| Nedra holds a clocktower painting by Ken Gentle that she donated for a Coosa River Basin Initiative silent auction in 2017. |
Sheila and I attended a memorial service today for Nedra Manners who died last month after a short illness. We were often thrown with Nedra because of shared interests.
She opened a small antique store on Fifth Avenue near the Oostanaula bridge. Sheila and I have always enjoyed poking around in antique stores and junk shops, and Yellow Door Antiques is only a few steps off the Riverwalk where we walk regularly. Nedra also was one of Rome's premier estate sale businesses. And Sheila and I visit those regularly as well.
Nedra was a committed Methodist and shared our dismay and heartbreak over the breakup of our denomination over the last few years. She commiserated with us over the turmoil and rancor in our church of over fifty years, Trinity United Methodist, and invited us to visit her church, First UMC, after ours disbanded.
She was someone who believed earnestly in the tenets of American (small-r) republicanism and liberty and justice for all. That meant she and we often ran into each other at One Community United events and Democratic Party events and at campaign headquarters for Democratic candidates. Brig. Gen. (ret.) Shawn Harris says Nedra was the first to suggest he run for Congress.
I am a collector of American political items and Nedra let me know whenever she found interesting ones in her estate sales. I bought several posters and pins from her and FDR shot glasses. She gave me a box full of some neat Obama pins. She also gave an Ike poster to me one time. Turns out it was a repro -- she didn't know that and I never told her.
Valerie Loner, pastor at Nedra's church, Rome's First United Methodist, delivered the message at the memorial service today. I wish I had the whole message; I'd share it here. She built her sermon around the Great Commandment and its corollary that can be summed up, as she indicated, in four words: "Love God; Love neighbor". I agree with Valerie that Nedra embodied that. Of course I also believe that in Nedra's case the "apple falls not far from the tree". Valerie shared a story of Nedra saying at her mother's funeral that her mom was "loved by many and feared by some." Nedra was fierce in her belief in and defense of "liberty and justice for all."




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