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AUGUSTA — Bettie Cornise Detjen Kettell died suddenly on Sunday, June 7, 2015, doing something she was passionate about: participating in a retreat at Pilgrim Lodge. She was born in Danville, Pa., on Feb. 9, 1947, a daughter of Cornise Denise Detjen and Herbert F.C. Detjen.

Bettie was a 1965 graduate of Berwick High School and a 1968 graduate of Allentown Hospital School of Nursing, both in Pennsylvania. She began her nursing career as an operating room nurse in Boston at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she met her husband, Charles Kettell. With daughter, Marraine, and son, Herb, they moved to Maine in 1978, where they designed and built their own passive solar home in Durham.

Bettie continued her operation nursing career at Regional Hospital in Brunswick, which became Mid Coast Hospital, and helped initiate and develop their recycling program throughout the hospital as pollution prevention coordinator. She retired from nursing in 2012, but expanded her scope by joining the Environmental Health Strategies Center and Prevent Harm in Portland as a board member, lending her expertise, voice and passion to lobby at the state and federal level for removal of toxic substances from everyday use and consumption. As her activism expanded, she joined organizations too numerous to list.

Bettie was a woman of profound and active faith. Shortly after moving to Durham, she and Charlie joined the First Congregational United Church of Christ in Durham, Maine family. Over the years, Bettie served as choir member, flower chair, deacon, Sunday school teacher, church delegate, Youth Group leader, and general workhorse at her beloved church.

Her involvement on the local level fed her ministry for the environment, and the wider Body of Christ. She was involved on the state level of the Maine Conference United Church of Christ as well including retreats, annual meeting, and activities at Pilgrim Lodge. Recently, she joined the Church and Ministry Committee.

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Bettie loved singing in the church choir, cats, dogs, gardening, painting, boating, and her church, the First Congregational Church United Church of Christ of Durham, her church family and environmental activism.

She is survived by her husband Charlie, daughter the Rev. Marraine Cornise Kettell, son Herbert Charles (Missy) Kettell, as well as grandchildren Natalie and Caleb; sisters, the Rev. Martha Sue Moll and Dr. Carolyn (Donald) Rude; brothers-in-law, Russell (Carol) Kettell and Henry Kettell; nieces and nephews, Lt. Col. Daniel (Stacy) Moll, Stephen (Shannon Surseley) Moll, Suzanne Hall, Jonathan (Leah Lambert) Rude, Alexander Kettell, and Peter Kettell; grand nieces and nephews, Danielle, Margaret, Catherine, Jonah, Amelia, Sydney, Avery, and new baby boy Rude. She was predeceased by her parents, her nephew Benjamin Rude and her dear brother-in-law Terry Moll.

Bettie loved and is sadly missed by her husband, children, grandchildren, her sisters and brothers and their families, as well as countless people she has nurtured over the years.

A memorial service will be held at the First Congregational United Church of Christ in Durham, 773 Royalsborough Road in Durham, Maine, on Saturday, June 27 at 10 a.m. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Bettie’s name to the First Congregational United Church of Christ Durham, c/o Julie Wagoner treasurer, 39 Aurora Drive, Durham, ME 04222, or to the Environmental Health Strategies Center c/o Mike Beliveau, 565 Congress St., Suite 204, Portland, ME 04101.

Arrangements are under the care of Crosman Funeral Home, Cremation and Monument Services, 40 Main St., Lisbon Falls.

Condolences may be shared with the family at www.crosmanfuneralhome.c om.


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