Obit: Eck, Rebecca Jean (1927 - 2018)

Transcriber: Robert Lipprandt
bob@wiclarkcountyhistory.org 

Surnames: Eck, Rowland

----Source: WJBL-WLDY Radio Obituaries (Ladysmith, WI) 6/12/2018

Eck, Rebecca Jean (Rowland) (3 MAR 1927 - 7 JUN 2018)

Rebecca Jean Eck, whose passion for music was felt throughout the Winter area for 50+ years, died on Wednesday June 7, 2018 in Rice Lake at the age of 91. Visitation is Friday evening, June 15th, from 4-8 at the Hayward Funeral Home.

There will also be a visitation at the St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Winter on Saturday, June 16th, starting at 12:00. The Funeral service will be held on Saturday at 1 PM at St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Winter. Burial will be at the Winter Cemetery.

~

----Source: the Bratley-Nelson Chapels (Hayward, WI) 6/10/2018

Rebecca Jean Eck, whose passion for music was felt throughout the Winter area for 50-plus years, died on Wednesday, June 7, 2018, in Rice Lake at the age of 91.

She was born March 3, 1927, in Independence, Iowa, with music in her blood. Her father, O. M. Rowland, played guitar and sang while her mother, Doris, played piano and organ and also sang. Jean started studying piano at age 3 and was singing in the church choir when she was 6.

After high school in 1945 she moved to Dayton, Ohio and worked at the Wright-Patterson airbase in support of the troops of World War II. When the war ended she moved to Des Moines, Iowa, and found work as a secretary for an insurance company. But music was her first love and she continued to sing and play piano and organ at church and also taught dance at the Arthur Murray dance school.

In 1952 she married Ken Eck in Independence, Iowa. They lived in Joliet, Illinois for a few years before heading north in the fall of 1959. With two little boys, and a third one on the way, they found their way to Winter. With just $25 to their name they negotiated a land contract with Dick Steinke and bought Pike Haven Resort on Barber Lake. Jean kept her musical desires burning by giving private piano lessons and also being the main organist at St. Peters Catholic Church in Winter. A few years later she became the organist at Sacred Heart Church in Radisson and St. Mary Magdalene Church in Couderay.

In late fall of 1966, Jean was hired as a substitute vocal music teacher at the Winter School District for the second semester while the choir director was on medical leave. It was those few months that got her teaching juices flowing. So in the fall of 1967 she began pursuing a degree in vocal music education at Mount Senario College in Ladysmith. She graduated in 1971 with honors and then got her first teaching job at Birchwood.

A year later she was hired as the vocal music teacher in the Winter School District, where she remained until her retirement in 1997. Jean’s pure love of vocal music was highlighted by having numerous students selected to the all-conference choir every year, plus she would regularly have 50 to 70 solo and ensemble groups at the yearly Lakeland Conference solo/ensemble competition. Many of those would also go on to the state competition.

In 1977 the new high school was opened in Winter and it included an auditorium. This fueled Jean’s desire and love for musicals. In the spring of 1979, to test the waters, the choir did the entire score from “Fiddler on the Roof.” It was a huge hit with audiences, so in the fall of 1979 she directed the first ever full-scale musical in the school history. “Calamity Jane” played to a packed house every night and left the audience wanting more. So each fall Jean would direct another musical. They included “My Fair Lady,” “Irene,” “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” “Finian's Rainbow,” “South Pacific,” “Boys and Girls Together,” “Sound of Music” and “110 in the Shade,” among others.

Jean did get a chance to act in some musicals, too, at Mount Senario College during the 1970s. Then in 1982 she traveled to Vermont to be in a production of “West Side Story.”
Music and performing arts were her passion but she had other interests. They included gardening, swimming, playing cards, reading, watching Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune, doing jigsaw puzzles, and traveling. Also every Friday night you could find her at Dix’s Chalet enjoying a fish fry.

Her impact has been felt far and wide and she has left an indelible mark on the thousands of people who knew her.

Jean will be deeply missed by her six sons, John and his girlfriend Cindy of Madisonville, Tennessee, Rick and his wife Jane of Butler, Wisconsin, Greg and his girlfriend Amy of Hayward, Bill of Winter, Brian and his wife Tammy of Belvedere, Illinois, and Paul in St. Louis, Missouri; her two brothers, Bill in California and Ben in Iowa; her sister, Rita, in Missouri; and 17 grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by a brother, John; a sister, Diane; an infant son, Joseph; and by her “special” son, Terry Lee.

Visitation will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday, June 15, at the Hayward Funeral Home. Family and friends are invited to join the Eck clan after visitation at the Steakhouse and Lodge in Hayward for socializing and appetizers.

There will also be a visitation at the St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Winter on Saturday, June 16, starting at noon.

The funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 16, at St. Peters Catholic Church in Winter. Burial will be at the Winter Cemetery. After the service there will be a catered lunch in the church fellowship hall.

Online condolences may be shared with the family at www.bratley-nelsonchapels.com
 

 

 


© Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998.

 

Show your appreciation of this freely provided information by not copying it to any other site without our permission.

 

Become a Clark County History Buff

 

Report Broken Links

A site created and maintained by the Clark County History Buffs
and supported by your generous donations.

 

Webmasters: Leon Konieczny, Tanya Paschke,

Janet & Stan Schwarze, James W. Sternitzky,

Crystal Wendt & Al Wessel

 

CLARK CO. WI HISTORY HOME PAGE