Betty Ina Linn

September 5, 2022

Betty Ina Linn died on Labor Day, September 5, 2022, a fitting date for a woman who worked so hard her entire life. She was born over a hundred years ago on March 8, 1922, in Argyle, Iowa, in the very southeastern corner of Iowa. She was the daughter of Leslie Herron and Elsie Etta Satterly Dumenil. Both of her parents had taught school for a while after completing their education but had turned to farming soon after they married and started a family. Betty had an older brother, Lloyd C. Dumenil and a younger sister, Dorothy J. Dumenil Fields. She also had a first cousin, Keith Dumenil, who lived across the road and was like a second brother to her. Her brother Lloyd, who was a professor of Agronomy for many years at Iowa State University in Ames, predeceased her in 2010. Her sister Dorothy, who was a teacher for many years, survives her and resides in Phoenix, Arizona.

After growing up on the family farm near Argyle in the 1920’s and 30’s, Betty attended Northeast Missouri State Teachers College in Kirksville, Missouri from 1940-1942, which has since been renamed Truman State University. After completing her course of study there, she went to work as a civilian at the Rock Island Arsenal, which has manufactured military equipment and ordnance since the 1880’s. She was always very proud of her service there to the country during the Second World War.

After the war ended, she married Lester Lyle Linn, who had grown up on a farm located near Rochester, Iowa, in Cedar County.   Lester had served in the US Army in Europe, spent some months in a German POW camp, and after being discharged when the war ended had begun attending Iowa State University. But in a hurry to begin farming himself, he left the university before graduating, and he and Betty began a lifelong partnership in farming, first by renting land near Springdale, Iowa. In the early 1950’s they moved with their young family to a farm located southwest of Tipton on Green Road where they grew row crops (corn and soybeans), made hay, and raised livestock (cattle and hogs) together for many years, including on an adjacent farm they purchased in the 1970’s. After Lester died in 1987, Betty carried on the farming operation, first with her only son Harold D. Linn, who died in 1990, and then with several devoted helpers, until she finally retired in her late eighties.

Betty is survived by two daughters, Bonnie A. (Joseph) Denman of Wheaton, Maryland, and Shirley J. Linn (Dumont Clarke) of Charlotte, North Carolina. She is also survived by four granddaughters, Grace L. Denman of Wheaton, Maryland; LCDR USN Elizabeth Dumenil (Declan) Clarke-Glynn of Cambridge, England; Deborah McClure Clarke (Peter) Reinsel of Norfolk, Virginia; and Scarlet C. Linn (Cory McNeely) of Sarasota, Florida as well as three great grandchildren, Connor, James, and Sienna. She also claimed and loved two step-grandchildren: Tony Linn Hills and Vincent Benavente Linn, both of Iowa City, Iowa.

Betty and Lester were devoted members for many years of the Rochester (Iowa) United Methodist Church. After taking care of her chores on the farm each Sunday morning, Betty would change her clothes and race down the Snaggy Ridge Road, sometimes in her pickup truck, in a cloud of dust to attend the 8:45 a.m. service – but not always arriving on time. She had many devoted friends both in the congregation and the pulpit at the church who kept in touch with her over the years. She also had many supportive relatives in Cedar County as well as numerous friends including other farmers, farm managers, employees of the Cedar County Co-Op, suppliers and others in the community. In Charlotte, she was beloved by and loved her Kenmore Avenue family in the Elizabeth neighborhood.

Betty didn’t have much leisure time available for social activity outside of farm work and church service, but she was an avid sports fan, first of the St. Louis Cardinals as a youth and then for many years the University of Iowa men’s basketball team.   She received numerous cards and letters on her 100th birthday, including one from the President of the United States, but the one that may have meant the most to her was the one she received from the University of Iowa basketball coach, Fran McCaffery.  

A funeral service for Betty will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, September 24th at the United Methodist Church in Rochester, Iowa. In lieu of flowers, memorials in Betty’s name may be given to the Rochester United Methodist Church c/o Cindy Stuhr, 1775 Snaggy Ridge Road, Tipton, Iowa 52772. Arrangements are in the care of Kenneth W. Poe Funeral & Cremation Service, 1321 Berkeley Ave., Charlotte NC, 28204 (704) 641-7606 and Fry Funeral Home, 220 E. 6th St., Tipton Iowa 52772 (563) 886-6336. Online condolences can be shared at www.kennethpoeservices.com or www.fryfuneralhome.com

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  • Norman Nielsen

    I have been truly blessed to have Betty Linn as my aunt. I will miss her practicality and wisdom in all things. I have known no other to work as hard and smart as she did, and be able to take all life gives us in stride. To my cousins Bonnie and Shirley please accept my deepest condolence.