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Edna Prokopchak Obituary

Edna Marie Theresa Serafine Prokopchak
Edna Marie Theresa Serafine Prokopchak of Silver Spring, Md., died Sunday of congestive heart failure in Pittsburgh at the age of 92.
Edna was the third child of 11 of Fredinand and Fabina (Grazioli) Serafine.
She was the beloved wife of 67 years of Michael John Prokopchak, who died in January 2009.
She was born in Kaylor, Armstrong County, May 7, 1919. Although her father worked on the railroad, she grew up as a "farmer's daughter," working on the farms of both her parents and her grandparents.
Later in her life, she was known as "Earth Mother" because of both her mothering instincts for everyone around her as well as her "green arm" for both flower and vegetable gardens.
As a teenager, she studied and played the trombone in both her high school and town bands. You also might have found her piloting a plane around the upper Allegheny River.
After graduating from high school, she attended a business school in Pittsburgh while working for the Honorable Herman Eberharter, M.C., in both his Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C., offices. She continued working for the congressman when she began her chemistry studies at the then Carnegie Institute of Technology.
Her studies were interrupted by World War II, and because of her chemistry background, she was recruited by the War Department to inspect chemical plants manufacturing munitions on the upper Ohio River.
In 1942, she married a young Army Air Corps tech sergeant named Mike Prokopchak of Lyndora. She traded her technical career for motherhood a year later and began her first journey as a military wife following Mike to military schools in the Gulf states during their first year of marriage until he deployed to fight the war.
She and her first daughter, Michele, returned to Butler, where she started a lifelong volunteer career at Deshon Army Hospital, now VA Butler Healthcare, as a Red Cross gray lady and blue lady. She would continue this avocation for many years in both the military and civilian communities until the Red Cross discontinued these programs in the mid-1960s.
When the war ended, her officer husband was kept on active duty and sent to school at the University of Illinois at Chanute Field, Champaign-Urbana, Ill., where their first son, Michael Edward, and second daughter, Donna, were born.
In 1947, when her husband was released from active service, they returned to Pittsburgh where he attended Carnegie Tech and she raised the three children living in on-campus, wartime Army barracks converted for returning servicemen and families under the GI Bill.
Edna's second son, Leonard, was born at Mercy Hospital in 1948. They bought their first house in Bethel Park, and Mike had just graduated when he was called back to active duty in the Air Force for the Korean War.
From that time until retirement in 1964, Edna was both mom and dad to their four children living in South Carolina, Texas, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia while her husband flew around the world. She spent many hours volunteering at the children's schools, worked as a secretary and was a Girl Scout leader. Edna put in hours at the various military bases in her commanding officer wife's job to counsel, guide and help the families of the men in their husbands' commands.
The third part and final part of her life began in 1967 with their final move to Silver Spring, Md., with her husband, who now worked for Goddard Spaceflight Center. She variously worked as a secretary and for a nursery, a flower shop and voluntarily landscaped the many gardens around her parish, St. John the Baptist, as well as anywhere else her flower instincts led her.
She loved traveling with her husband and family and spent years traipsing around the East Coast in a camping trailer and on numerous trips to Europe where she fell in love with Germany.
Her favorite activity was cooking huge feasts for her children and grandchildren at her house at any time of the year but especially the holidays. She cherished the annual reunions of her huge Italian family.
Although in her last decade, she had many health problems, they did not deter her from spending time in her "summer home" in Bethel Park, sitting on the back porch communing with the birds and admiring the flowers she still planted though she walked with a walker.
Throughout her life she enjoyed going to concerts, operas, plays and any event in which her children and grandchildren were participants.
Edna is survived by her four children, nine grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren and six great- great-grandchildren as well as four sisters and a brother.
PROKOPCHAK - Friends of Edna Marie Theresa Serafine Prokopchak, who died Sunday, Aug. 14, 2011, will be received at the Geibel Funeral Home, 201 E. Cunningham St., Butler, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. A Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Friday at St. Paul Catholic Church, 128 N. McKean St., Butler. She will be buried on "Snow Hill" at the St. Mary Cemetery, East Brady, where her husband, Mike, and many of her huge Italian extended family rest.
Additional information, directions and condolence messages can be found at www.geibelfuneralhome.com

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Butler Eagle from Aug. 17 to Aug. 18, 2011.

Memories and Condolences
for Edna Prokopchak

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3 Entries

Donna

April 7, 2025

Miss you Mom

Donna Weyman

August 19, 2011

I do not know your family, but I so enjoyed the account of Edna's life. So sweet and refreshing. I pray peace and blessings on your family at this time, and thanks be to Jesus for those that have been influenced by this wonderful woman. Sincerely, Donna Weyman

Debra Serafine

August 16, 2011

I have many memories of spending time in Bethel Park and Silver Springs, and all of the family reunions with Aunt Edna and Uncle Mike.

My thoughts and prayers are with all of my cousins in the days that follow.

Debbie Serafine

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