Lives Lost: A Louisiana grandmother 'took care of everyone'

Lives Lost: A Louisiana grandmother 'took care of everyone'

SeattlePI.com

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Mary Louise Brown Morgan kept a garden full of rosebushes and just about every kind of fruit tree, from plums to satsuma oranges to kumquats. And when the lawn surrounding her south Louisiana home grew too high, the 78-year-old grandmother climbed on her lawnmower to cut it herself.

“She had the most beautiful yard on the block,” said her grandson, Steve Morgan.

Morgan, a “God-fearing woman” who made a “mean gumbo and red beans,” died on March 27, he said. She was the first in Terrebonne Parish to succumb to the coronavirus, in a state where COVID-19 is taking a heavy toll.

Born in New Orleans on Jan. 5, 1942, she was a lifelong resident of Gray, Louisiana — a small town of about 6,000 people, deep in the state's Acadiana region.

Three times a week, she could be found working out at her local gym, where she enjoyed being with the Silver Slippers, a group of ladies who also would go out to lunch and have parties together, said her niece Penny Mikkel.

In addition to her gardening, she raised chickens, giving away eggs to friends and family. She was a regular churchgoer and frequent volunteer at Mt. Vernon Methodist Church, where she put up the Christmas tree and kept the pews clean.

To her extended family, she was the matriarch who went out of her way to make sure they were OK. She helped care for a dying brother, a friend's children, and before Steve's sister Cecily died last fall, she traveled back and forth to Houston to visit her while she was being treated.

“My auntie had this beautiful spirit. .... She was very elegant and graceful and at the same time down to earth," said Penny. “She was a treasure to our family. She kept everyone together.”

She also loved to travel, Steve said, recalling how she flew to New York to cook...

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