BARBARA JEAN PALPANT

Date of Birth

December 12, 1927

Date of Death

October 14, 2023

October 15, 2023
Barbara Jean (Jeanne) Palpant was born on December 12th, 1927, in Villa Park, Illinois. She
graduated from high school in 1945 and studied briefly at Wheaton College.
“A few years ago, we read mom’s admission letter to Wheaton,” says John, her fourth-born.
“She talked about wanting to attend because she had friends going there. That letter reflects who
mom was. She was so social. Time with friends—that’s what she treasured.”
In 1947, Jeanne (her preferred name) married Ed Palpant and moved to Michigan, where Ed
studied forestry at Michigan State University. They lived in a small travel trailer.
“Mom was so resilient,” says John. “She moved around the country so much with dad when he
was in the forest service. She had two kids in Michigan, two in New Mexico, and two in
Colorado.”
The family moved a total of six times before settling in Pennsylvania for a time.
After her sixth child was born, Jeanne took a job as an administrative secretary in the Dean of
Student Affairs office at Penn State University, where Ed worked in the forestry department.
“She was trained as a newspaper assistant and was very organized and a great typist and filer,”
says Risë, Jeanne’s third-born, “so she easily got the job. She pivoted her life and organized all
of us to do the duties at home so she could manage to work full time. Eddie was a toddler and
Edie an infant, but she returned to work to help support the family.”
“She worked to support us all,” says John. “That was part of mom’s resilience.”
In her free time, Jeanne often took her kids on bike rides.
“Riding bikes with her to the Penn State pool in summertime is one of my favorite memories,”
says Eddie, her fifth-born.
“I remember being a young teenager and still wanting to have our bike rides but worrying that
mom might be too old for a workout,” says Edie, her sixth-born. “At the time, she would have
been in her early 50’s!”
Jeanne loved to quilt, sew, knit, cook, and play piano and organ. The family often traveled across
the country on summer camping trips to collect pinecones for Ed’s business, so her freezers often
had seed packets sitting next to frozen peaches. Over the years, she and Ed visited missionary
friends in Venezuela, the Caribbean islands, Europe, and East Africa.
“Her legacy of love and friendship has rippled around the world,” says Sam, her first-born. “She
loved singing hymns, reciting Bible passages, and praying for the missionaries she visited.”
Jeanne’s family and friends remember her most for her hospitality, kindness, and warmth. She
taught pre-school Sunday school into her 80s, and her dining room table was frequently
surrounded by people from the local church community.
“She always lit up whenever anybody came to visit,” says John.
“Mom never focused on herself,” says Ted, her second-born. Even as her health waned, “if we
asked her what she wanted to eat or do, she would just say, ‘Whatever you want to do. I just
want to be with you kids.’”
In 2008, Jeanne and Ed moved to Buena Vista, Colorado, and in 2014, after 66 years of
marriage, Ed passed away. Jeanne then moved to Elburn, Illinois, to live with her son, John, and
daughter-in-law, Nancy. She passed away on October 13th at the age of 95.
In her last hours, she said frequently what she had said all her life: “Thank you, thank you, thank
you.”
Jeanne is survived by six children, 18 grandchildren, and 19 great grandchildren, with another
one on the way.

5 thoughts on “BARBARA JEAN PALPANT

  1. We have lost our dear Jeanne. Always solid, always welcoming, always positive. Ed and Jeanne “adopted” our family when we were between our time in Venezuela and Colombia. When we returned from Colombia three years later, they bought a house for us in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania! They told us, “You can buy it, rent it, or check out other houses.” We bought it from them.
    Lives like Jeanne Palpant’s spur us on to do good and live well for our loving Lord.
    Rest in peace, Jeanne

  2. We love you, Jeanne! We are so glad that you let us become part of your wonderful family. Thank you for your love, kindness and fellowship.

  3. In the brief time I got to cross paths with Jeanne, I noticed the warmth and loving kindness of a woman with lots of life. I got to sit next to her many times in our small group and she would sometimes lean against me. I don’t know if it was for warmth or just to be close to someone in the group. She will be missed but I’m sure she is with Jesus and leaning into Him.

  4. I worked for your Ed and Jeanne in the summers on their tree farms in PA from the time I was 12 until I was 16. There was a crew of us young kids that all grew up together in the area that worked for them. I have so many memories of those summers working on the trees at his house in the Fort, traveling to Bear Lake to trim trees and working on the old house on his property. Your Dad would gather us around for meetings either before we started our days or when we were done. I remember one time we were having a meeting and his old cat, who we called I-Lean, because she would walk and fall over, fell right into a hole next to us. We all laughed and she was fine. I remember traveling to Bear Lake and Ed had us douse ourselves in sulfur powder to ward off the chiggers. It smelled so bad and unfortunately we still got them. Makes me laugh when I think about it. after spending the morning in the hot sun trimming trees, we would cool off in the creek behind his house. I remember Jeanne sending snacks outside for us kids when we would come to work. Ed had such a passion for his work and for the kids who worked for him. He had a big impact on me as a young teenager and I often think about him still. They together left quite a legacy. My condolences to the family.

  5. “Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope. For we believe that Jesus died and rose again, and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him.” In 1 Thessalonians

    Jeanne’s words of encouragement made me smile. I always experienced them as shared from her genuineness of heart. I also got to witness her example of steadfast commitment, being a witness within the body of Jesus Christ, for community.

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