Carolyn G. Poundstone
   
   A Life Well Spent
  
   Carolyn was born in Chicago on March 18, 1941 to William and Louise Gilmore,
   
   joining older sister Sallie. Her father served in the U.S. Army during World War II,
   
   and the family lived those few years in Wisconsin. They moved following the war
   
   to Los Angeles.
   
   She attended local public schools and graduated from Venice High School in
   
   1959. She studied at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) for about one
   
   year. She was not raised in a religious or church-going home and experienced a
   
   spiritual crisis during her days in college. This led to her Christian conversion,
   
   baptism, and joining a nearby evangelical United Presbyterian Church. There she
   
   met young men who were members of a Christ-centered fraternity at UCLA. In
   
   the fall of 1962 she became a good friend of one of those men, Don Poundstone.
   
   Following his graduation, they were married on November 2, 1963.
   
   A few days into marriage the young couple went to the Univ. of New Mexico as
   
   trainees for the U.S. Peace Corps. Three months later they were approved for
   
   service as volunteers to Brazil. They spent two years in that country as community
   
   development workers, living in the state of Espirito Santo.
   
   They returned to the U.S. in late 1965, and Don studied at Fuller Theological
   
   Seminary for half a year. Carolyn supported the couple financially as a secretary at
   
   the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. In September 1966 they drove cross country where
   
   Don enrolled at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. Carolyn
   
   continued her supportive employment at Honeywell Corp. until she gave birth to
   
   her first child Timothy on their fifth anniversary.
   
   Don completed formal theological studies in June 1969 and began church
   
   ministry labors at a small Orthodox Presbyterian church (OPC) northwest of
   
   Pittsburgh in Sewickley, PA. Two more sons (Benjamin and Andrew) and a
   
   daughter (Margaret) were born to them during the next six years. In early 1976
   
   Don accepted a ministerial call to the First Orthodox Presbyterian Church in
   
   Portland, OR, where he served as pastor for the next 18 years.
  
   In 1994 -- their four children now adults -- Don and Carolyn answered the call of
   
   the OPC Committee on Foreign Missions to serve as missionaries with the Middle
   
   East Reformed Fellowship in Larnaca, Cyprus. While living on that Mediterranean
   
   island they made a couple of trips to Israel as tourists with their daughter
   
   Margaret and youngest son Andrew.
   
   After working in Cyprus for a year and a half, they returned to the States, but
   
   not before spending three months in Eritrea (East Africa) during the restoration
   
   and repair of the OPC’s mission clinic that had been abandoned and damaged
   
   because of a civil war nearly 20 years earlier. During their weeks there Carolyn
   
   prepared three meals a day for 8-10 short-term workers at the clinic.
   
   Back in the U.S., they lived for several months in early 1996 with Don’s widowed
   
   father Dwight in Santa Barbara, CA. While there, the area’s Orthodox Presbyterian
   
   churches invited Don to serve as a regional missionary, overseeing efforts to start
   
   new churches in Arizona, Hawaii, and southern California. Don and Carolyn settled
   
   in Temecula, CA, where they lived for 12 years before Don retired in 2008. They
   
   both traveled extensively throughout Don’s final extended employment. One
   
   memorable trip took them to Suriname in 2004 to visit son Andrew and his wife
   
   Kortney, both Peace Corps volunteers.
   
   Retiring back to Portland (and the home they had purchased 32 years before) to
   
   be near four married children and their grandchildren, Carolyn and Don settled
   
   into a more relaxed season of life. Carolyn led regular Bible study classes for
   
   women at their church and Don preached often at nearby churches when needed.
   
   They enjoyed occasional trips to Hawaii, sailed on ocean cruises to Tahiti and
   
   several others sponsored by National Review magazine, and even returned to
   
   Africa (Uganda) for two months in 2011 to teach classes at an OPC mission work.
   
   At last, in their 70s, time began to catch up with them. Carolyn underwent a
   
   successful aortic valve replacement in 2020. She started to slow down physically
   
   and had to suspend regular exercise sessions at a local fitness club. She also
   
   began to develop what became a disruptive mental decline. She remained in the
   
   family home with Don until late August 2023, when she moved into the
   
   Glendoveer Senior Living home where she received loving and attentive care
   
   throughout her final three weeks. She required a visit to the ER on Sept. 17 and
  
   was diagnosed with pneumonia and other severe problems. She died that evening
   
   and entered her eternal glory and rest with Jesus Christ her Lord.
   
   She will be remembered by those who knew her as a “sweet lady,” a wise
   
   counselor and friend to all, and a willing helper in any work for the kingdom of
   
   God. Her children arise and call her blessed (Proverbs 31:28).
  
A Visitation will be held at Rose City Cemetery's Chapel, from 1:00 pm - 4:30 pm Thursday, September 28th.
A Committal at Rose City Cemetery will be held at 10:00 am Saturday September 30th, Grave 4, W1/2 Lot 359, Section S
Memorial Church Services will follow at 11:00 am Saturday September 30th, 2023, at First Orthodox Presbyterian Church: 8245 NE Fremont Street, Portland OR 97213
Church Reception to follow service.
In lieu of flowers, the family would ask that charitable contributions be made to Westminster Seminary California
https://www.wscal.edu/donate
Rose City Chapel
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