baldwin, Columbia, Elbert, Greene, Hancock, Lincoln, McDuffie, Morgan, Oglethorpe, Putnam, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, and Wilkes Counties
Anthony Chapel UMC
Barton Chapel UMC
Berlin UMC
Blythe UMC
Burns Memorial UMC Augusta
Central UMC Putnam County
Cokesbury UMC Augusta
Coldwater UMC
Crawfordville UMC
Dearing UMC
Devereux UMC
Dunn’s Chapel UMC
Eatonton First UMC
Elberton First UMC
Fork Chapel UMC
Francis Asbury UMC Elberton
Friendship UMC Hephzibah
Gaissert UMC
Greensboro First UMC
Harlem UMC
Hephzibah UMC
Hopewell UMC Milledgeville
Independence UMC
Johnson UMC Warrenton
Knowles Chapel UMC
Liberty UMC Hephzibah
Lincolnton UMC
Macedonia UMC Warren County
Martinez UMC
Midway UMC Lincolnton
Milledgeville First UMC
Montpelier UMC
Mosaic UMC
Pennington UMC
Philadelphia UMC Eatonton
Philadelphia UMC Harlem
Prospect UMC Morgan County
Prospect UMC Norwood
Rutledge UMC
Salem UMC Thomson
Shiloh UMC
Siloam UMC
Sparta UMC (Pierce Memorial)
St James UMC Augusta
St Mark UMC Washington Road Augusta
St Paul UMC Eatonton
Swords UMC
Thomson First UMC
Union Point First UMC
Washington First UMC
Wesley Chapel UMC Eatonton
Young Memorial UMC Thomson
South West District Butts, Coweta, Fayette, Harris, Heard, Jasper, Lamar, Meriwether, Monroe, Pike, Spalding, Troup, and Upson Counties
Aldora UMC Thomaston
Bethany UMC Fayetteville
Big Springs UMC
Caney Head UMC Roopville
Christ UMC Forsyth
Concord UMC Pike County
Culloden UMC
Ebenezer UMC Barnesville
Ebenezer UMC Fayetteville
Ebenezer UMC Forsyth
Forsyth First UMC
Harmony UMC LaGrange
Highland UMC Griffin
Hillcrest UMC LaGrange
John Wesley UMC Grantville
Korean UMC of LaGrange
Korean UMC of Newnan
Life Springs UMC Zebulon
Mountville UMC
Mt Zion UMC Campground
Pomona UMC
Prospect UMC Mansfield
Providence UMC Fayetteville
Stark UMC Butts County
The Rock UMC
Thomaston First UMC
Trinity On The Hill UMC LaGrange
Turin UMC
Welcome UMC Roopville
Williamson UMC
Woodbury UMC
Yatesville UMC