(From Parker Mortuary)Our beloved Charline Louise Klopfenstein left us far too soon. Peacefully, on Monday, August 9, 2021, she went to be with our Lord. Our lives are richer because she was a part of us; she will be greatly missed.
Charline was born June 19, 1936, to Charles and Aline Eichelberger in Pueblo, Colorado. She married Willis Eugene Klopfenstein on May 25, 1958. Will died in an accident in 1984; Charline never stopped longing for him. Now they will always be together.
Starting at a young age, Charline worked in her family’s greenhouse, learning the business of raising and marketing plants and her flower arrangements. Later she joined the U.S. Treasury Department where she was employed in both Denver and Kansas City.
When she and Will moved back to his hometown, they made their home on the Klopfenstein farm northeast of Pleasanton. Their house burnt one night when they were at a school basketball game. Charline always spoke fondly of how her adopted community helped them in the dark days following that tragedy. They made their new home in a building Will had erected on the property; Charline continued to live there with all her fond memories her entire life until just this past May.
She gave up working outside the home when she and Will started their family. She continued to give to the Pleasanton community as a leader of the local Girl Scout troop and as a member of the First Christian Church. Along with Stephen Johnson and Kenton Bell, she played a major role in designing and installing the Civil War scenes that are still on display at the Linn County Historical Museum.
She joined the staff of the Pleasanton School District in the late 1970s as assistant librarian in both the junior high/high school and the elementary school. An excellent listener and a kind friend, she enriched many lives, both adults and children.
Her biggest regret was that she had no formal education beyond the 8th grade; as an adult she earned her GED. Anyone who knew her, however, would attest that she was far smarter and more talented than any degree could have made her. Far too modest to admit it, Charline was a gifted artist who never hesitated to lend her skills to anyone who needed them. Her self-learned knowledge of nature and her willingness to share that knowledge drew many people to seek her help. Her story of raising and taming a pair of orphaned possum joeys was just one example of the diverse relationships she had with wild and domesticated animals; she taught many Girl Scouts the joy of making hollyhock ladies and other magical nature projects. Her love of reading led her from Smithsonian Magazine to most of the children’s books in the school library to news feeds on the computer. Life never left Charline behind.
Now she is with her parents and her husband Will. Left to give testimony of the impact she made on our lives are daughters Karen Reynolds (Mark) of Ottawa, KS, and Jeni Klopfenstein (Rob) of Joplin, MO; sisters Marguerite Sieggen of Golden, CO, Marie Eichelberger of Pueblo, CO, and Frances Marshall of Westerville, OH; grandchildren Stormi Potts (Wyatt), Hunter Potts (Taylor), Hannah Monholland (Berry), Cameron Reynolds (Brooklyn), Taylor Reynolds, and Brandon Reynolds; niece Fawn Brunn (Carrie); nephew Bowen Marshall (Tyler); cousin Michael Beck; and many more family and friends who are better people for having known Charline.
We promised you we would be brave like you. But we are broken. We know you are no longer suffering from the pain in your body or the frustration of what your life had become; we are crying for ourselves, how lost we will be without you. Be at peace, Mama; we’ll see you again one day.
Donations may be made in remembrance of Charline to Angels Care Home Health, 318 S Main, Ottawa, KS 66067.
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