Marilyn Robbins

Born: Sat., Jul. 14, 1923
Died: Tue., Jun. 25, 2013


Visitation

7:00 PM to 8:00 PM, Fri., Jun. 28, 2013
Location: First Christian Church


Funeral Service

1:30 PM Sat., Jun. 29, 2013
Location: First Christian Church


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Marilyn Henderson Robbins passed away at 7:15 p.m., Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at Sunnyview Nursing Home at the age of 89, 15 days short of her 90th birthday.
Funeral services are scheduled for 1:30, Saturday, June 29, 2013 at the First Christian Church in Trenton.  The body is to be cremated after the services with inurnment at a later date at Resthaven Memorial Gardens in Trenton.  A visitation is scheduled from 7 until 8 Friday evening at the First Christian Church.  Open visitation will begin Thursday afternoon at Whitaker Eads Funeral Home in Trenton.  Memorial donations may be made to either the Marilyn Henderson Robbins 43 Piano Scholarship which was established at Columbia College in Columbia, MO to honor an outstanding piano student each year, or the First Christian Church of Trenton.  Online condolences may be left at whitakereads.com
Mrs. Robbins was born July 14, 1923 in Macon, MO the daughter of Jasper Ray and Iva Nadine Henderson.
She was a graduate of Monroe City, MO High School where she was a Drum Majorette for six years; Christian College (now Columbia College) in Columbia, MO, where she accompanied numerous soloists and groups, receiving the Buchroeder Award for Outstanding Musicianship; and the University of Arizona in Tucson with a Bachelor of Music.  Her graduate studies were in pipe organ in the School of Sacred Music at Union Theological Seminary in New York City.
In 1948, Mrs. Robbins returned to Columbia to be on the staff at Christian College.  It was there that she met Bill Robbins who had graduated from the University of Missouri before serving in the U.S. Marine Corps.  On May 4, 1950, they were married at her mother’s home in Columbia, and then settled in Bill’s hometown of Trenton, where she resided until her death.
Mrs. Robbins was involved in Pi Beta Phi Sorority, Sigma Alpha Iota Honorary Music Fraternity, American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), P.E.O. Sisterhood for 71 years, Shakespearean Circle, American Association of University Women, Daughters of the American Revolution, The American Legion Auxiliary, First Christian Church, where she was organist and directed the youth choir, and the Grundy County Museum.  She was a leader of Brownie and Girl Scout troops, state and national president of the Association of Mutual Insurance Companies Auxiliaries, and was involved in local, state and national chapters of Republican Women Federation.  She was honored twice by being Grand Marshal of the Missouri Days Parade.
In 1975, she was appointed to the Missouri State Bicentennial Commission by Governor Christopher Bond.  She traveled statewide presenting Bicentennial flags to 65 towns and cities.  Mrs. Robbins served on the Trenton Beautification Committee, which was responsible for making esthetic improvements to the city.  In 1976, she and Clarence Breazeal, then mayor of Trenton, sponsored the tree planting project southeast of the Geyer Hall Building on the campus of North Central Missouri College in Trenton.  Her efforts as a member of the state commission were responsible for a federal grant to establish the Grundy County Historical Society Museum, now one of the county’s major public attractions.
She also accompanied her husband on insurance and Masonic trips throughout the United States and world.  Two trips to the Holy Land in 1968 and 1971 were most important to her.
Her aptitude in music surfaced at a very early age and continued as a dominant interest in her life.  She wrote her first music composition, “My Music Box” when she was six years old, and continued throughout her life composing over 40 copyrighted songs for individuals, organizations, and special events, with 16 of those songs written for a musical play, “Billy the Kid.”  Sharing her music was one of the most enjoyable parts of her life.  Playing for the local men’s group Brothers in Song in the 1970s was a special highlight.  She always felt and expressed that her musical abilities were a gift from God.
Besides her music, Mrs. Robbins’ greatest asset was her endless enthusiasm for life, seeing something positive and finding beauty in most everything.  She loved interacting with people and was blessed with the ability to remember people’s names.  She felt it was her duty to learn new things and stay current with the day’s news.  Patriotism and love of her country were evident in all areas of her daily life, from saluting the flag in her front yard each night to thanking military personnel and veterans for their services.
She is survived by two daughters, Meredith Black and her husband Gary of Trenton, Marsha Eaton and her husband Randy of Warsaw, four grandsons, Guy Black of Jefferson City, Jacob Black and Lindsey of Trenton, Eran Eaton and Tammy of Columbia, and Alex Eaton of Columbia; and five great-grandchildren, Anna Nadine, Karinne Marie, Kaitlynn Marie, Triston Mason, and Grant William.
She was preceded in death by her devoted husband, Bill on January 3, 2012, her parents, a brother J.R. Henderson, and a sister Charlotte Ann Watson.

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Cara Stauffer
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
I'm so sorry for your loss Guy. She must have been quite a lady.

Casey Rutherford
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
Marsha & Randy,

Matt and I are sorry for your loss and wish you peace and strength in this difficult time. May God be with all of you.

Sincerely, Matt & Casey Rutherford

Teresa Jincks
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
Marilyn was a joy to be around. She loved to talk and she always had a smile. Music was one of the ways she ministered to people. She was so excited when the FCC got the pipe organ. She was playing it before it was installed and plugged in. She would come to the church and play for hours once it did get installed. It was a joy to listen to her play the organ. She was a blessed Christian.
Teresa Jincks

Laura Poole
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
A bright light has left us here and is now Home.
Blessings of comfort to all of her beloved family.
She will be dearly missed and fondly remembered.
With sincere sympathy & love,
Laura Poole, Grinnell, Iowa

Chaplain Garry Jones
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
I greatly enjoyed the visits with Mrs. Robbins. She showed such grace and beauty. I am glad to know that she loved Jesus so much, she truly understood that God is good to us all the time.

She will be greatly missed. I am glad that she has been reunited with her beloved Bill.

Jackie Clark-Otto
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
So sorry to get the news of your Moms passing. I received a lovely note from her recently. She was a special and very talented woman.. She was always present at so many important occasions at the church. My baptism, wedding and the service for Chet and Ruth. Marilyn was always willing to share her gift.
I regret so much that I will not be present at her service. I am meeting Travis girls at airport and getting them to Kanakuk this weekend. Please know I will be there in spirit. Prayers to all Jackie

Linda Armstrong
   Posted Thu June 27, 2013
Guy, Jacob, Meredith and Gary: You have my sympathy in the loss of your grandmother, mother and mother-in-law. It is hard to let go, but that is exactly what we are born to do. Thank Jesus, you will see her again!

Bill Clark
   Posted Fri June 28, 2013
Meredith, Gary, Marsha, Randy and the whole family,

Our thoughts and prayers are with you as your say goodbye to a very special and wonderful woman. She lived her life and faith well. Her life was one filled with music and love while she enriched the lives of all she knew and touched. I do not know anyone who knew her who didn't love her, respect her and appreciate her. We have all be enriched by out time in her company and her music in our lives. We will all miss her and our prayers are with each of you.

Bill Clark

Cathy Oesterling
   Posted Fri June 28, 2013
To family members of Marilyn's,

'She was a class act' Marilyn's life must be celebrated! Sorry I am unable to be there to share this time with you. She touched the lives of many in her own very special way. I was saddened to hear of her passing but joyful to know she is in 'good hands'. My thoughts are with each of you. God Bless.

E Allen Kohler
   Posted Fri June 28, 2013
My most sincere sympathy to the family. I was Grand High Priest of the Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons of Missouri in 1976-1977 and I remember Marilyn and her wonderful piano music and our Grand Sessions. It was always a pleasure to see her and her husband Bill. I know Marily will be greatly missed.

E. Allen Kohler

Donna Hammer
   Posted Sat June 29, 2013
Meredith and Gary,

So sorry to hear about Marilyn. What a beautiful lady inside and out. She always just exuded happiness and what an extremely talented musician. Oh that others could have the positive outlook on life that she had. I will miss she and your Dad at gatherings at Trenton when I am there.

Bruce & Golda Beals
   Posted Sat June 29, 2013
Very sorry for your loss. Thanks for keeping in touch.

Paul S. Fraser
   Posted Sat July 06, 2013
Dear Meredith, Gary, Marsha, Randy, Guy, Jacob, Eran, Alex and all of Marilyn's wonderful family,

I cannot express in these few words all that Marilyn meant to me. Though I served as her Pastor for less than two years, her love, her faithfulness, her "joie de vivre," and her graciousness in the face of adversity, grief and loss will remain with me for the rest of my life. Consider yourselves blessed to have had her for a Mom, mother-in-law, grandmother and friend. And now there is a great reunion in heaven. Love never ends.

Grace and peace! Pastor Paul

Linda Benner
   Posted Mon July 08, 2013
To Meredith, Gary, Marsha, Randy and to all your children and grandchildren,

News traveled slowly to the mountains of Colorado, where John and I have been vacationing. It is hard to imagine that Marilyn has left us; she was a real life-force to the end. I am so sorry for your loss, and I join you in being grateful that I knew her.
Marilyn and Bill were lovely role models for as long as I can remember. Marilyn was as feminine as a rose, but under the well-tailored pink and pearls was a toughness in adversity that I came to count on. She was there, with her wonderful musicianship and professionalism in some of my happiest and
darkest hours. She played for our wedding, perfectly quaffed, in the midst of a wild December snow storm. It was Marilyn who created an arrangement of the Mizzou Fight Song that that was so dignified that no one raised an eye-brow when it drifted through the music for my dad's funeral. Only she nd I shared that smile!
"Marilyn" means music, but also a deep faith and optimism. Her talents were many,her standards were high for herself and for those she loved, and I could not be around her without wanting to be my best.
After reading the account of her many accomplishments, I am reminded of a sage's quote: "It is not dying we need fear, it's never having lived in the first place." No worries, Marilyn.

My condolences and my love to you all, Linda Benner

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