Effie Jean Powers
Effie Jean Powers, known by friends and family as Jean, was the fourth child in the family being born on October 31, 1927, in Davidson, Oklahoma to George Wesley Powers and Nita Viola Bates.
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Name: Effie Jean Powers
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Spouse: Frederick Charles Wikel
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Children: Carole Jean Wikel ( ); Patricia Gwen Wikel ( ); Curtis Glen Wikel ( ); Sharon Kay Wikel ( ); Roberta Joyce Wikel ( ) Laura Susan Wikel ( ); David Bradley Wikel ( )
From Carole's FB Page
EFFIE JEAN POWERS WIKEL
I raised seven children – five girls and two boys. David was four years old when Fred passed away.
At that time I was working part time for 7-11 stores. I had been having quite a bit of pain in my hips, so I decided to retire on social security disability and sign up for Medicare in order to get some health insurance to help pay for the surgery I needed (which, by the way, was never any help.) I became eligible for rehabilitation through social security disability. They paid for me to go back to school. I took an accounting technician course at Lake Washington Vocational Tech. which took about one year to complete. I attended classes six hours a day and continued to work part time.
I was a little nervous about going back to school so late in life, but to my surprise I wasn’t as dumb as I always thought I was. I was always at the bottom of the class with low, low grades but still passing. After school I landed a job working for Safeco Life Insurance Company as an accounting clerk. I became the disbursement clerk. I worked for Safeco for thirteen years and retired at age sixty-seven because of health problems.
Retirement took some getting used to, but I’m finally content. I love to make quilts and also to put together jigsaw puzzles.
Jean Wikel (Jeanie)
(From Powers Family Book compiled by Georgia Powers Jennings)
I raised seven children – five girls and two boys. David was four years old when Fred passed away.
At that time I was working part time for 7-11 stores. I had been having quite a bit of pain in my hips, so I decided to retire on social security disability and sign up for Medicare in order to get some health insurance to help pay for the surgery I needed (which, by the way, was never any help.) I became eligible for rehabilitation through social security disability. They paid for me to go back to school. I took an accounting technician course at Lake Washington Vocational Tech. which took about one year to complete. I attended classes six hours a day and continued to work part time.
I was a little nervous about going back to school so late in life, but to my surprise I wasn’t as dumb as I always thought I was. I was always at the bottom of the class with low, low grades but still passing. After school I landed a job working for Safeco Life Insurance Company as an accounting clerk. I became the disbursement clerk. I worked for Safeco for thirteen years and retired at age sixty-seven because of health problems.
Retirement took some getting used to, but I’m finally content. I love to make quilts and also to put together jigsaw puzzles.
Jean Wikel (Jeanie)
(From Powers Family Book compiled by Georgia Powers Jennings)
Left to right, Tommy Powers, Connie Powers, Jeanie, and me (Carole).[From Carole's FB Page]
EFFIE “JEAN” WIKEL
OBITUARYEffie “Jean” Wikel
Seven children lost their mother, fourteen grandchildren lost their grandma, and 25 great grandchildren lost their great-grandmother when Effie Jean (Powers) Wikel, age 92, passed away on Friday afternoon, October 9, 2020. She was just 22 days from reaching her 93rd birthday.
Effie, known to her close friends and family as “Jean” or “Jeanie,” was named after her own grandmother, Effie Mable Alexander Bates, and her grandfather, Eugene (Gene) Tullis Bates. She was born on October 31, 1927 to Nita Viola (Bates) Powers and George Wesley Powers. She was the last remaining of her seven brothers and sisters: Georgia Jennings, Clinton Powers, Viola (Mildred) Knight, Virginia Jennings, Wesley Powers, Tommy Powers, and Connie Spielman.
Her husband, Frederick Charles Wikel, also preceded her in death. She is survived by seven children: Carole Johnson of Marysville, WA; Patricia Wilcox of Lodi, CA; Curtis Wikel of Bothell, WA; Sharon Miller of Arlington, WA; Roberta Chaffins of Lake Stevens, WA; Laura Nelson of Coeur d’Alene, ID; and David Wikel of Lake Stevens, WA.
Jean was born in Davidson, Oklahoma, and her family later moved to Texas, where she was a member of the 1945 graduating class of Muleshoe High School, Muleshoe, Texas. Later, while living back in Oklahoma, she met and married Fred in 1953. By this time, family members on both sides had migrated to the Pacific Northwest for jobs, so they followed suit. Ultimately, Jean and Fred made their home in Bothell, Washington, just outside of town.
Jean was a strong, independent, smart, and capable woman who still had six children living at home when her husband died at the early age of 49. While she had previously been a homemaker and held various jobs in the community, the family was dependent on her after Fred’s passing, so she attended classes at Lake Washington Vocational College and earned a Certificate in Accounting. Subsequently, she obtained a job at Safeco Insurance, where she worked until her retirement.
She regularly attended the Kenmore Assembly of God Church in Kenmore, Washington for a number of years (now known as Cedar Park – Northshore). She was an active participant in the “Senior Lunch Bunch,” and served as secretary to track their member’s contact information and birthdays. The computer was her friend and she used it in the afore mentioned listing of contacts, as well as a communication tool. Even in her last year of life, at the age of 92, she was able to play various games on the computer to entertain herself and check Facebook to monitor the activities of family and friends. Those who know her would all agree that she was a great cook and could conjure up delicious meals using whatever she had on hand. She was known for her desserts, and you could rely on being offered a cookie if you stopped by. Her hospitality was contagious. She will be missed by all who loved her.
OBITUARYEffie “Jean” Wikel
Seven children lost their mother, fourteen grandchildren lost their grandma, and 25 great grandchildren lost their great-grandmother when Effie Jean (Powers) Wikel, age 92, passed away on Friday afternoon, October 9, 2020. She was just 22 days from reaching her 93rd birthday.
Effie, known to her close friends and family as “Jean” or “Jeanie,” was named after her own grandmother, Effie Mable Alexander Bates, and her grandfather, Eugene (Gene) Tullis Bates. She was born on October 31, 1927 to Nita Viola (Bates) Powers and George Wesley Powers. She was the last remaining of her seven brothers and sisters: Georgia Jennings, Clinton Powers, Viola (Mildred) Knight, Virginia Jennings, Wesley Powers, Tommy Powers, and Connie Spielman.
Her husband, Frederick Charles Wikel, also preceded her in death. She is survived by seven children: Carole Johnson of Marysville, WA; Patricia Wilcox of Lodi, CA; Curtis Wikel of Bothell, WA; Sharon Miller of Arlington, WA; Roberta Chaffins of Lake Stevens, WA; Laura Nelson of Coeur d’Alene, ID; and David Wikel of Lake Stevens, WA.
Jean was born in Davidson, Oklahoma, and her family later moved to Texas, where she was a member of the 1945 graduating class of Muleshoe High School, Muleshoe, Texas. Later, while living back in Oklahoma, she met and married Fred in 1953. By this time, family members on both sides had migrated to the Pacific Northwest for jobs, so they followed suit. Ultimately, Jean and Fred made their home in Bothell, Washington, just outside of town.
Jean was a strong, independent, smart, and capable woman who still had six children living at home when her husband died at the early age of 49. While she had previously been a homemaker and held various jobs in the community, the family was dependent on her after Fred’s passing, so she attended classes at Lake Washington Vocational College and earned a Certificate in Accounting. Subsequently, she obtained a job at Safeco Insurance, where she worked until her retirement.
She regularly attended the Kenmore Assembly of God Church in Kenmore, Washington for a number of years (now known as Cedar Park – Northshore). She was an active participant in the “Senior Lunch Bunch,” and served as secretary to track their member’s contact information and birthdays. The computer was her friend and she used it in the afore mentioned listing of contacts, as well as a communication tool. Even in her last year of life, at the age of 92, she was able to play various games on the computer to entertain herself and check Facebook to monitor the activities of family and friends. Those who know her would all agree that she was a great cook and could conjure up delicious meals using whatever she had on hand. She was known for her desserts, and you could rely on being offered a cookie if you stopped by. Her hospitality was contagious. She will be missed by all who loved her.