Thelma Lee Capps

Thelma Lee Capps obituary, West Lafayette, IN

Thelma Lee Capps

Thelma Capps Obituary

Obituary published on Legacy.com by Tippecanoe Funeral & Cremation Services on Dec. 26, 2025.
Thelma Lee Capps, age 95, passed away peacefully at Westminster Village Health Center in West Lafayette on December 9, 2025, with her loving family by her side. There will be a private celebration of life at a later date.

Thelma was born Thelma Young Hee Lee on September 29, 1930, in Honolulu, Hawaii. She was the daughter of Lee Sang Ha and Kim Myung Nam, who had immigrated to Hawaii in 1917 from South Korea. She was the fourth of their five children.

After graduating with a degree in political science from the University of Hawaii, Thelma left Honolulu in 1952 to study on the mainland. She met Robert Blair at the University of Chicago and they married in 1954. In 1960, they moved to West Lafayette when he began teaching at Purdue. They had three dear daughters: Hollis Westler (Milo), Patricia Bollinger (Eric), and Elizabeth Kreuzmann (Dave). Thelma became a school librarian, earning a master's degree in library science from Indiana University and working sequentially at Morton, Happy Hollow (Kingston), and Cumberland Elementary Schools. She loved reading and introducing books to

the students. In 1975 she married Richard Huntley Capps, of Purdue's Physics Department. They had 19 very happy years together before he passed away in 1994.

In addition to her daughters, Thelma is survived by, in her words, "nine kind and handsome grandsons" whom she loved dearly: Brendon (Molly), Gareth (Heather), and Scott (Alice) Westler; Lee (Jay), Todd (Swathi), and Vance Bollinger; Justin (Mary) and Patrick Spencer; and Jesse Kreuzmann. She was proud of her eight great- grandchildren: Elijah, Noah, Penelope, Winifred, Zoë, Ada, Ishani, and Suhani, and enjoyed hearing from her nephews and nieces. She was always very grateful for her loving family.

In the last years of her life, she lived at Westminster Village. She was happy there and met many nice people. Her family is thankful for their kindness and care. Thelma is remembered for her wonderful cooking and baking, the cartoons she regularly mailed to her children and grandchildren, her cheerful smile, her generosity, and the love and encouragement she gave her family.

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

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