Grady-Randolph-Obituary

Grady Randolph

Atlanta, Georgia

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Atlanta, Georgia

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Family-Placed Death Notice Grady Lee Randolph, age 90 died on October 21, 2005. Graveside services will be held at the Wetumpka (Alabama) City Cemetery on Monday, October 24, 2005 at 2 PM, Central time. The Reverend Doctor James Troglen, officiating. Grady Randolph was born in Fayette...

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Aunt Jennie,
I was so sorry that health kept me from being with you or attending the funeral. You lost a husband who loved you a great amount. I know he will be missed for I will miss him so much myself.

Horace

Dear Mrs Randolph:
I know that we pass this way just once,and for a short time. However, Grady Randolph,touched more lives and made a difference in the successful outcome of those lives than any other person that I loved and respected.
As you know he made a great difference in my life. He opened the wide door to the methods of becoming a good student. The lessons I learned in his tenth grade class in World History, at Sylvan High, opened the doors to success in the higher levels of...

Mr. Randolph was a genuine intellectual and an excellent teacher who inspired in me a love of history during his World History course at Sylvan Hills High School. Our class of 1955 recently celebrated its 50th anniversary, and I deeply regret that Grady Randolph was not able to participate. My deepest sympathy is extended to his family.

Dear Jenny,
Sam and I were saddened to read
of your loss. Please know you haave
our sincere sympathy at this time.
Rachel

I am sad to hear of Grady's death. He was a long time patient and friend. My prayers and thought are with Miss Jennie.

Dr.Foster

I never met Mr. Grady Randolph but he was my 4th cousin through the McCollum line. His nephew, Horace, married my cousin, Martha Sue Box. Our sympathy goes out to the family.

In the mid-sixties, I was a young, single mother intent on finishing my degree. Fortunately, I found the right program at Oglethorpe University and, more fortunately, was privileged to be a student of Grady Randolph. He taught so much more than what was 'on the printed page' and did, indeed, challenge one to think. And now, almost forty years later, I remember him as one of those who influenced me early on.........may he rest in peace.

Mr. Randolph was an outstanding teacher. I knew him at Brown High School from having taken his course in World History in 1948. His emphasis was always on "why people behave as they do."