Obit: Gelhaus, Helen V. (1922 - 2011)
Contact:
bob@wiclarkcountyhistory.orgSurnames: Bochnia, Gelhaus, Griffin, Jones, Kovacik, Leischer, Parnewicz, Riehle, Smitala, Sapetta, Willger, Zuleger
----Source: The Star News (Medford, Taylor Co., Wisconsin) Thursday, May 19, 2011, online edition
Gelhaus, Helen V. (Sapetta) (December 7, 1922 – May 14, 2011)
Helen V. Gelhaus, 88, Medford, died on Saturday, May 14 at Aspirus Wausau Hospital.
Funeral services were held on Wednesday, May 18 at Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Medford, with Father Gerard Willger officiating.
Burial was at Holy Rosary Catholic Cemetery in Medford. Pallbearers were Ben, Gabe and Bryan Gelhaus, Mike Smitala, Eric and Adam Zuleger and Matt Leischer.
Hemer Funeral Service of Medford assisted the family with arrangements.
--
----Source: Hemer Funeral Home (Medford, Taylor Co., WI), online
Helen Victoria Gelhaus was born December 7, 1922 in the farming community of Redville, just east of Lublin, Wisconsin, to Edmund & Victoria Sapetta, immigrants from Poland.
She was the second oldest of four daughters: Josephine, Helen, Wanda (Bochnia), and Louise (Parnewicz). She helped on the farm in her youth, attended elementary school in Redville, and in 1940 graduated from Owen High School.
After high school, she traveled to Chicago for work and adventure, where she
remained for 16 years, working in factories, including Motorola (Belmont Street)
for 10 years where she rose to level of supervisor, managing a department that
made wire recorders for the war. Helen also attended beautician school at night
while working at the factory, and then, after leaving the factory, worked five
years as a beautician. Helen remembered being picked up by the bus each day on
Lawrence Street. She lived on Milwaukee Street. In 1956, at the age of 34, she
returned home to Redville to care for her ailing parents.
Helen met Arthur Gelhaus (a widower with 9 children) on a trip to Medford to
purchase a car for her father. She would joke that Chevrolet threw in a husband
with the car to seal the deal. They were married August 29, 1959 at St.
Stanislaus Catholic Church in Lublin. An eyewitness at the reception said Art
and Helen could dance a wild Polka. She moved to Medford where she resided at
133 North Second Street for the next 37 years. Raising nine children, and then
three more of her own, Helen was busy with homemaking duties.
She was an excellent cook and all remember the big meals of pierogies, golumki
(stuffed cabbage), creamed chicken on homemade biscuits, fried venison,
porcupine meatballs, and countless others, or the special treats like the raised
sugar donuts, the deep fried rosettes covered with powdered sugar, and a variety
of pies, cookies, sweet rolls, and character birthday cakes. With a freezer
always full of wild game, she mastered the art of making the toughest piece of
meat taste great.
Holidays were special. The Christmas tree was always jaw-dropping, a tall tree
covered with glass ornaments and countless lights. Art called it the Polish
Christmas tree. At Easter, she would dye eggs with natural dyes and beeswax in
the Polish style. At Halloween, carved pumpkins were everywhere.
Before her snowmobile accident in her early 50’s, which nearly took her life,
she enjoyed putting together puzzles, with a number of them adorning the
upstairs hallway. Helen was an avid gardener, and Art and she had a big plot
which they kept immaculate out at the farm. She loved her flowers along the
house. Canning and freezing vegetables and fruit were annual rituals.
Helen did find time for painting ceramic figurines which was one of her most
memorable hobbies. She also enjoyed traveling with Art to Chevrolet conventions
all over the world. And, of course, she loved going to garage sales. She was
quite the regular attendee on the garage sale circuit in her later years. When
she left her apartment on Main Street in 2005 to go to Country Gardens, an
assisted living facility, she had a garage sale of her own. They came from all
corners of the county to witness this mother-of-all-garage-sales. In her most
recent years, she collected angels and had a beautiful display in her room.
She and Art were loyal members of Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Medford. All
twelve children made their way through elementary school at Holy Rosary. Helen
also enjoyed visiting the church of her youth in Lublin, the Polish National
Catholic Church, and its cemetery, where her parents are buried. Through much of
her life she would attend the annual Polish National Catholic Church festival in
Lublin, where she could speak Polish with her friends from the past.
Helen was preceded in death by her parents, her husband Arthur, and also stepson
Nicholas. Survivors include stepchildren Mary, Sally (Tony Kovacik), Carol
(Roland Griffin), Jane (Tom Leischer), Laura (Dennis Zuleger), Susie (Lyle
Jones), Peter (Jeanine), and Charles (Linda), and children Donna (Steve Smitala),
Mark (Linda) and Robert.
Survivors also include thirty-six grandchildren, twenty great grandchildren, and one great-great grandchild. Caretaker Martha Riehle was a very close and dear friend to Helen in her latter years.
In lieu of gifts, contributions can be made to Holy Rosary Catholic Church, 215
South Washington Avenue, Medford, WI 54451.
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