Following the death of her husband William, Bessie Kahan Lubow was left alone to raise her three young children. Although she was the beneficiary of a life insurance policy administered by B’nai B’rith’s Birmingham Lodge #725, by 1915 Bessie – on the urging of the Lodge — admitted the children to the Home.
Harry Lubow was buried in Resurrection Catholic Cemetery in Kansas City, Missouri.
“We had a wonderful life in the Home,” said Helen in her 1982 oral history. “We had every advantage anybody could ever have….And I feel that I was very fortunate in being raised in the Jewish Children’s Home.”
With her nursing degree, Helen secured a position in Touro’s obstetrical department and became self-sufficient. In 1933, when she married Abe Louis Sizeler, a realtor, Helen was “given away” by Arthur Weil, the husband of “Aunt Edie” Weil, who had generously volunteered as Helen’s “Big Sister” while she lived in the Home. Helen and her husband raised two children, Marilyn and William, in New Orleans. Helen died in 1998 at age 86.
In Her Own Words
Evalyn (as she later spelled her name) became a registered nurse in 1936 and fulfilled those duties until 1991 when she retired as Director of Nurses from Town & Country Nursing Home in Minden, Louisiana, after seventeen years of service. In recognition of her dedication to the nursing profession, in addition to other community activities, Evalyn was presented the key to the City of Minden and had her retirement day proclaimed “Evalyn Gibson Day” by resolution of the mayor.