Pat Whitcomb, former Indiana first lady, Seymour resident, dies at 91
Former Indiana first lady Pat Whitcomb died earlier this week in Seymour. She was 91.
After graduating from Ward Belmont College in Nashville, Tennessee, Pat joined the Fashion Board at L.S. Ayres. Modeling in the Tea Room, she caught the eye of young State Senator and future Governor Ed Whitcomb. After a three-month courtship they married.
After politics, Pat Whitcomb lived in Toluca Lake, California until the late 80s and she and the former governor divorced. Pat, her mother and brother operated a Honey Baked Hams franchise in Toluca Lake.
After moving back to Indiana, Whitcomb was active in the community.
She is survived by her children, grand children and great grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are pending with Winklepeck and Brock Funeral Home in Brownstown. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Community Diner of Seymour at the First Methodist Church in Seymour.
Gov. Eric J. Holcomb is directing flags at state facilities be flown at half-staff in her honor from now until sunset on Monday, July 12th. Holcomb also asks businesses and residents to lower their flags to half-staff.
Submitted photo
Her obituary:
Former Indiana First Lady Patricia (Pat) Whitcomb passed away on June 27, 2021, in Seymour at the age of 91. Born in St. Louis, Missouri to Nelson Frank Dolfuss and Alice (Pfeffer) Dolfuss, Pat loved her adopted home state of Indiana.
A graduate of Greenfield High School and Ward Belmont College in Nashville, Tennessee, Pat joined the Fashion Board at L.S. Ayres upon graduation. Modeling in the Tea Room, she caught the eye of young State Senator Ed Whitcomb. After a three-month courtship they married.
That began a journey that would take them to all 92 counties in Indiana several times and to all corners of the world. Eager to engage with people everywhere she went, Pat learned courtesy phrases in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Japanese, Tagalog and German. From their lovely home in Seymour, Indiana, Pat made everything she touched beautiful and meaningful.
Pat was active in her community. She regularly volunteered at the Thrift Shop, operated by her sorority, Psi Iota Zi. The same horticultural skills that she used to landscape the grounds of their home earned her the presidency of the All-Thumbs Garden Club. A leader of her daughters’ Brownie troop and as a Sunday School teacher, Pat was a role model of grace and intelligence.
The consummate partner, Pat helped Ed build his law career, his political base, and was responsible for getting his first book published. All the while, she managed the household of five children and their numerous pets with the help of her mother-in-law, Louise; Anna Habenicht, their live-in housekeeper; and Nancy Endicott Parker, a college student who supervised the children when Pat and Ed were on the campaign trail and serving the state as Governor and First Lady.
Life after politics took Pat into the business world with her mother and brother. They operated a successful Honey Baked Hams franchise in Toluca Lake, California. During that time, she and Ed divorced, and Pat lived in Toluca Lake until the late 1980’s. She then moved back to Indiana where she continued her passion for the arts, gardening and being with her children and grandchildren.
Pat is survived by her children, Trish Whitcomb (Russ Sipes), Ann (John) Guggenheim, Shelley Whitcomb, Alice Carfagno, and John (Terri) Whitcomb. Grandchildren include Patty Guggenheim, Michael Guggenheim, Amber (Ryan) Burton, Zach (Georgia) Branham, Russell (Donna) Sipes, Bonnie (Chris) Hovey and Tabitha Whitcomb; great grandchildren Arabelle, Lincoln, Charlotte, and Lola Burton, Sebastian Branham, and Emma James Cowden.
She is preceded in death by her parents, her brother, Nelson Frank Dolfuss, Jr., and her grandson, John Allen Whitcomb.
The family is grateful for the care Shelley Whitcomb gave their mother, and the support of home healthcare workers and hospice nurses. Funeral arrangements are pending with the Winklepeck and Brock Funeral Home, Brownstown, Indiana. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Community Diner of Seymour at the First Methodist Church in Seymour.