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Obituaries

John Lumpkin Foster, Jr.

Obituary Date: Saturday, January 29, 2022

In the early evening on Saturday, January 29, 2022, John Lumpkin Foster, Jr. completed his journey on earth surrounded by the love and laughter of family and close friends. 

John was born on December 11, 1936 at home in Roswell Georgia to John L. Foster, Sr. and Lula Roberts Foster. His mother always considered his birth a “bit romantic” because he entered the world the day that King Edward VIII of England abdicated the British throne for the woman he loved. 

John grew up in Roswell and attended Roswell High School where he excelled academically and ran cross-country track. He worked in his father’s Drug Store, The Roswell Soda Company after school and on weekends.The rest of the time he was out hunting, fishing with his father or tramping through the woods he so loved. 

After graduating high school, John attended Oglethorpe University for one year and then transferred to the University of Georgia. He graduated from UGA with a BS in Pharmacy in June of 1958. The next day, on June 10th, he married the “love of his life” Emylie Palmer Blackwelder. 

John and Emylie met when John's college roommate introduced the two. For Emylie, it was love at first sight. John was slightly more coy. He called Emylie that weekend. He asked her if she was free for the evening and when she said yes, he said, “good, my friend needs a date.” 

That happened exactly once. After that, he realized she was the one and they dated exclusively until they married. 

John passed his pharmacy licensing exam and he and his new bride moved to Marietta, Georgia where he worked through his internship at Dunaway Drug Store. 

When he was finished with his internship, he and Emylie moved to Smyrna, Georgia. They bought their first home and John went to work as a pharmacist at South Cobb Pharmacy. 

In March of 1960, they welcomed their first child, daughter Sara Lucinda (Cindy). 

In 1965, John was offered an excellent opportunity at a drug store in Seneca, SC. They chose to move because they owned a lot near Seneca on Lake Hartwell and loved to go there camping. 

In December of 1966, John and Emylie welcomed their second child, a son, John Lumpkin Foster, III also known as Jay. 

In early 1967, John was once again offered an excellent opportunity to practice pharmacy in Cleveland, Georgia. Warren “Doc” Griffin asked him to come to work for him and take over the drug store when he retired. 

John and Emylie decided Cleveland was a good place to raise their young family and so in the fall of 1967 they moved to Cleveland and settled in for good.

John worked at Griffin’s until the early 80s. He decided that he’d rather be a full time pharmacist rather than run a business so he eventually declined the offer to buy Griffin’s when Doc Griffin retired. 

He moved across the street and spent the rest of his career working with Ray Black at Cleveland Drug. 

John was one of a disappearing breed of small town pharmacists. His home phone was listed in the local phone book for after-hours emergencies. Several times a week, he would get calls during dinner by concerned patients and at least once a week he went back in the middle of the night to fill a prescription for a sick patient. Many nights on his way home from a 12 hour day at the drugstore, John would run by the home of a house bound patient and deliver medicine. 

John retired at 62 and he and Emylie took their dream trip to Scotland with the National Geographic Society. 

In 2003 Emylie was diagnosed with lung cancer and John tenderly nursed her until she died in April of 2005. 

John did relief work for other pharmacists and worked in his garden but with both children living out of state, he was lonely. 

Several years after Emylie’s death, John met Alice Jones Todd. He married her the following October and they were married 9 years until she passed 4 years ago. He also tenderly cared for her during a number of serious health crises. It was during this time, John was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease. 

When Alice died, John moved back into the home he and Emylie had built in Sautee. By this time his daughter Cindy had moved back to Georgia to be near her father and he lived in the family home with Cindy and her husband Mike. 

John managed his Parkinson’s pretty well until a broken hip three years ago severely limited his mobility and by late Saturday evening, this horrible disease had robbed his body of so much, it could no longer contain his magnificent spirit. 

John had many interests. His primary interest, even at the end, was taking care of his family. He loved to bird hunt (mostly to watch the dogs work), fish, camp, hike and collect funny stories. He was an avid UGA football fan his entire life and was over the moon at another National Championship. 

He was also the family genealogist and had found and proven a number of lines in his family tree. John also excelled in botany, nurturing the lady slippers that grew along the driveway. A walk in the woods with him was a pharmacological botany lesson. He could identify numerous local plants and tell you their usefulness in the practice of medicine.

He was a former member of the Kiwanis Club in White County and acted as Key Club advisor at White County High School in the late 1970s. He served on the Board of Directors for the local senior center’s Alzheimer’s Respite Group. He was an elder and a deacon in the Presbyterian Church and he and Emylie were founding members of the First Presbyterian Church in Cleveland Georgia. The first worship service of that congregation was in the living room of John and Emylie’s home. He was also Emylie’s wingman in her Laotian ministry. She did the legwork and he provided the moral and financial support. He had a local Meals-on-Wheels route that he worked for close to 20 years. Even after he married Alice and moved to the Atlanta suburbs, he drove back to Cleveland once a week to deliver meals. 

Later in life, John was tickled to be accepted into the Sons of the American Revolution through his Ancestor James White, a soldier at the Battle of King’s Mountain. 

John was preceded in death by his parents John and Lula Foster, his sister, Nan Foster Freemon, his beloved wife of 47 years, Emylie Blackwelder Foster and his great late-in-life companion, Alice Todd Foster. He was also preceded in death by his aunt Alda Roberts Lyons who lived in the home with John and his parents and Kitty Martin, beloved friend who worked in the Foster home and helped rear “little” John. 

John is survived by his daughter Cindy (Mike) Foster Grace, son John (Julie) Foster, grandchildren Foster Grace, Emylie (Simon) Grace Kasmir, John L. Foster IV and Walter Foster. 

He is also survived by Alice’s children, Scott (Paula) Todd, Billy (Carolyn) Todd, Anne (Amber) Todd and Claire Todd, Hannah Todd, Justin Todd and Braeden Todd. 

He also leaves behind nephews John (Marcia) Freemon and George (Colleen) Freemon and numerous beloved cousins, particularly the branch known as the Texas Foster clan. 

In addition to family he leaves many, many friends to mourn his loss. 

The family is particularly grateful to Hospice of Northeast Georgia, Nurse Julie and Elaine, caretakers Rita Gooch and Kay McClendon and dear friends Stephanie Henslee and Marty Palmer. All worked to help make John’s last days on earth as happy and as peaceful as possible. 

The family also requests that in lieu of flowers, friends consider making a donation in memory of John and Emylie to the Laotian Ministry at the First Presbyterian Church in Cornelia Georgia. Checks earmarked for the Laotian ministry can be mailed to the church at 469 N. Main Street, Cornelia, GA 30531. 

John’s ashes will be interred next to Emylie this spring. At that time there will be a celebration of life service and a party to honor this remarkable son, husband, father, grandfather, friend and community servant. Date and time to be announced later.

To share a memory or to leave the family a condolence please visit www.barrettfh.com

Barrett Funeral Home, Cleveland. 706-865-3101.

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Barrett Funeral Home
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118 N Brooks St, Cleveland 30528
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