Sr. Laura Gall, CSJSister Laura Gall, CSJ from Nazareth, Michigan and
formerly from St. Joseph Center, Tipton died in Michigan. She
had been a resident of Camilla Hall at St. Joseph Center in Tipton
for many years and had moved to Borgess Gardens on the Nazareth
Campus of the Congregation of St. Joseph in Kalamazoo, Michigan on
Nov. 7, 2012, where she died peacefully surrounded by loving care
givers early Thursday morning, January 10, 2013.Sister
Laura (Rita) was born to Hilda (Peters) and William Gall on January
2, 1923 in Tipton. She was the fourth of their eight children. Her
father was a farmer for several years and though the family remained
on their farm, he discontinued farming and built a garage on the
property. His work as a mechanic on cars and farm equipment was
highly respected. Sister Lauras mother was a wonderful homemaker.
Sister Dorothy Gall, a double cousin to (Rita) Sister Laura,
recalled how, on many Sunday afternoons, her family would visit
Ritas family. Their fathers were brothers and their mothers were
sisters, which made for close family ties.Sister
Laura received her elementary education at St. Johns Parish School
in Tipton and her high school education at St. Joseph Academy in
Tipton. She entered the Tipton Sisters of St. Joseph Convent in
1941. After Novitiate, Sister Laura attended Good Samaritan School
of Nursing in Kokomo, where she earned her R.N. She received her
B.S. in nursing at St. Mary of the Plains College in Dodge City,
Kansas. Sister Lauras life-long ministry was in health care,
usually in a supervisory position. Some of her years of nursing
were at St. Joseph Hospital, in Kokomo. She served several years at
St. Charles Hospital in Bend, Oregon, then at Mercy Hospital in
Elwood.During
Sister Lauras last 14 years as a nurse, she served as the manager
of the infirmary at the Tipton Sisters of St. Joseph Motherhouse.
What a blessing Sister Laura was to the sisters and lay patients
there, as well as to the staff. Until the Tipton Center closed in
late 2012, some of the infirmary staff who served until that time
sang Sister Lauras praises loudly. One of the aides hired by her
said Sister Laura hired me 30 years ago. Sister was always a very
quiet manager, assuming her employees knew what they were doing,
though I had no experience in the nursing field. Sister Laura liked
to have fun, visit her family and eat chocolate! She always kept a
box of petit fours in the infirmary refrigerator, in case she needed
a chocolate pick-me-up. In her later years, as I got to know her as
a patient in our infirmary, she and I always got along. When I
would remind her she had hired me, however many years it was at that
time, she would say, Well I must have done a good job, because you
are still here. Those same praises were sung loudly by some of the
sisters who were privileged to have a parent or other relative live
out their lives in the Tipton infirmary, including Sister Laura,
whose mother and sister died there. Sister Laura is survived
by four siblings, John Gall,
Anderson, Mary Sutton, Elwood, Tom and Rita Gall, Tipton and
Gertrude Glotzback, Alexandria.Following the funeral Mass at Nazareth, Sister Lauras body will be
taken to Tipton, where visitation at 11:30 a.m. and Mass at 1:00
p.m. on Wed., January 16, will take place at St. John the Baptist
Catholic Church with Fr. Leroy Kinnaman presiding and burial in the
cemetery at St. Joseph Center in Tipton to follow.
Young-Nichols Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements.May She Rest In Peace!