ForeverMissed
Large image
This memorial website was created in memory of our loved one, Bettie Crigler, 83 years old, born on February 27, 1936, and passed away on December 27, 2019. We will remember her forever.
December 27, 2023
December 27, 2023
I miss beautiful Betty. It doesn’t seem it’s been almost 4 years. Betty and Frank, my best clients!
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Mom, I pray you are now together with Frank now that he left us on Sunday.
September 1, 2020
September 1, 2020
Bettie was my first cousiin, her mom, was the sister of my father, Eldon G. Cook I am forever thankful I knew her and her husband Frank. I always admired their family and their lives in our nations service.
July 24, 2020
July 24, 2020
Bettie was a cheerful, intelligent, and dedicated person whom I met when I worked as a Research Assistant for Frank. Her personality was a shot of adrenaline for everyone.
March 2, 2020
March 2, 2020
Bettie and Frank moved to our neighborhood in Durham and immediately were interested in being a part of all the activities. They both helped me create a holiday pillow from a needlepoint kit, and Frank did much of the sewing. Bettie joined our Neighbors' Club and loved to hear everyone's news, adding her own stories of past and current adventures from her fascinating life. She was always curious about how we all were doing. We will miss her at our monthly meetings, and feel privileged to have had her company in our midst. I am adding a photo from our group in 2015. Rest well, dear friend. Frank, our prayers are with you.
February 11, 2020
February 11, 2020
I had the pleasure of being Betties Caregiver. She was a special person and I miss her dearly. I look forward to seeing her in a beautiful paradise.
January 28, 2020
January 28, 2020
It is wonderful to remember the good times with Bettie and Frank. Seeing the pictures that Lauren uploaded brought a wave of nostalgia, so I uploaded some of my own. We take the most pictures on trips, so they are overloaded. But it is remarkable the number of places we visited together. Mexico, Bolivia, Peru, Venice, Turkey, Arizona and lots of places in North Carolina. We especially enjoyed bicycling with them across NC and France. What a fabulous woman. 
January 20, 2020
January 20, 2020
I met Frank and Bettie in Rwanda in 1976. I arrived in Kigali as the first Peace Corps volunteer there at the same time that Frank arrived in his first post as US ambassador. I had spent the previous year in Zaïre (now the Democratic Republic of Congo). I soon learned that Frank and Bettie had served heroically in Zaïre a few years earlier when they organized the safe departure of western citizens trapped in the middle of one of Zaïre's frequent civil wars. Frank had the job and all the responsibilities and accolades associated with his distinguished diplomatic career, but spouses share in those responsibilities and he and Bettie were always a team. Frank would be the first person to agree that he could not have accomplished all that he did without Bettie at his side every step of the way.

Anyway, perhaps our mutual experience in Zaïre made it easy for us to begin a conversation that has continued for over 40 years. Or maybe it was just their collie Missy, who accompanied them to Rwanda. Whenever Frank and Bettie were both away, they asked me to stay in the Ambassador's residence to keep Missy company. Although my own housing arrangements were quite satisfactory by Peace Corps standards, they were well below the level of an official US ambassador's residence. This arrangement had a few unintended consequences. One day a mid-level diplomat from some European country turned up in Kigali looking for Frank and Bettie who were not in Rwanda at the time. Instead of turning them away, I instructed the staff to prepare a lunch for this visitor and me as Bettie would do. Upon their return, Frank and Bettie might have decided that I should no longer be left alone in their official residence, but they just found it all very amusing and let it pass.

On several occasions when Frank was away and Bettie was in Rwanda, she and I managed to consume whole liters of Johnnie Walker just talking until it was time for me to go back to my own place a few blocks away. My freedom to enter and leave their residence did not go unnoticed by the Russian diplomats who lived near them. One night while out in a bar with my usual expatriate crowd, two Russians around our age showed up and expressed great interest in getting to know me. A few days later I ended up at their place where we managed to consume both a liter of Stoly and another of Jack Daniels. All this lubrication led to us agreeing that the Russian and US embassy staffs should play a volleyball match. Waking up hungover, it occurred to me that I might have really gotten out of line this time. Not wanting to vomit in the embassy, I went up to Frank's ground floor office window and told him what had transpired. With his usual good humor, he just told me that it was no accident that the Russians had sought me out because they were undoubtedly aware of my access to him and Bettie, but that I did have to document all my interactions with them. He agreed to host the volleyball game, and Bettie turned the event into a great garden party at their residence that made there Cold War a bit warmer for at least a few days.

Bettie also made it possible for me to meet Dian Fossey and to spend a lot of time with her Mountain gorillas. In December of 1977, she and Frank decided to give Dian a real bathtub as a Christmas present to replace the buckets Dian had used to bathe for the previous decade. Since my job included the full-time use of a Chevy Suburban, they enlisted me to deliver this steel bathtub up several thousand feet of mountain to Dian's Karaoke research center. I drove the tub to the base of her mountain, hired porters, and arrived just before noon one day in late December. Dian never allowed visitors who had no connection to her research, and she did not know me when I arrived, but the bathtub was a great icebreaker and she was so pleased to receive it that she allowed me to stay for a few days with her graduate students who soon became my friends. Bettie made all this happen without even being there. She knew how Dian would react and how I would handle it without even speaking directly about it to either one of us. I remained friendly with Dian and her students for the remainder of my time in Rwanda and was even able to bring my family to meet the gorillas long before it became a tourist destination. This would never have happened without Bettie.

After our 2 1/2 years together in Rwanda, we continued to stay in touch, albeit infrequently. Bettie wove a beautiful rug for me as a wedding gift in 1980 while she and Frank were in Columbia where, as Chargé d'Affaires ran US interests while the Diego Ascencio, the ambassador, was held hostage by Columbian rebels. The rug still hangs in the entrance to my home, and will remain there until it's time for me to give to her granddaughters whom I have the privilege of knowing.

In 2016 I attended Frank and Bettie's joint 80th birthday party. As a gift, I presented them with photographs of Dian Fossey with the bathtub I had delivered to her from them 39 years earlier. Never missing an opportunity to make a connection, Bettie then told me that a UK company producing a documentary about Dian had been in touch with her and Frank. Generous as always, Bettie immediately introduced me to the production company. Subsequently I digitized my photos of my visits with Dian and donated them too the company. A few of them made the final cut in the documentary.

I had no idea when I left Durham after their birthday party that I would never see or speak with Bettie again. Although I may not have seen it that way in my early 20's, Bettie was both a maternal figure who helped me to feel at ease being myself, and who helped me to mature when I first lived independently as an adult. I have always considered her a trusted friend, even in the past few decades when our contact has been limited to annual holiday cards and an occasional encounter, usually arranged by her son Jeremy and his wife Pam. I loved her from the moment we met. I an am stunned and saddened by her premature passing. I always thought that we had time to drain another bottle of scotch. RIP my friend. I love you and I miss you.  

January 13, 2020
January 13, 2020
Bettie’s smile lit up a room. She was curious about everything. She was kind and funny. Listening to her and Frank embellish stories from their lives around the world was an adventure all its own. I am sorry she is gone. I hope for your peace and comfort.
January 8, 2020
January 8, 2020
I just smiled ear to ear and laughed when I realized how much Mom would have enjoyed the problem I just worked out. Undoubtedly she would have calculated the answer much faster.

I needed to figure out how much wood I would need for her burial urn...

What is the volume of a hexagonal pyramid 3.5 inches on the bottom and 6 inches at the top with a side angle of 70 degrees.?  I had to get out my trigonometry and figure out it would be 6.8 inches high and the total volume would be about 150 cubic inches.  Plenty big for mom.  And then I remembered all the math problems she worked through calculating the amount of fabrics or pillow fill or ribbing for her countless projects. She had protractors, rulers and graph paper always at the ready when she started a project.   I remember her working things out using geometry and trigonometry.  It made me tear up! 
January 4, 2020
January 4, 2020
When I was 18 Mrs. Crigler saved my butt at the Mexico City airport when one of the security officers there wanted to pull me aside for further questioning. For that moment she transformed from best friend's mom into American diplomat super-woman, that poor guy never knew what hit him. I had never seen her do that before, it was pretty cool. Thanks Bettie.
January 4, 2020
January 4, 2020
Lauren Crigler's Facebook post and replies:

My dearest mother passed away this Friday night, December 27, 2019 at her home in Durham NC. She was with my brother Jeff and her husband of 65 years, Frank Crigler. She lived a brave and dynamic life, and she was my best friend.

Bettie Ann Crigler died peacefully at the age of 83. Although the last several months were difficult for her and her family, it could not dampen her indomitable spirit. She led a life in pursuit of mastery, as a wife and mother; as a diplomat and hostess for the United States; as a weaver, jeweler, seamstress and fabric arts designer; as an entrepreneur; and as a passionate civic activist for progressive causes. She is survived by her husband of 65 years, their three children and three grandchildren.


May her memory be a constant joy and comfort  Douglas Twigg
Delete or hide this

Hill Love to you ❤️ Tracy Quinones
(((((((((Long hugs without words)))))))$)

Oh, Lauren, I am so saddened. I thought your mum was just so interesting and generous. May you and your family feel peace. --- Lee Ann Smith Bravender

Oh Lauren, I am so very sorry for your loss. I love your mom. She was such an amazing person with whom I will always feel a special connection. Sending you all my deepest sympathies and lots of love. -- Heather Wilson

May her memory be a blessing for all who knew her. -- Jay Kingley

I remember riding bicycles in France with her and Frank Crigler and Judy Troy Eshelman. We were the Red Birds (or maybe it was Blue) who wanted to ride further than the other couples. I remember especially that she wanted to learn to ride "no-handed". Frank would say, "Don't do that!!" But of course she did. She lived a full life, it is a shock that she is gone. -- Curt Eshelman

She was amazing, and led an amazing and purposeful life. All my love to you and the family. Kristen Greenaway

Sending my condolences Lauren. She was an amazing woman. -- Valerie

Sad news. We are so glad we were welcomed into her home to meet her.
-- Lewis Wardell

Lauren I’m so sorry for your family’s loss. She was a very cool chic!
I’m so sorry for your loss. She was a lovely person.

Lovely tribute, Lauren. Thinking of you. -- Cathy Murphy

Oh no, Lauren. I am so sorry. -- Beth Dager Turesson

Lots of love to you, Lauren. Beautiful memories! -- Laura Hoemeke

Ka hotuhotu te manawa mou. The heart sobs with sadness for you. -- Moira Duff

Sending love to you dear Lauren. -- Lori Ramsey

I’ll always remember the story of her facing down a vengeful mob in the doorway of her home, saving several lives in the Congo at risk of her own. Tough lady. -- Toby Eshelman

Deep sympathies to you and the family at this difficult time. Please know that Rob and I are here for you if there is anything you need. Much love. -- Rebecca Kohler

Moira Duff Takoto mai e kuia Bettie
Pikia atu te ara
Ki te Rerenga Wairua…See More

Oh Lauren. I was so lucky to have met her and gotten a taste of the amazing person she was. Much love coming your way. -- Leah Ekbladh

My sympathies to you and your family, Lauren. -- Nicole Dupré

I am deeply sorry for your loss. May your memories continue to provide you with love and peace. -- Linda Ippolito

Oh Lauren I’m deeply sorry for your loss. Your Mom was indeed an indomitable spirit. Sending you and your family strength and courage for the days ahead. -- Sara Lewis

My condolences. Real passage in so many ways. -- Roxanne Henderson

My condolences Lauren -- Daniel Lopez-Acuna

Sending deepest sympathies, Lauren. I’m so very sorry for your loss. -- Mona Byrkit

My deepest sympathies for you and your family. Love to you! -- Cristina Ruden Bisson

I am so sorry. I know this past year has been a challenge. Bettie always brightened my day when I saw her. She is greatly missed❤️ --- Janene Swift Tompkins

I’m very sorry to hear of your loss. You have my deepest sympathy. -- Sara Marcy

Que la terre soit légère sur elle. -- Lynne Franco

My condolences Lauren. -- Matthew O'Connell

Lauren, so sorry to hear this. Beautiful tribute. May her memory be a blessing in your lives. -- Cheryl Nicchitta

Lauren, your mother was truly an inspiration; may your memories bring comfort to you and your family. -- Lucy Harber

I’m so sorry, Lauren. I know how much you meant to one another. Dave and I send our condolences to you and your family. -- Katie Joyce

My condolences. May her soul rest in peace. -- Vishal S Shah

My condolences to you Lauren. I remember your mum coming up in a discussion we had and I admired the relationship the two of you had. She was clearly an exceptional person. - Geoff King

My condolences, Lauren. ❤️ Amanda Huber

My condolences Lauren to you and your family - Your mom was definitely a wonderful person - strong and creative and you have her amazing beauty as well! - Hope your healing is smooth and you can be a comfort to your father. LOVE!!! Teresa Polk Politi

I am so, so sorry, Lauren. Your Mom sounds like such an amazing person. Sending you hugs from across the pond. -- Ellen Clancy


So sorry to hear this Lauren - she seems to have been a wonderful warm and accomplished woman. Sending love and condolences to you and your family. Xx -- Barbara Stilwell

My condolences Lauren !
So sorry to hear this, Lauren. Thinking of you. -- Sara English Matson

I am so sorry for your loss, Lauren. I recall meeting your mom and dad on several occasions when we were all younger. I certainly remember what a special person she was. In addition to being so talented, she sparkled! Wishing you and your family peace and happy memories as you grieve Bettie's passing. ❤️ Nancy Kiplinger

Very sorry for your loss! -- Michael Huhn


I'm so sorry for your loss, Lauren. My condolences to you, your dad and the rest of the family. May your memories of the good times help you through this difficult period. -- Debbi

Your mother was a beautiful woman. I’m sorry for your loss. -- Diana

Oh no. I’m so sorry to hear this. Thank you for showing her to us. She was a beautiful and brave person. I remember seeing a picture of her by a pool — I think in Africa? I love hearing your memories about her.
-- Cathy Murphy
January 2, 2020
January 2, 2020
Jeffrey Crigler's Facebook post and replies:

My mother, Bettie Ann Crigler died peacefully in her home in Durham, North Carolina, on Friday, December 27th at the age of 83. She led a life in pursuit of mastery, as a wife and mother; as a diplomat and hostess for the United States; as weaver, jeweler, seamstress and fabric arts designer; as an entrepreneur; and as a passionate civic activist for progressive causes. She is survived by her husband of 65 years, their three children and three grandchildren.
Arrangements are being made for a memorial for Bettie and I will post them shortly. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund https://gorillafund.org
Please share your thoughts, photos and remembrances of her on her memorial site here: Bettie-Ann-Crigler-Memorial https://www.forevermissed.com/bettie-ann-crigler/about
I was fortunate to be with Bettie when she died. I had arrived for a visit in Durham on Friday about 3 pm. I brought her an orchid and body cream for Christmas presents and she really appreciated them, perked up and was clearly engaged and happy. She had a last meal of soup and some ice cream.
Dad and I retired to have diner. During diner our caregiver said her breathing had become shallow. I went to her room and raised her bed. Her breathing was slow but steady. Then she took a big breath, as if diving into a pool.... and she was gone. It was about 7 pm.
In the Meditations, Marcus Aurelius thanks those he knew for what he inherited.
From my mother I received the desire to learn and acquire skills, with my hands, my senses and my mind. I learned to carefully practice skills in design, planning, construction and presentation. Just as she made beautiful weavings, jewelry, diplomatic receptions and civic organizations, so I have learned to build furniture, guitars, software systems, and business organizations by the grace of her gifts.
Mom: Rest in Peace and Rise in Glory!
Amen+

Kat Sarfati: I am sorry for your loss. I will pray for you all.

Fran Gardner-Smith: Jeff, your mom was beautiful! Thanks for sharing her story with us. Praying for you. And may she Rest In Peace.

Bryon Propst: I'm so sorry Jeff. Losing a Mother is heart-wrenching at any age. She sounded like a wonderful person.

Joni Jackson Langevoort: What a beautiful woman, and a lovely tribute. Sending hugs and prayers for peace to you and your family.

Jeffrey Crigler: Joni, You would have loved her. You kind of remind me of her... in you passions for doing what is right.
Joni Jackson Langevoort: No higher compliment. Peace, my friend.

Frederick Cox: So sorry for your loss

Randall Holbrook: I am so very sorry for your loss.

Barbara Everhart: Sending love to you and your family.

Nancy Homans: It sounds as though her memory is already a blessing. Thinking of you, Nellis and Robin as you grieve her passing.

Angela Lauria: Oh! I am so sorry to hear this. Your mom was such a lovely lady.

Kate Kominars: I’m truly sorry for your loss and glad that you were able to be with her.

Mary Ann Ritter Youn-Batten: My condolences for the loss of your dear mother.

Mike Brown: Lovely tribute, my deepest sympathies to you, Jeff.

Louise Armitage: A wonderful tribute, Jeff. I am so glad you were there with her.

Aastha Verma: Such an amazing life and so beautiful ❤️

David Aylward: Lovely tribute. I am sorry for your loss

Carol Colatrella: My sympathies on your loss. Your mother’s life is inspiring.

Dolly Mastrangelo: What a beautiful woman, Jeff. You are clearly her son.

William G. Salter: Jeffrey and Lauren, I am so sorry. She was a wonderful lady, and always very kind to me. My condolences to your whole family.

Skip Richards: A beautiful tribute Jeff. Thank you for these words and my sincerest condolences on your loss. I'm so glad we got to spend time with her during those final days, hearing her stories and seeing her perk up as she recounted stories of Diane Fossey. We will all miss her.

Art Bushnell: My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family. What a wonderful tribute and so special you got to be with her.

Jean Carroll Kemp: Amen- May she rest in the peace of the light everlasting, Jeff. She clearly shone a bright light in her life.

Shanti Bhusan Sharma: Sorry for your loss Jeff . May she rest In Peace

Linda Leonard Dohme: My sincerest sympathies. What a gift to be with her when she passed. You and your family are in my prayers.

Meg Hargreaves: Touching words from a loving and grateful son. I’m sure she was incredibly proud of you. I’m so sorry for your loss, Jeff.

Mojdeh Ghiaie Raznahan: My deepest condolences to you and your family. May she Rest In Peace.

Sue Sujansky: A loving tribute. My thoughts and prayers for you and your family.

Douglas Twigg: Beautiful tribute Jeff May her memory be a joy

Sundar Lakshmanan: Nicely written tribute to your beloved Mom, Jeff! May her soul Rest In Peace. My deepest condolences.

Ed Richards: Such a thoughtful and beautiful tribute to your dear mother, Jeff! She did love her family so much and was so proud of each of you!!

Ed Richards: That comment was written by Alice Richards, but I agree , love and condolences.

Tuwenia Grebowsky: Jeff, what a great mom you had. I am so deeply sorry for your loss.

Laura Horn: She left the finest kind of legacy, Jeff. I’m sorry for your loss and so glad that you had this woman of character and consequence in your life...and that she had you.

Deborah Luth Bedell: Our condolences, Jeff. She sounds like a lovely and very accomplished woman.

Kathy Kuhn Penny: What wonderful gifts your mother bestowed upon you. So very sorry for your loss

Michelle Marie Branigan: Jeff, this is one of the most beautiful tributes I've ever seen. My condolences on the loss of a remarkable woman.

Bevin Newman: I am sorry for your loss, Jeff. Thank you for sharing your beautiful tribute. Many prayers for peace and comfort.

Nancy Shuster: While I am sorry for your loss, I am happy, impressed and inspired by what she leaves behind and the spirit she leaves in this world. My sympathies to you and your family.

Susan Burk: Jeff, lovely tribute to your mom. What great gifts she passed down to you. And my, she was a gorgeous woman!
I’m sorry she’s no longer with you but she is certainly in you!

Ann Holtz: Our condolences Jeff. What a loving tribute.

Jo McDermott She’s beautiful! I’m sorry for your loss.

Eric Koefoot: So sorry for your loss. What a wonderful tribute to a wonderful woman. God bless her - and your family at this difficult time.

Dean McCall: I remember her as a gracious lady. Glad she was your mom.

Michael A Huhn: A very great tribute to your mother.. Very sorry for your loss..
January 1, 2020
January 1, 2020
Sally and I are so sorry to hear this news. We were welcomed into her beautiful house several times and treated with warmth and hospitality. Such an engaging and caring woman. She will be missed!
December 31, 2019
December 31, 2019
We are so sorry for the loss of Bettie. She was a wonderful and caring woman, an adventurous wife and mother, and she will be missed by all of us. We pray for the comfort and encouragement of the family during this time of bereavement.
"Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted." Math. 5:4

...Mark and Sheila Crigler

Leave a Tribute

Light a Candle
Lay a Flower
Leave a Note
 
Recent Tributes
December 27, 2023
December 27, 2023
I miss beautiful Betty. It doesn’t seem it’s been almost 4 years. Betty and Frank, my best clients!
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
Mom, I pray you are now together with Frank now that he left us on Sunday.
September 1, 2020
September 1, 2020
Bettie was my first cousiin, her mom, was the sister of my father, Eldon G. Cook I am forever thankful I knew her and her husband Frank. I always admired their family and their lives in our nations service.
Her Life

Eulogy for Bettie Crigler, Given By Jeff Crigler at her Memorial Service

May 10, 2020
Good Morning
Thank you all for coming to remember and celebrate Bettie’s life.

1.Bukavu

On the morning of July 5th, 1967 our family awoke suddenly to the sound of bangs and loud cracks.  We stumbled out of bed confused.  We had spent the evening before celebrating Independence Day.   Mom had invited all our “expat” neighbors and we had a joyous celebration,  arranged with all her usual flair complete with fireworks  and flown-in hot dogs and Budweiser beer. We sang  American folks songs, Dad playing the guitar.….  but that was supposed to be over.

I remember stumbling down the hallway on the second floor to my Mom and Dad’s bedroom to find them both up, anxiously getting dressed and equally confused. 

We were in the middle of an invasion.  An attack by rebels, reinforced by Belgian mercenaries, who ultimately captured the city and the surrounding province in one of that region’s periodic civil wars fueled by colonialism and ethnic/tribal rivalries, and corruption.  It was a precursor to the Rwandan genocide that played out 30 years later.

We were living at the time in the Consul’s Residence in Bukavu, in the eastern part of Zaire (now the DRC), where Dad had been posted.  It was a beautiful Swiss Chalet style mansion on the shores of Lake Kivu.  

Dad got dressed and got on the shortwave radio to the U.S. Embassy and headed to Consulate to figure out what to do.  But Mom, along with our security guard, our cook and household servants were left to organize what became “Fox-Trot-Charlie” Base Camp.  

Fortunately many expat friends, diplomats and US missionaries from the area stayed overnight after the 4th of July celebrations.  That crowd of expats grew much larger as mom advertised our “Base Camp” on “social media” (then called shortwave) and the rebels closed in.

The Zairian governor showed up shaking and literally “white” pleading for sanctuary from the rebels.  Mom hid him in the attic.  The Belgian Consul was there, hiding as well.  Inconveniently, he fell through the attic ceiling into a bedroom bellow while visiting the terrified governor.  Our trembling CIA station chief shook so much he couldn’t assemble his rifle and was no help.  And while Dad was busy coordinating our evacuation from the Consulate, mom was busy guarding the door, working the short wave, and caring for, feeding folks and organizing a caravan of dozens of vehicles.

When we finally “moved out” the afternoon of the next day, we were faced with roadblocks at the front between the government and the rebels.  Dad had figured out a route across the border to Rwanda to a makeshift airstrip where a US Air Force C130 could land. Dad, ever the diplomat, somehow managed to talk us through the roadblocks, only to be greeted by machine gunfire from Rwandan military as we crossed over the border.

We kids were in the back seat of the lead Chevy Cary-all, flying the US flag, as those shots pointed at us, rang out. I still remember mom grabbing our heads and forcefully slamming us to the floor.

Needless to say we all made it. Mom and three kids strapped to the floor of that C130.  Dad staying behind to round up more evacuees.

2.Life Adventures

I don’t think Mom was expecting that much excitement when she fell in love with a young awkward music nerd at West Phoenix High School.  

She was born Bettie Alexander in Oklahoma, a long way away from Rwanda.  Her dad John Alexander, having managed to come home safely from WWII, died in a crop dusting airplane crash when she was 10.  Her mom, Gladys, married fellow G.I. Charlie Morris and they moved to Arizona where Bettie enrolled in school.  There she grew up and eventually met and fell in love with her classmate Frank. 

She would tell you, if you asked, and maybe if you didn’t… that she was the more handsome, the better student, and she got the leading parts in the schools plays.  And by the photo’s I’ve seen, I have no doubt she was the “girl to get” if you were an ambitious young man at West Phoenix High. Good work Dad!

Mom had her own plans to go to college and study drama. But as with many women of her era, she put those on hold in order to get married, start a family and support her husband’s career. 

Which of course is what happened.  Dad managed to get into Harvard, and then into the Foreign Service. A whirlwind career as diplomatic wife followed.  They were posted to DC, sent to two tours in Mexico, and then off to Kinshasa and Bukavu, Zaire, Libreville Gabon, back to DC, to Bogota Columbia, again back to Mexico.  Then it was back to Africa as “Mrs. Ambassador” in Kigali Rwanda and Mogadishu Somalia before retiring.  Quite a journey.

3.Friendships and lasting bonds

Moving every couple of years meant having to find and meet new friends.  For us children moving from school to school, was hard.  But for mom, her extroverted nature seemed to recharge with every transfer.  She made many life long friends along the way, some of whom we are lucky to have here today.

I have to mention one of them who isn’t but should be.  Mom’s strong and enduring friendship with Dian Fossey. Their friendship was precious to mom and Dian’s murder at her gorilla research center in 1985 was traumatic.  On many occasions Mom trekked up Mount Visoke to visit and venture out with Dian to greet and observe her extended gorilla family on the mountain.  At Dian’s primitive base camp, lit by a fire, they laughed and played like children, drank like seaman, and had a sisterhood’s perspective on authority figures, men in particular, and what today we would call the “un-woke.”  The hundreds of letters they wrote to each other about their most intimate fears, longing, ambitions and aspirations are a story of a deep friendship.

I think, in hindsight, that part of that friendship involved a mutual admiration and jealousy.  Dian was at the peak of her profession, recognized as a leading primatologists and conservationists along with Goodall and Galdikas.  Dian, unhappily unmarried, had pursued excellence and had achieved it.  Mom, happily the diplomats wife, had pursued mastery, and achieved that.

4.Mastery

Mom was a master at so so many things.  Dian was both admiring and jealous.

Mom had cooked her way through every Julia Child and Diana Kennedy recipe and mastered the art of French and Mexican Cooking.

She could lap anyone in the pool, soundly beat any young peace corp team at volley ball and demolish you in croquette. In her late 70’s she could cycle across North Carolina.  

She would humiliate any opponent at charades.  She loved to win at everything she did.

She was a master seamstress, upholster, jeweler, weaver.  Her ability to craft exquisite artifacts by hand inspired her children to learn our own skills in cabinet making, luthery, and knitting. 

After the government had retaken Bukavu, Dad returned to our ransacked home to find a steamer trunk in the wreckage.  In it was a quilt, started but unfinished by one of Mom’s Lee ancestors.  She finished it, meticulously, and it sits on the bed in Curtis Lee Mansion in Arlington.

Pamela Harriman, the famous diplomatic doyenne had nothing over mom when it came to entertaining and putting on the perfect reception, dinner or soireé.  Her affairs were always social calendar “events”

I don’t think when Mom signed up as “foreign service” wife she was ever bitter.  But the  unfulfilled ambition that she carried contributed to a lifelong desire to explore, experience and be really really good at what she did.  And what she decided to do, she did with passion!

5.Mary and Martha 

Which is why she hated the story of Martha and Mary.  

Not the one we just heard where, true to Martha’s, she basically organizes the resurrection of her brother Lazarus by summoning Jesus.  

No, she hated the earlier story in the Gospel when Jesus and his disciples visited their home in Bethany.  Martha is busy preparing the table and making the meal for the guests, and Mary is chilling with Jesus and disciples in the living room.   Jesus admonishes Martha for complaining that Mary was neglecting her duties.   

Mom had heard a good number of bad sermons on why Martha was wrong for complaining. But the story drove Mom crazy.  Here was Martha, putting on the reception of a lifetime.  The Son of God was going to be there, for pete’s sake.  How could Mary not help? Mom was definitely a Martha not a Mary. I know why it drove her crazy.  
_________________________________________________________________________

Bettie was passionate and energetic. She led a life in pursuit of mastery, as a wife and mother; as a diplomat and hostess for the United States; as weaver, jeweler, seamstress and fabric arts designer; as an entrepreneur; and as a passionate civic activist. She lived life with a vengeance. 

Rest In Peace, Mom!  And Rise in Glory.

Biography of Bettie Ann Crigler (1936-2019)

March 4, 2020
Bettie Ann Crigler died peacefully in her home in Durham, North Carolina, on Friday, December 27th at the age of 83. She led a life in pursuit of mastery, as a wife and mother; as a diplomat and hostess for the United States; as weaver, jeweler, seamstress and fabric arts designer; as an entrepreneur; and as a passionate civic activist for progressive causes. She is survived by her husband of 65 years, their three children and three grandchildren.   


Bettie was born Bettie Ann Alexander in Oklahoma in 1936 to Gladys Cook and John Alexander. After John Alexander died in a crop dusting crash, Gladys and Bettie moved to Phoenix. Gladys remarried Charlie Morris and Bettie remained in Arizona until she graduated from West Phoenix High School.  She married her high school sweetheart and classmate Trusten “Frank” Crigler and moved to Cambridge Massachusetts while her husband completed his degree at Harvard College. In 1957 the couple had their first son, Jeffrey Charles and her husband Frank graduated. The couple returned to Phoenix and had their daughter, Lauren Elizabeth in 1959.


In 1961 Frank joined the U.S. Foreign Service and Bettie moved her young family to northern Virginia for Frank’s new job at the State Department.  The couple embarked on a diplomatic odyssey, moving first to Mexico where their second son, Jeremy Trusten, was born in 1964. Bettie managed and organized transfers to posts in the US, Africa and Latin America over the next 30 years.  They included Zaire (now The Democratic Republic of the Congo); Libreville, Gabon; Washington DC; Mexico City; and Frank’s Ambassadorship in Rwanda (1976-1979); DCM and Chargé d'Affaires position in Colombia (1979-1981); and Ambassadorship in Somalia (1987-1990). Frank and Bettie left the Foreign Service in 1990 and moved back to Boston where Frank taught at Simmons College before retiring to Durham, North Carolina in 1993.


As the wife of a US foreign service officer, Bettie did not pursue a career of her own. She had plans as a young adult to go to college and study drama, and in fact, fell in love with husbandr during a play they were both in (he, merely a walk-on, she, the star attraction).  However, by falling in love and hitching her wagon to Frank, she set off on more than a career; she became the engine behind his achievements and the cushion absorbing the (few, albeit) falls. She quickly became the master planner, organizer, facilitator, hostess, seamstress, chef, and quintessential Memme l’Ambassadrice. She mentored young wives in the foreign service facing the daunting tasks she had by now mastered. She raised her three children in darkest Africa during its most dangerous and rebellious times, enrolling them in local schools when possible (Belgian missionary schools) so that they would grow to understand the cultures and people where they lived, not in the cloistered anglo and european communities, but amidst the noisy and confusing, but mostly rewarding, cultures around them. She worked with womens’ cooperatives in jewelry making, weaving, clothing design, and wearable art for export to the US, culminating in the smash success of a fashion show in Mogadishu, Somalia, just prior to their departure in 1990.


Bettie’s dearest friend throughout this odyssey was Dian Fossey. Their friendship began in 1967 when my Frank, then in Congo, was asked to help free Dian from Congolese soldiers holding her captive in the Virunga mountains. When Frank became Ambassador in Rwanda, their friendship blossomed and the family spent several Christmases and Thanksgivings on the mountain with Dian, tracking gorillas, learning how to ‘speak’ to them with a low muamba to reassure them as we approached. Bettie and the family got to know the gorilla groups, the silverbacks and the babies, and tracked their movements through the years, their hearts breaking at every horrible attack and death suffered by them, name by name. After departing Rwanda, Bettie and Dian continued their friendship through long and regular letters until Dian’s untimely death in 1985.


Bettie started her own business (BC Designs) after she and Frank retired to Durham NC, designing and manufacturing cushions, pillows, curtains and other interior articles -- hiring staff and opening a workshop in downtown Durham.  Bettie quickly became engaged in the Durham community; she volunteered at voting sites, she joined a mystery book club, she made dishes for the homeless through St. Phillips. Bettie and Frank became avid bikers and would reserve weekend days to bike all over the area. At the age of 72, Bettie and Frank, along with close friends Judy and Curt Eschelman, took part in the North Carolina bike ride from Mountains to Coast, biking more than 450 miles. Several years later, the same foursome biked across France. Travel continued to be a passion, well into her 70s.  She traveled to Turkey, Mexico, Bolivia, Peru, Venice, Arizona, sometimes with Frank and sometimes with friends. 


Bettie was passionate and energetic. She led a life in pursuit of mastery, as a wife and mother; as a diplomat and hostess for the United States; as weaver, jeweler, seamstress and fabric arts designer; as an entrepreneur; and as a passionate civic activist. She lived life with a vengeance. 


Recent stories

Adventurer

January 4, 2020
In my mind Aunt Bettie will always be the quinticential adventurer. From entertaining heads of state to climbing through the jungles of Rwanda, she seemed at ease with all of it. Her passion for living was evident to all of us. When visiting her during her recent hospital stay she shared so many stories of her life... And they were all about various adventures she'd experienced.  Her favorite friend in life was Diane Fossey, fellow adventurer and conservationist whose life was cut far too short while studying the mountain gorillas of Rwanda where she and Bettie became closest friends.  I will always remember Aunt Bettie's passion for life... And the adventures it brings.
March 7, 2020
I’m remembering the times we took our new babies up to the cabins in Pine to escape the summer heat of Phoenix. Those were good times together. Now those babies are in their 60s. Sending much love Alice

Invite others to Bettie's website:

Invite by email

Post to your timeline