Obit: Clifford, Betty (1923 - 2011)
Contact: Stan
Email: stan@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Clifford, Ussher
----Source:
Marshfield News Herald (Marshfield, WI) 02/15/2011 Clifford, Betty
(1923 - 8 FEB
2011)
Anyone
who sat in Betty's kitchen and savored New England seafood chowder,
sweet and sour barbecued ribs, homemade lasagna or a dozen other
specialty dishes that she made for family and friends left the
table with taste buds transformed and palate
well-pleased.
Anyone
who took part in a Colby City Council or School Board meeting --
throughout the 1970s, '80s and early '90s where Betty served as the
first female alderman and the first female School Board member --
knew that she brought a critical eye and a level of professionalism
that improved the quality of the decisions made by Colby's elected
officials.
Anyone
who spoke Spanish, Tagalog or Bicol with Betty, decades after she
had left the Philippines, was amazed by how well she spoke and
understood the languages she had learned as a child living in the
Philippines. And most anyone who spoke English with Betty noticed
her unique accent and total command of a language she learned from
her Canadian father and Filipino
schoolteachers.
Yet
most notably, any of the American and British servicemen who fought
in Corregidor or Bataan during World War II, only to wind up
starving and sick in Japanese prison camps in and around Manila,
knew that their own survival depended, in no small part, on a group
of brave Filipinos, Americans, and a Canadian named Betty Ussher,
who risked capture and torture in order to smuggle food and
medicine to the imprisoned Allied
soldiers.
Betty's
life of adventure and hardship, struggles and triumphs came to an
end last week. Two weeks after being hospitalized due to a major
seizure, Betty contracted pneumonia and passed away peacefully in
her sleep at Aspirus Wausau Hospital on Feb. 8, 2011, at the age of
87.
A
cosmopolitan person by definition, Betty's life story began in
Vancouver, Canada, in 1923. Born the youngest of four children to
Fidela Ortiz Reyes y Roxas of the Philippines and George Odlum
Ussher of Toronto, Canada, Betty began her world travels at the
tender age of 4. The Ussher family sailed across the Pacific and
initially settled in the Philippine capital of Manila. She attended
school in her mother's hometown of Libmanan, a town of 1,000 people
located 140 miles southeast of Manila; however, in 1939, she
returned to Manila to live with her older brother John and his
family while she continued her education. After completing a
one-year intensive secretarial course in 1940, Betty began work as
a secretary for a Filipino law firm, but global events soon
interfered with her
career.
World War II
engulfed the Philippines on Dec. 8, 1941, when the Japanese invaded
Luzon. Fifty-two years later, Betty formally was recognized in
Wisconsin by the Philippine-American Association of Madison and
Neighboring Areas (PAMANA) for her courageous efforts in assisting
American and British POWs. A 2005 film called "The Great Raid"
lifts up and documents several major achievements of the Philippine
Resistance
Movement.
In
1950, she left the war-ravaged Philippines and returned to Canada
where she found secretarial work in a law office in Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan. Later, she gained employment at the University of
Saskatchewan, serving as secretary to the director of the extension
office.
Betty
met her husband, Joe Clifford, at the University of Saskatchewan in
1955, and the two were married a year later at St. Paul's Cathedral
in Saskatoon on Sept. 29, 1956. They lived in Minneapolis, Minn.,
for the next eight years and started a family there. In 1967, Joe's
company, Midland Cooperatives (now Cenex/Land-O-Lakes), promoted
him to a central Wisconsin post, and the Clifford family resettled
in
Colby.
While a
resident of Colby, Betty became the first woman elected onto the
City Council and served as alderman for 14 years. She also was the
first woman in Colby voted onto the Colby School Board, an office
that she held for eight years. In addition, Betty volunteered for
many years as the executive secretary of the North American Lily
Society and was a longtime member of the Minnesota Horticultural
Society. Due to her love of flowers and gardening, she joined
Colby's Blue Sky Garden Club and helped them organize the
Bicentennial Flower Show in Colby in 1976. During the 1980s, she
became a Wisconsin Department of Agriculture Certified Judge for
flower shows. On top of all that, she was also one of the central
organizers of the first two statewide quilt shows to be held in
Colby.
From
1992 to 1997, Betty worked with the Abbotsford Head Start program
as an interpreter and translator for Spanish-speaking children and
their parents. In 2002, she tutored Mexican adult learners studying
English as a foreign
language.
She is survived by her husband, Joe, six
children, Mike (Annemarie) Batavia, Ill.; Jim (Tlalli Mota
Castilla) San Diego, Calif.; Mary (Mike Schlageter) Verona, Wis.;
John, Minneapolis, Minn.; Rick, Westminster, Colo.; Bob, Boise,
Idaho; four grandchildren, Lauren Marie, Adam, Jonathan and
Nicholas; and two great-grandchildren, Thomas and
Maria.
Betty
was preceded in death by her parents; three sisters, Marie Corito,
Frances and Helen; two brothers, John and George; and her son
Bill.
It was
Betty's wish that in lieu of gifts or flowers, a charitable
donation be made to the Carter Center, an organization founded by
Jimmy and Rosalyn Carter that promotes peace, raises public
awareness of mental health issues, and fights disease around the
world. Go to www.cartercenter.org to find
ways to give online or by
mail.
A Mass
in Hope of Resurrection will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 19,
at St. Mary's Church in Colby, with visitation beginning at the
church at 10 a.m.; and a lunch following the service at St. Mary's
school cafeteria. Joe's nephew Fr. John Swing will
officiate.
Maurina-Schilling Funeral Home, Colby, is assisting the
family.
A
Memorial Mass followed by interment of ashes will occur in
Caledonia, Minn., on June 25, where the Clifford family, Joe's
Caledonia relatives and friends, and some of Betty's relatives will
have an opportunity to celebrate the life of Elizabeth Fidela Ortiz
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