Margaret Louise Caruthers
Ruppersburg died on February 22, 2019, at the age of 91. Most recently she resided
at St. Anne’s Terrace, Atlanta, where she had lived for nine years. For much of her life she lived in College
Park, Georgia, where she raised her six children: Hugh Michael Ruppersburg of
Athens (Tricia), Margaret Anne Watkins (Joe) of Sandy Springs, Karen Lynn
Keenum (Ty) of Sandy Springs, Nan Renee Hudson (Tom) of Black Mountain, NC, Luke
Caruthers Ruppersburg of Sugar Hill, and Elizabeth Finley King (Bill) of
Elkins, WV. She had fifteen grandchildren: Bill Watkins, Michael Ruppersburg
(Sarah), Emily Hudson (Bryan Quintana), Chris Keenum (Ann), Claire Watkins
(Adam Dwyer), Margaret Hudson, Charles Ruppersburg (Chelsey), Patrick Keenum
(Caroline), Andy Watkins (Amanda), Camille Hudson (Bryan Simmons), Max
Ruppersburg, Elizabeth King, Luke Ruppersburg, Jr., Walter King, and Julia
Ruppersburg. She had seven great
grandchildren. During her last days, she called her children and grandchildren “my
crowning glory.”
Margaret was born on July 2,
1927, in Beaumont, Texas. She was the
only child of Luther Lawrence Caruthers (a crop duster and later a pilot for
Delta Airlines) and Gussie Maxwell Caruthers (a schoolteacher and mother). As
the daughter of a pilot who dusted crops across the southeast, Margaret moved often
during her childhood. She remembered attending
thirteen different schools in one year. In 1939, her family settled in College
Park, Georgia. At the age of 12 she
attended the premier of Gone with the Wind
and wrote a short article about it for a local newspaper. She played the
accordion and once a week rode the bus from College Park to Atlanta to play
with a large accordion choir for young women.
During World War II Margaret
volunteered for the Red Cross. She attended Richardson High School and then
College Park High School, where she graduated first in her class in 1944. She
went on to study journalism at the University of Georgia, graduating in 1948. At UGA she belonged to Pi Phi sorority and
served a year as president. She was inducted into Mortar Board, Pi Kappa Phi,
and Alpha Lambda Delta honor societies and was a staff member for the college
yearbook, newspaper, and magazine. After graduation she worked several years for
Davison’s department store in Atlanta and edited the company newspaper. The Magnolia Tea Room at Rich’s was one of
her favorite places.
In 1949 Margaret married Hugh
Ruppersburg of College Park. Her good
friend Lucille, Hugh’s sister, had introduced them. Children began arriving in 1950. The marriage ended in 1976. Margaret raised her six children on a tight
budget, but she made sure they could pursue their interests. She saw that they had music lessons, played sports,
took ballet lessons. She took them to
the local library often and encouraged their reading. She attended any event in
which they had a part. She welcomed their
friends into the house and gave them a place to sleep if they needed it. She befriended neighborhood children. She was
president of the PTA and often a room mother. She was good at tolerating, overlooking,
and forgiving the various foibles of her offspring. She especially stressed
education: all of her children graduated from college. Long after they had
grown up and left home, she continued supporting and encouraging them. Later in
their lives, they did their best to thank her.
Margaret had a warm sense of
humor and was a model of courtesy and grace.
She loved playing bridge with her friends. She enjoyed reading, socializing,
baking, and following the news. She was a lifelong Democrat but generally kept
her politics to herself, except among her children. For most of her adult life
she attended First Methodist Church of College Park, where she taught Sunday
School and kept the nursery. For several years she was a substitute teacher at Woodward
Academy, where she also volunteered her time.
After her father’s death in 1967, she managed his four greenhouses and grew
orchids which she sold to local florists. She kept books for her husband’s
business and then for her son Luke when he took it over. She sewed clothes,
knitted sweaters and stockings, and smocked dresses for her grandchildren. She was a serious fan of crossword puzzles
and Jeopardy.
Each summer for more than 40 years,
Margaret’s children and grandchildren vacationed with her for a week on the
Florida Coast, first at Destin Beach and then on St. George Island. She enjoyed the fun and uproar of these
gatherings. She loved sitting on the
beach, sipping a glass of Chardonnay.
Margaret was the heart of a
family that loved her dearly and cannot begin to imagine her absence.
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