IN LOVING MEMORY OF

Elinor Potee

Elinor Potee Nichols Profile Photo

Nichols

March 11, 1927 – September 7, 2022

Obituary

Walking, Waving Lincoln Lady dies at 95

Elinor Potee Nichols was born March 11, 1927 in Nagpur, India. Being "from the jungles of central India" was her first story in a lifetime of stories lived and told. It explained the village Hindi she learned from her Ayah and the frequency with which she got lost in concrete jungles: "If I had an elephant, I'd be fine," she would tell the passerby who showed her the way.

While big sister Carol stayed in the bungalow, Elinor and older brother Gale roved narrow paths in search of things different than home. There was the morning the python dropped on them from above. There was the evening the tiger stalked them home and they could not let themselves break into a run, lest they be chased.

Elinor's boundless compassion was born in the starving India of the 1930s. She fed her chapattis to famished dogs at the railway station. She slept with orphaned baby squirrels. After leaving her parents, Esther Gale and Kenneth Lyon Potee, to board at Kodaikanal International School, a British hill station, she experienced hunger firsthand. Privation rooted her life in gratitude: if you're alive and not hungry, It's Good Enough.

At school, when Elinor wasn't attracting suitors with her sunny disposition, she was rescuing the brown rats that the kitchen cooks caught, strangled, and threw over the wall into the school playground. The rats that survived till morning she wrapped in a pair of underpants so they couldn't bite, hid them in her dresser, fed them until they recovered, then released them near the kitchen.

Elinor started Oberlin College in the middle of World War II. To her naïve eyes, America was an alien place with alien values: money, bridge, alcohol, movies, and cigarettes. It took twelve weeks for her mother's comforting letters to answer Elinor's homesick ones.

Her college majors, Sociology and Psychology, helped make sense of things, and people. After marrying Roger Nichols, she earned a Master's degree in Psychiatric Social Work, the first class to graduate from University of Iowa. As her class of three crossed the stage, the dean whispered to her, "You're the best student we've ever had." Following a year of visiting patients at home, Elinor gave birth to Kathleen and Wendy.

To pay off medical school debts, the family decamped in 1957 to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, a small compound built on rocky, barren hills near the world's most productive oil well, Dammam #7. Camels instead of elephants, deserts instead of jungles, more admirers of her vim: to Elinor it felt like home. Being cute in a tennis dress was fun. Driving a forehand shot to the far baseline was more fun. Yet when imminent loss dispirited her opponent, Elinor threw the game—invisibly and gently. Winning didn't mean diddly-squat. Jogging home after three sets in 110℉, tennis shoes squishy wet, she thought she could never be happier. Happiness was also water skiing on the Persian Gulf, jumping the wake until she wiped out and fell into a salty sea of jellyfish and sea snakes.

In another life, Elinor would have been an archeologist. Clambering between pre-Islamic ruins, she could see camouflaged blonde chert arrowheads where others saw only rocks and sand. She led Girl Scout troops into the desert to scramble up jebals and explore wadis. Around campfires at night her guitar and sweet voice led the singing. She sang lullabies to Quaife when he was born in 1961.

Inheriting an Arabian mare posed a challenge. She knew her Indian elephants but it was obvious that horses were too big and frightening to ride so she exercised Sheer by walking her in circles. Her Girl Scouts snickered, "Mrs. Nichols, we've been talking and we think you're too scared to ride Sheer." "I'm not scared," she said, "I just need the exercise." The girls hoisted her ninety-six pounds into the saddle. Soon, she was cantering yellow dunes. Soon, galloping the endless beaches.

Twice the family drove 4,000 miles from London to Arabia, jerry cans of water strapped to the bumpers of the Landrover, Elinor handing sandwiches to her children, all three riding outside on the hood and roof. From Istanbul in the west to Sharjah in the east, in souks and harbors her Hindi opened doors—a gold smuggler in Dubai offered her passage on his sailing dhow—but it was humor, kindness, and warmth that won her a world of friends. Those who shared their addresses received years of airmail postcards, an honor they returned by arriving on her doorstep at naptime—horrifying.

In 1970, Elinor moves to a marsh island in Cohasset Harbor, south of Boston, where she discovers a plethora of animals that need her. She feeds the possums, porcupines, ducks, chipmunks, squirrels. She feeds the coyotes and foxes that eat them. Spying from a mile away her white Toyota heading home, red-tailed hawks circling overhead screech for their daily chicken wings. On the front lawn, raccoons dine on dog food. When an exhausted mother of five kits leans against Elinor to rest while her babies eat from Elinor's cupped hands, the two mothers need no words.

Amirah, her Newfoundland, roams the nearby beaches in search of picnics. The phone rings: "Come get your dog. She just ate our hotdogs." Elinor jumps into a canoe and paddles across the harbor. Willingly, Amirah clambers into the bow, and rides serenely until a seagull flies by – splash.

Unable to pay the mortgage on Bailey's Island, Elinor and Roger found University Associates for International Health, a non-profit. Staffing Arabia's hospitals and professional schools sends Elinor crisscrossing Eurasia to interview and hire hundreds of employees.

After Roger becomes Director of Boston's Museum of Science in 1981, Elinor throws herself into organizing blockbuster exhibits and raising money to build an Omni Theater. Widowed at age 60 in 1987, her stories of Ramses the Great draw crowds to their final exhibit.

Elinor gave her grandchildren the world: riding camels past the Great Pyramid of Giza is not enough; they search for better pyramids, get lost, and end up in an Egyptian Army firing range. At age 85, Elinor moves to Lincoln, MA, writes a memoir, True Tales of Jungle India, and explores her new town, walking four miles a day, every day, in every weather. She waves to bus drivers, talks to police officers, pets dogs, and tells her stories to whomever will listen which, it turns out, is everyone.

She is survived by her children, Kathleen, Wendy, and Quaife Nichols, and her grandchildren Kathleen and Roger Creel, and Wellesley, Denver, and Alex Nichols.

A memorial service in her honor will be held on Saturday, November 5th at 1:00 pm at the First Parish Church, 4 Bedford Road, Lincoln, MA.

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Services

Memorial Service

Calendar
November
5

First Parish in Lincoln

4 Bedford Rd, Lincoln, MA 01773

Starts at 1:00 pm

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