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Carol
was born and raised in Manchester, Conn., the daughter of the late
Thomas J. and Ethel (Brookings) Cordner and was a graduate of Manchester schools. She
received an associate degree from The University of Hartford (1963),
bachelors degree from Eastern Connecticut State University (1983), and
the Master of Divinity degree from Andover Newton Theological School
(1990).
Carol's
love of poetry and music was a major theme of her life and ministry. She
studied piano as a child, and organ as a teenager with the organist at South
Methodist Church in Manchester where her family were members. This led, at the
age of nineteen, to her becoming organist at Windsorville Methodist Church.
Later, after she married Gordon and gave birth to their first child, the
family moved to Andover and in 1968 she became the organist and senior choir
director at The First Congregational Church of Andover. Beginning in 1973 she
formed and directed Junior and Cherub choirs in Andover and in 1978 a junior
choir at St. Columba R.C. church in Columbia with the assistance of her dear
friend and fellow musician Carol MacKay, of Andover. The two women taught the
children so thoroughly that they sang in two parts without sheet music, and
with only Carol Howard’s guitar for accompaniment. They performed monthly in
their churches and also at many community and area religious functions.
During
all this time Carol was writing poetry and lyrics and composing music for
both. She was a prolific author and composer with over 400 known compositions
(with works still being found among her papers). After expressing an interest
in learning to play the guitar for accompaniment, an uncle gave her an old one
which she taught herself to play. This enabled bringing her message and music
to a much wider audience. In the early 1970s she self-published two books of
her songs. Rather than selling copies of the first one, she gave most of them
away; her first effort inspiring an anonymous gift which enabled the
publication of the second. In 1975 she received an unexpected bequest of $125
from her distant uncle Edward Duff , the exact amount needed to purchase her
guitar “Edward” which replaced her very old and tired first one. She was
accompanist for the Minstrel Maids and Ayre singing groups and founded The
Rainy Day Trio with her friends Carol MacKay and Nancy Richards. Her early
music was more inspirational than religious. But with time it evolved,
culminating with the hymns she wrote for an independent study in hymn writing
at ANTS. At the time, faculty members could not remember anyone else
attempting such a project.
At
the age of ten, Carol lost her mother to breast cancer and at sixteen accepted
Jesus Christ as her Savior at a Billy Graham rally in New York City. These
events strongly influenced the rest of her life--particularly after she was
diagnosed with breast cancer in 1978. She underwent a mastectomy, radiation
followed by a year of chemotherapy, and then a second mastectomy. As with so
many cancer patients, these events caused her to examine her life, and with
prayer and the help of her spiritual advisors, determine how best to use
whatever time she had left. She was feeling an ever stronger pull to devote
time to sharing her message through music and preaching, so she resigned as
organist. She had started preaching as a lay fill-in at Andover and preached
in several Connecticut UCC churches, including the two she eventually served
as pastor. She also spoke and sang in prisons, hospitals, other churches and
many Christian Women’s Clubs. These experiences strengthened her desire to
seek ordination and full-time ministry. But how to accomplish this given her
health, family and limited finances? Knowing the “the Lord will provide,”
as He did when she needed a new guitar, she returned to college willing to
take the journey one step at a time, confident that the way would be shown.
Finding social work after ECSU unfulfilling, she made the final decision: to
apply to Andover Newton.
After
starting her studies at ANTS in the fall of 1985, she learned that the
pastorate of South Windham Congregational Church was open. In the UCC, lay
persons with the proper backgrounds can become either Commissioned or Licensed
Ministers, which enables them to perform all the religious functions of an
Ordained Minister. As a seminary student studying for the Master of Divinity
degree, she was granted Commissioned Minister status and was called by South
Windham, serving there into 1991. After graduating in 1990 she began searching
for her ultimate objective -- a full time pastorate. Unfortunately, the cancer
reoccurred while she was a candidate at Longmeadow Congregational Church in
Auburn, NH. She informed its search committee of this but committee members
still wanted to present her as their candidate. The congregation was informed
after her candidate sermon; the vote to call was unanimous. Carol served there
until in 1998, when, with her strength and endurance much reduced, she decided
to seek a part-time pastorate in Connecticut to be close to her support base
of family and friends. This brought her here, to Union, where she served until
her death on All Saints Sunday, November 5, 2000.
Her
ability to live 22 productive and happy years after her first cancer encounter
was a source of joy and inspiration. She formed a mastectomy support group
while at ESCU, and for years spoke and sang to women's organizations about the
importance of her faith in dealing with her illness. Her ministry touched
countless lives and continues to do so with her music being her living legacy.
Even while dealing with the disease, she enjoyed white-water rafting and
hiking, and traveled to Scotland and Northern Ireland where she met much of
her father’s family. She was overjoyed to welcome three granddaughters into
the family and her last act as a minister was to baptize her granddaughter
Alyssa.
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