HOLLENBECK, Constance Keller (Age 98)

Passed away at Boundary County Hospital on December
31, 2007. Connie was born in Leonard, Missouri on May
6, 1909 to Thomas and Libbie Gray Robinson. In January
1914 the family arrived in Bonners Ferry by train to
visit their relatives George and Jerusha Schofield who
owned a livery stable here. They were so enchanted by
the beauty and bustle of the still-raw community that
they decided to stay. For Connie, that stay lasted 94
years. In the early years they raised cattle and
farmed in the Kootenai Valley, at that time still
natural wetlands. After the valley was drained and
diked they farmed principally in the Moravia area.
Living in places that were remote from the
conveniences of Bonners Ferry before the advent of
paved roads and motorized transportation, Connie
learned at an early age all the skills needed to run a
self-sufficient frontier home and farmstead. Her
cooking and sewing abilities were widely admired.
Connie graduated from Bonners Ferry High School in
1928, and in 1930 she married Harry Keller, a
nationally-known writer of poetry and fiction. Their
union produced four children. After Harry's untimely
death in 1943, Connie first supported her family by
sewing and then in 1946 was employed as Deputy County
Assessor. In 1951 she became the first woman deputy
sheriff in Idaho and in 1956 was elected to the first
of four terms as County Treasurer. She was active in
Democrat Party politics at the county and state levels
throughout the past 60 years. Her 1951 marriage to
Clarence Hollenbeck ended in divorce the same year.
Connie was active in the county's economic life as
well, at various times owning and operating a
Montgomery Ward store, a Grade A dairy and an antique
store in the historic Samaria Hotel building which she
had bought and renovated. She was a living
encyclopedia of Boundary County history. Having
arrived here less than fifty years after the first
ferry was established to carry miners and traders
across the Kootenai River to the Wild Horse gold
fields in Canada, and hardly twenty years after
completion of the Great Northern Railroad opened the
area to general settlement, Connie's own life spanned
the last two-thirds of the county's history and she
knew personally many of those who had lived in the
earlier one-third. Her first-hand knowledge of
community events and personalities can never be
replaced. It is in the social area that Connie will be
remembered with the greatest love and respect. Though
her own life was not always easy, she was perpetually
concerned for others in need. Her home was ever open
to children from troubled families, many of whom found
shelter and comfort with her for short or longer
periods over the years. Connie spent her childhood
among the Kootenai people in the valley, and her
affection for those early playmates and their elders
extended to several generations of their descendants.
She was often an advocate and mediator for the tribe
and its individual members in a sometimes hostile
white community. Until the last few months of her
life, Connie maintained a lively correspondence with a
host of relatives and friends who will deeply miss
those long letters written in her fine, clear hand.
Connie is survived by sons Clint Keller of Coeur
d'Alene and Ken Keller of Quito, Ecuador; daughters
Margaret Swanson and Rebecca Shearer of Bonners Ferry;
12 grandchildren; 25 great-grandchildren; and 3
great-great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be
held in Bonners Ferry on January 12, 2008 followed by
interment at Moravia Cemetery. A memorial celebration
of Connie's life is being planned for Spring.


Jan 10, 2008
Spokesman-Review