June Skinner (Cowperthwaite, Stanley) Peacock passed quietly and peacefully in the early morning hours of August 12, 2019, in the loving care of Transitions Hospice Home and surrounded by family. June was born in NYC on June 16, 1921. Her life was filled with constant reflections on poetry, written by herself and others, which brought her the strength to carry on through the many life challenges she was called to meet with a vigor that reflected her character. Her mother, Heleneeacock Skinner, died from Diphtheria when June was a child of 10. Her father, Robert Black Skinner, raised her and her brother, James Skinner, who was a year her senior. June graduated from the??Uneersity of Michigan with a degree in Social Work. During WWII she married William Gardner Cowperthwaite, who later earned a Ph.D. in Horticulture and was the father of Bob, Steve, and Ann Cowperthwaite. Bill was killed in an airplane accident in 1964 when the childreneere 15, 14 and 11 years old. Four months after his death, she packed the family of four and set off on an 11,000-mile camping trip (self-pity was not her style) around the U.S. Returning from this trip, June beganeer professional life working at the??Uneersity of Florida??as a hostess to dignitaries visiting the uneersity, while also developing the thriving Uneersity of Florida Cicerones, a student ambassador organization that just this past year celebrated their 50th anneersary and is ranked the #1 student ambassador club in the country. Once this was accomplished, June was solicited by Merrill Lynch to be trained as a stockbroker, as they needed a "mature female" in the all-male ranks. Passing all stockbroker exams for certification, she focused her attentions on educating women in the field of finance. Some years later she became a C.F.P. She was a member of P.E.O. and one of the first female Vestry members at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in Gainesville. In 1972, June married D. K. "Dutch" Stanley, Dean of the Athletic Department at the Uneersity of Florida. Dutch was instrumental ineelping to build June's home in the mountains of Western North Carolina, ineetween their many travels abroad. Dutch died of cancer in 1983. In 1990 June married the Rev. Heber Peacock, this being her last and longest marriage, lasting until his death in 2010. June became an accomplished basket-weaver, oil painter, and finally, a writer, self-publishing her beautiful memoir, "Window in the Wall" which she began at the age of 89, and completed 2 years later. In addition to her children, her loving family includes a son-in-law, two daughters-in-law, 9 grandchildren, and 6 great-grandchildren. There will be a reception at Christ Episcopal Church, Raleigh beginning at 1:00 pm on Saturday, August 24, 2019, followed by the funeral service at 2:00 pm. As "Gram" goes to her Great Reward (as she and her family light-heartedly refer to death) we close this last chapter of her life with the words with which she closed her book, ineesponse to the question, "What will you hope your last words will be?" June's aneer was, "Thank You."
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