Mrs. Trumbull Comes Home

Lisa Thomas • July 28, 2021

It was Monday, February 14, 1966—Valentine’s Day, if you’re paying attention, a fact that has absolutely nothing to do with this story, but something that just occurred to me when I typed the first part of this sentence.  Dad had just arrived home for supper, carrying a box the likes of which I had not seen before.  Of course, I was only 9 at the time, so there was a lot I hadn’t seen.  He gently set it down on the piano bench and told us he wasn’t comfortable leaving it at the funeral home overnight.  Why, you may ask?  Because in that box were the ashes of Mary Elizabeth Patterson, world renown actress and Savannah, Tennessee native.

In 1966 we didn’t have cremations in Savannah, or much of anywhere in the South for that matter, so being charged with the safety of her ashes was an unusual responsibility, one my father felt better about fulfilling by having her as an overnight “guest” in our home.  Although born and raised in Savannah, Miss Patterson had only been a visitor over the decades of her career, having left to pursue her chosen profession, despite her parents’ best efforts to persuade her otherwise, including sending her to Europe as a distraction.  Unfortunately for them . . . but great for the rest of the world . . . it only strengthened her desire to perform; upon returning she took her leave of Savannah, moving to Chicago where she joined a small Shakespearean troupe known as the Ben Greet Players.  That leap of faith led to her Broadway debut in 1913 in the play Everyman.  Her talents drew the attention of writer Booth Tarkington who personally requested that she perform in his Broadway production of The Intimate Strangers in 1921—and novelist William Faulkner who chose her to play the elderly female lead in the movie version of his book Intruder in the Dust.

She continued performing on Broadway until the mid-1950s; however, she also chose to pursue parts on the big screen, accepting her first role in 1926 at the age of 51.  It was a silent movie called The Boy Friend , a role that was rapidly followed by a multitude of others.  As a character actress she was able to transition from silent films to “talkies”, eventually performing in over 100 films with the likes of Katharine Hepburn, John Barrymore, and Bob Hope, just to name a few.  But it wasn’t until she reached the ripe old age of 77 that she accepted the role which would make her a household name—although it didn’t start out as Mrs. Trumbull.  Elizabeth’s first appearance on the I Love Lucy Show was as Mrs. Willoughby, the wife of the justice of the peace who married Lucy and Ricky the second time around.  Fans of the show may not remember Elizabeth in that part, but they most assuredly will recall her horribly off-key rendition of I Love You Truly during the ceremony.  The next year she was cast as Mrs. Trumbull and the rest, as they say, is history.  At least where her career is concerned.

Elizabeth Patterson was 91 when she contracted pneumonia, an illness that eventually took her life.  At the time she was living in the Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood, her home for the previous 35 years.  Her body was cremated and placed on a train, scheduled to make the trip cross-country and arrive in time for her service at the First United Methodist Church in Savannah on Sunday, February 13, 1966.  That was why my father made his first trip to the train station the day before . . . and returned empty-handed.  The trains might run on time, but Mary Elizabeth did not.  She missed her memorial service (which went on without her), arrived the day after, and spent the night on our piano bench before being interred in Savannah Cemetery on Tuesday.

So, for those of you who didn’t know, Miss Mary Elizabeth Patterson is only one of several celebrities we have buried in our midst.  If you’d like to pay your respects, her grave is easily found nestled among her other family members in the McDougal plots of Savannah Cemetery.  If you’re turning onto Cherry Street (that runs through the middle of the cemetery) off of Water Street, take the first road to the right in the cemetery.  If you’re turning onto Cherry Street off of Pickwick, take the second road to the left.  You’ll pass the Shackelford family monument on your left and next to that, the Fariss family monument.  Stop there by the ginormous oak tree and look straight across to your right.  You’ll see the McDougal family’s section with their monuments reaching up toward the sky.  Hers is the first one in the fence, nestled in the corner, made of the whitest marble and bearing the inscription “In Memory of Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Mildred McDougal and Edmund Dewitt Patterson.  1874 – 1966”.

“She walked with Kings, nor lost the common touch”.

 

About the author:  Lisa Shackelford Thomas is a fourth generation member of a family that’s been in funeral service since 1926.  She has been employed at Shackelford Funeral Directors in Savannah, Tennessee for over 40 years and currently serves as the manager there.  Any opinions expressed here are hers and hers alone, and may or may not reflect the opinions of other Shackelford family members or staff.

 

 

By Lisa Thomas May 8, 2025
It was late one Saturday afternoon when the guests gathered beneath the boughs of an ancient oak. They had come to celebrate the beginning of a life together for two young people they all knew and loved, but before the ceremony began with the official seating of the grandparents and parents of the bride and groom, a woman walked down the aisle, carrying sunflowers which she gently laid in a chair at the front.
By Lisa Thomas May 1, 2025
The crowd was tremendous, numbering in the tens of thousands, and all willing to wait the almost eight hours it could take to reach their destination. And the vast majority of them came armed with cell phones and the occasional selfie stick.
By Lisa Thomas April 23, 2025
As a child I always had a love-hate relationship with Easter. I loved the egg hunts we had at school, walking to a nearby classmate’s home and searching for the elusive eggs scattered about the yard. I wasn’t crazy about being required to dress up for the church service—mainly because I wasn’t crazy about being required to dress up for much of anything.
By Lisa Thomas April 17, 2025
When a family comes to the funeral home to make arrangements for someone they have loved and lost, they come bearing much more than clothes and a picture for the memorial folder. They just don’t always realize it.
By Lisa Thomas April 9, 2025
If you were allowed to live a normal, rough-and-tumble childhood, then you probably have the scars to show for your adventures. I know I do.
By Lisa Thomas April 3, 2025
It was one of those nights when his daddy had to work late, and our youngest grandchild Malcolm was upset because he wouldn’t be home for their normal bedtime routine.
By Lisa Thomas March 27, 2025
Nick and Christina married on July 4th and every year thereafter celebrated with a big cake covered in sparklers. Nick owned a Greek restaurant and the cook there knew that each July 4th, that cake was not only expected but greatly anticipated. So, it concerned Christina when her husband began asking about the cake more than a month away from their anniversary . . .
By Lisa Thomas March 19, 2025
As best we can tell, she adopted us in December of 2022. Not that we minded. We were coming off of two very difficult years and this little furball proved to be the bright spot we needed.
By Lisa Thomas March 12, 2025
Some important things to know about James Christopher Harrison: 1. He was known as the Man with the Golden Arm. 2. He saved the lives of over two million infants. 3. He was afraid of needles but . . . 4. He donated blood and/or plasma 1,173 times in his 88 years of life. 5. That life ended on February 17, 2025.
By Lisa Thomas March 6, 2025
We’ve all watched those movies or television shows where the wealthy relative dies and everyone gathers in the lawyer’s office or, better yet, the library in the mansion of the recently deceased—the one with the dark wood paneling, filled with books they never read and overstuffed furniture.
More Posts