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In Memoriam
Martha Josey Larsen
President of
The House of Jossey-Josey
1999-2001
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On December 5, 2002, our immediate past President, Martha Josey
Larsen of Macon, Georgia, died of cancer. Despite a
very pessimistic prognosis in 1997, Martha was undaunted.
With the help of her devoted ex-husband, William W.
"Wash" Larsen, and their research on alternative
treatments, she not only beat the cancer for five years, but
continued to pursue a very active lifestyle. Martha served as our
President for
two years during that borrowed time. She took on the
formidable task of taking our reunion home to Halifax County,
North Carolina. Although she began with no local base of
support and very limited funds, the result was a wonderful
Homecoming Reunion!
An accomplished real estate broker,
a Certified Commercial Investment Member, and a marketing
professional with extensive credentials in business and finance,
Martha managed several successful businesses during her life.
Her brother, Harold Josey, said "Of all Martha's
careers, she was most proud of her association with NIKKEN
Corporation and the line of wellness products they represented.
She left her very successful commercial real estate brokerage in
1994 to devote full time to NIKKEN and attained the grade of
Platinum with more than 700 associates in her personal
organization."
Thanks to her leadership abilities and people skills, Martha
consulted on site selection for the Carter Presidential Library,
was a consultant for the West Virginia Roundtable, had managed
the British Royal Family's timber holdings in the Bahama
Islands, represented the State of Georgia at the B'nai Brith
Awards Dinner in 1983, served as an official hostess for the
Macon Cherry Blossom Festival 1983-1988, and hosted members of
the British House of Lords and other international dignitaries.
Always politically active, she was completely at ease with
executives, political leaders, and heads of state, and lobbied
the Georgia Legislature and the U.S. Congress for mental health,
drug education, and child abuse legislation, doing her own
research and contributing to columns, as well as providing
analysis to legislators.
Martha had vision. I have often thought that if she had
been an artist, she would have painted large canvasses in bold,
sweeping strokes of vivid color. She could stay focused on
the big picture and not get lost in the details as well as
anyone I ever knew. An old adage that typified Martha
says, "When you are up to your behind in alligators, you
can't be worried about the mosquitoes around your head."
I watched that attitude in action as we prepared for the
Homecoming Reunion in 1998-99. There were so many
obstacles and problems, that a lesser person would have given
up. Martha never did, and she never lost sight of the
ultimate goals, not only for the Reunion but for the House of
Jossey-Josey in general.
At our Reunion in 2001, the membership of the House of
Jossey-Josey
gave Martha a bowl bearing the phrase "Preserving the
Legacy, Pursuing the Vision", as a token of our
appreciation for her hard work and recognition of the principles
that guided her term. It was Martha's belief that we must
encourage and inspire in our young people a desire to learn
about the family and to appreciate their Josey heritage.
At the 2001 Reunion Banquet, she individually introduced and
recognized every young person in attendance. She
understood that our young people represent the future of the
House of Jossey-Josey, and that they are the ones who will
continue our Reunions long after those of us reading this
Newsletter are just names on tombstones.
Martha was my cousin, but I am pleased to say that she was also
my friend. Like you, I sincerely appreciate all of her
hard work on behalf of the House of Jossey-Josey family, and
extend to her children and her brother our sincere condolences.
Diane Josey, Vice President
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