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The Thompson · Hoffmann · Kipp Book

Betty Jo of Connersville

Born 1928. Daughter of the Gruell rabbit-trap years. Eulogized by her own daughter.
1928–2018
Sourced fact
PDF
betty-hofmann-eulogy-by-jennifer-hofmann-2018.pdf
Eulogy for Betty Jo Gruell Hofmann, by Jennifer Hofmann (her daughter)gray-sail

"Less than a year after her birth, the Great Depression began," her daughter Jennifer wrote in the 2018 eulogy embedded to the right.1 The Gruell family had four children in those early years — Ted lost his factory job, took whatever odd jobs were available, and trapped rabbits to feed his family when there was nothing else. Betty, as Jennifer recounts it, "would tell me she hated rabbit. There simply did not exist a fancy French restaurant menu that would ever convince her that rabbit was a delicacy."1

The four Gruell children, and the brother who died at three

Sourced fact

Betty had three brothers — all in this site's database, all confirmed by the eulogy:

- Theodore Joseph Gruell Jr. (1927–2004), called "Junior," who had been oxygen-deprived at his home birth: their grandmother Nancy Belle assisted the doctor and "spent many minutes after the non-breathing baby's birth, dunking his lifeless body from warm to cold tubs of water, trying to shock the little body to life. Junior finally started to breathe, but he would suffer the effects from that lack of oxygen for his entire life."1,2
- Bob Gruell (1930–2011), called "Bobbie," the younger of the surviving brothers.2
- William "Billy" Gruell (November 20, 1933 – January 13, 1937). He died at age three, of what the family believed to be leukemia. "Grandma Betty, then just a young girl herself, said she fell asleep one night with little brother Billy playing at the foot of her bed. When she awoke the next morning, Billy was gone."1,2

Author's framing

Jennifer's eulogy notes that the eulogist's great-aunt Edith (Thelma's sister) said Ted Gruell "never really recovered emotionally from the loss of his three-year-old son Billy." Eight years after Billy's death, Ted would be dead himself, at forty.

A Connersville girl

Sourced fact

Betty grew up in Connersville, attending 8th Street Elementary, then Connersville Junior High School, and graduating from Connersville High School in May 1947 in the top fifteen percent of her class — a member of the National Honor Society and president of the high-school chapter of the American Red Cross.2,1 Her first paid job came that same year: Philco Manufacturing, 1947.2

Sourced fact

The eulogy adds the texture the GEDCOM cannot. She was a self-described tomboy. She loved Saturday afternoon movie matinees and wanted desperately to sing like the actress Jeanette MacDonald"but try as she might, those within earshot, usually her brothers, let Betty Jo know, 'She was no Jeanette MacDonald.'"1

Author's framing

Jennifer notes that this inability-to-carry-a-tune was independently confirmed decades later by an eleven-month-old. Rocking her infant granddaughter Kristin Nicole Thompson to sleep, Betty "launched into her best rendition of Rock-a-bye Baby. With her little hand, Kristin reached up and covered Grandma Betty's mouth, and very clearly said, 'No. Just rock the baby.'"1 Across two generations, the same verdict.

March 1945: Her father's obituary

Sourced fact

Betty was sixteen years and five months old when her father died. (The eulogy says fifteen; the dates say otherwise. Betty was born September 22, 1928; her father died March 11, 1945. The eulogist's math runs a year behind throughout.)

Sourced fact

Ted Gruell, age 40, press-room foreman at Rex Manufacturing in Connersville for fifteen years, had attended a meeting of the company's management club at the Country Club on Saturday night, March 10, 1945. The next morning — "apparently in his usual health until shortly before his death," the local obituary reads — he died at the family home, 214 West Thirty-fifth Street, Connersville, at 9 a.m. on Sunday, March 11.4,2

Theodore Joseph Gruell obituary — "Factory Foreman Rites Wednesday"
Theodore Joseph Gruell obituary — "Factory Foreman Rites Wednesday"gray-sled

Sourced fact

The Connersville obituary, headlined "Factory Foreman Rites Wednesday," records the survivors: Ted's wife Thelma; their three living children Theodore Jr (17), Betty Jo (16), and Bobby Lee (14); Ted's mother Mrs. Claude Dungan of Richmond — Elizabeth Connor Gruell, who had remarried after Ted's father William died; his sister Mrs. Lowell Church of Richmond; and his brothers Chase of Hamilton, Ohio and Russell of Connersville. He had also been preceded in death by his father, a brother, and his young son Billy — who had died at age three in January 1937, eight years before his own death. Rites Wednesday March 14, 1945 at 2 p.m. at the Myers funeral home.4

Sourced fact

The obituary also records, for the first time on this site, the exact date of Ted and Thelma's marriage: January 8, 1927 in Connersville.4

Sourced fact

The eulogy frames what came next: "Now the family that had struggled through the economic deprivation of the Great Depression would be forced to struggle to survive once again. While Betty Jo's mother, Grandma Thelma Gruell, found full-time work in a factory, Betty Jo had to step into a more mother-like role to help take care of both her brothers Junior and Bobbie. The family of six was now a family of four."1

Author's framing

The obituary's small detail is the cruel one: a man who attended a management-club meeting at the Country Club Saturday night was dead the next morning. The obituary writer's phrase — "apparently in his usual health until shortly before his death" — is the language a small-town paper used in 1945 when a stroke killed a forty-year-old foreman in a single Sunday. For the sixteen-year-old elder daughter at 214 West Thirty-fifth, that abruptness is the part of the year that stays.1,2

VJ Day, August 15, 1945

Sourced fact

Five months after Ted's death, VJ Day brought spontaneous celebration to the streets of Connersville: cars honking, crowds, "the impromptu parade of cars that circled the four block area of downtown." Betty was out with two girlfriends. In one of those cars was a young man named Jack Hofmann, riding with friends who knew Betty's friends. The girls were invited to ride along. "Though Betty Jo and Jack hardly spoke that evening, both remembered that first meeting."1

Author's framing

Both 2018 eulogies on this site — Jennifer's for Betty, and Benjamin Thompson's 2007 eulogy for Jack Hofmann himself (artifact pending ingest) — independently record this same August 15, 1945 first meeting. Two grandchildren, eleven years apart, told the same story. The VJ Day car ride is the moment from which Benjamin Thompson's maternal line descends.

Marriage, May 1948 — and the three children

Sourced fact

After months of Jack "showing up more and more at the places that Grandma Betty frequented" — at one point reportedly driving country roads ahead of her returning Red Cross convention car so he could be visible at every cross-roads — Betty and Jack married in May 1948.1 Their three children, all in this site's database as biological children of Jack Hofmann and Betty Gruell:

- Jennifer Hofmann (born October 4, 1949 — on her grandmother Thelma's birthday, a fact that mattered to Betty)2
- Gary Lee Hofmann (born December 19, 1950 — fourteen months after Jennifer)2
- David Hofmann (born December 7, 1955 — five years after Gary)2

The second loss: her mother, at thirty-six (1954)

Sourced fact

Violet Thelma Helms Gruell died on December 21, 1954, of cancer, when Jennifer Hofmann (Betty's first child) was five.2 Betty was twenty-six. Ten years after losing her father at fifteen, she lost her mother. "Grandma Betty was only 25 years old when she lost her mother, just a short ten years after her father had passed away."1

Author's framing

The eulogist (Jennifer) writes that Thelma was "my Grandmother Thelma. I was her first grandchild. I was born on her birthday and I can still literally feel her love for me." That shared October 4 birthday is the kind of detail that the GEDCOM happens to record but that only the eulogy explains.

The Union County Election Board years

Sourced fact

Betty worked at Philco Manufacturing (1947), then Woodruff's Supermarket (1967, the year Jack lost both his mother and his older brother), and beginning in 1990 at the Union County Election Board in Indiana — a role she would hold for at least fourteen years.2,3

Sourced fact

On Monday, September 20, 2004, Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita visited the Union County Courthouse and bestowed on Betty (then 75) and three other long-time poll workers Indiana's highest award given to a private citizen: the title of Honorary Secretary of State. The other recipients were Norma Hendrix (absent due to health), Annastasia Warrick (10 years of poll work), and Pat Gentry (40 years, also president of the Union County Council). The four had been recommended by Circuit Court Clerk Patricia Hensley "based on the quality and dependability of their service."3

PDF
betty-hofmann-honorary-secretary-of-state-union-county-2004.pdf
Election workers honoredstill-yew

Sourced fact

The article in the local Union County paper, written by staff writer Bev Woodruff, quotes Betty by name. She told the reporter that her first year as a poll worker she worked at Kitchel — one of the smaller Union County township polling places — and "birds were flying overhead and the roof needed work." She also said "in a small community people expect you to know who they are when they come in to vote," and added that she did know most of the voters.3

Author's framing

The article is the only document on this site that places Betty in her late-life civic role in living scene — at the courthouse, photographed with the Secretary of State, a certificate in her hands at age 75. The GEDCOM records that she worked for the Union County Election Board from 1990; the article records how she did it. The closing fact — "she did know most of the voters" — is the small-town civic virtue compressed into one sentence. She would continue voting and being voted in by her neighbors for years after this.

Historical context

Indiana's Honorary Secretary of State program was, per the article, in pilot stages in 2004: Rokita's office planned to visit every county in Indiana to bestow the award on long-serving local poll workers. Union County was the sixth county he had visited. The U.S. Election Assistance Committee was cited in the article as reporting that the average age of a U.S. poll worker was 72; the four Union County honorees averaged 74. Conducting an election in Indiana, the article concludes, would be impossible without its volunteer poll workers.

"Returning to those who passed their stardust on to her"

Sourced fact

Betty Jo Gruell Hofmann died on July 25, 2018, in Ohio, at age 89.2 In the last year of her life, the eulogy records, "the disease that was ravaging her brain turned her focus away from us and away from the present and the future. Every day, and more and more, we faded from her memory. Memories of us were replaced by memories of her own mother and father. In her mind, she started to relive the sorrow and enact the grief of the young woman who lost both of her parents too soon in life. Here she was, nearly ninety years old, but instead, retreating to her childhood, going back to her beginning."1 She was buried September 15, 2018.2

Author's framing

The eulogy's closing image — "returning to those who passed their stardust on to her as she did to us" — frames the whole document as a meditation on inheritance. Jennifer opens with the observation, from a 2017 Milky Way survey of more than 150,000 stars, that the atoms in any human body are the same atoms that compose the stars. She uses it to make a small theological point about the line of descent: "You are walking around on this earth because of that special mix of stardust that comes from all the parents that came before your beginning." The chapter you are reading is, in effect, an attempt to map that mix.

How this chapter was made
Method: Quoted excerpts · Author: Benjamin Thompson, in collaboration with Claude (Anthropic). Primary qualitative material drawn verbatim from a 2018 eulogy written by Jennifer Hofmann.
This chapter quotes a 2018 eulogy written by Betty's own daughter (Jennifer Hofmann, Benjamin's mother). The eulogist had access to family stories from Betty's great-aunt Edith, from Betty's mother Thelma, and from Betty herself. Where the eulogy is the source, it is cited as such; where the GEDCOM corroborates dates and names independently, both are noted. Where the eulogy gives qualitative or anecdotal material that no other source corroborates (e.g. "she always wanted to sing like Jeanette MacDonald"), the source is the eulogy alone, and the paragraph is tagged accordingly.
Paragraphs are tagged at the left margin: FACT = sourced and cited; CONTEXT = general historical background; AUTHORIAL = the writer's framing, not a factual claim. Numbered superscripts link to the citations at the bottom of the page.

Artifacts

Photos, scans, and documents that back this chapter. Each carries a SHA256 fingerprint so the file can be independently verified as unchanged since upload, and a short code — the tiny adjective-noun pair below each card — for compact reference (e.g. lineage.sent.li/a/sage-pine).

Scanned newspaper clipping; column-format obituary
Scanned newspaper clipping; column-format obituary
From Theodore Joseph Gruell obituary — "Factory Foreman Rites Wednesday"
SHA256: fa95ba76…b38456 · 2.1 MB · uploaded 5/18/2026
gray-sled
pdf
betty-hofmann-honorary-secretary-of-state-union-county-2004.pdf
Click to open
Scanned 2-page newspaper article (1.03 MB PDF). Corroborates the GEDCOM's Union County Election Board occupation event dated 1990 — by 2004, the article notes Betty had been a poll worker "for the past 14 years," consistent with a 1990 start. Page 9 photo identifies her by name; quotes from her include the Kitchel polling-place anecdote about birds flying overhead and the roof needing work.
From Election workers honored
SHA256: 6b3cf0c5…d7cef7 · 1.0 MB · uploaded 5/18/2026
still-yew
pdf
betty-hofmann-eulogy-by-jennifer-hofmann-2018.pdf
Click to open
Family-preserved 5-page eulogy. Written and delivered by Betty's eldest daughter Jennifer Hofmann (Benjamin Thompson's mother). Provides the qualitative texture that the GEDCOM lacks — the rabbit-trapping father, the brother who died at three, the VJ Day meeting with Jack Hofmann.
From Eulogy for Betty Jo Gruell Hofmann, by Jennifer Hofmann (her daughter)
SHA256: 74ac99f9…c77d92 · 94.8 KB · uploaded 5/18/2026
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