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Kelly Jadon

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Hometown Heroes

A news blog about ordinary people making extraordinary contributions to their communities.

Be a Part of One of God's Greatest Works During This Time

October 21, 2017 Kelly Jadon
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Imagine retiring only to go to work full-time for the Lord.  A dream come true for Jeff and Paula Grossmann, who serve  year round in the Treasure Coast Area for Samaritan’s Purse program Operation Christmas Child.

Coordinating a grassroots team of 32 called-ministry partners, the Grossmanns overseemedia communications, community outreach, church relations, logistics (semi-trucks, etc..) and prayer ministries connected with Operation Christmas Child.

Encompassing St. Lucie, Martin, Okeechobee and Palm Beach counties, the grassroots effort is growing; there are more than 200 participating churches as God prepares and opens doors to more.  Last year this Treasure Coast Area collected 20,000 gift-filled boxes; the goal for 2017 is 25,000.

The Grossmanns, married for more than 50 years, work January through June with a light schedule, but in season, July through November, they each easily put in 40 hours a week.  Paula has been involved in Operation Christmas Child for more than ten years; she began by packing a shoebox.  Paula was also chosen to travel to Uganda, Africa, to a women’s prison, to see the Gospel presented to inmates and gift boxes received by their children.

Jeff is partially retired from his own business, Grossmann Air Conditioning.  He and his wife, Paula, have been Morningside Church members for 14 years.  They have received Christian leadership training and are equipped and supported by Samaritan’s Purse staff in Orlando. Together the two make a dynamic team. 

Did you know that when you pack a box that nothing ever is removed from it?  This is called the “integrity of the box,” Jeff Grossmann states.  After you fill a gift box and pray for the receiver, the box is collected at a collection site.  From there it is transported with other boxes to central drop offs to be loaded into semi-trucks.  The trucks travel to eight major processing centers across the United States.  Florida boxes are received into a mammoth building in Atlanta where they are individually checked by 300 called-ministry partners and then placed into cargo containers for sea route shipping overseas.  At times, some boxes will be placed aboard a plane if the receiving country has a limited time window.

Overseas, in more than 100 countries, children ages two to 14 receive the gift-filled boxes from trained Operation Christmas Child nationals.  Many of the children are in need, living in poverty, orphanages, and refugee camps.  These children are also invited to participate in The Greatest Journey discipleship program, where they will have an opportunity to meet Jesus and receive Him. “Jesus said, ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.’” (Matt 19:14) Each day thousands of children come to know the Lord through this program.

This year Samaritan’s Purse is introducing a new type of box which may be used for gift-packing.  It is a durable plastic box, decorated with the Operation Christmas Child logo and colors, now made available at Hobby Lobby.  This box itself is a gift.

It is a blessing and an honor to pack a box and send it. 

Paula Grossmann says this, “Last year, Puerto Rico sent many boxes; this year, it is expected that none will come from the U.S. territory.”  God is calling us to make up the shortage and then some.  If you filled a shoebox last year, please consider filling two this year.

Other ways to pack boxes include organizing packing parties through a community organization or church.

Just as Apostle Paul sent out handkerchiefs, these shoeboxes represent the work and word of God going forth.  Children will be won to the love of Christ. 

Paula tells a story of a box packed just with socks.  The box was received in India by a little boy who had burned feet.  Because of his condition he was required to wear socks, but he had only one pair; his mother was constantly washing them. God knew what this boy needed.

Jeff Grossmann adds, “God is in control.”

The work of God goes where no one can go—into the hearts and minds of children and their parents, changing the world for the glory of God.

National Collection Week   November 13-20

Drop Off Locations:

  • Port St. Lucie: Morningside Church, West
  • Fort Pierce: Indian River Presbyterian
  • Stuart: United Methodist on Kanner Highway
  • Okeechobee: First Baptist of Okeechobee
  • Loxahatchee:  Oasis Church
  • Jupiter: Harvest Community Church
  • North Palm Beach:  Lighthouse Church
  • West Palm Beach:  Lakeside Presbyterian

© 2017 "Hometown Heroes"  Kelly Jadon

In Martin County, Palm Beach, Treasure Coast, St. Lucie County, Port St. Lucie, Okeechobee, Jupiter, Hobe Sound, Fort Pierce, Florida Tags hobby lobby, morningside church, samaritan's purse, operation christmas child, the greatest journey, treasure coast
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Doris Edmunds: WWII London Bombing Survivor

July 13, 2017 Kelly Jadon
Doris Edmunds

Doris Edmunds

During World War II London became the center of the “lightning war,” or the Blitzkrieg.  Germany’s Luftwaffe, the German Air Force, ran mass air attacks for air superiority over the United Kingdom, to draw out the Royal Air Force Fighter Command into a battle to the end and to cause the surrender of Great Britain.

Germany failed.

Across Britain, more than one million homes were hit and 40,000 civilians killed—half of them in London.

The British government decided to relocate to safety children of London and other urban centers, sending them into the countryside to small towns, villages, and hamlets until the end of the war. Under Operation Pied Piper, other children were even sent abroad to Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and the USA.  A total of 3 million people were evacuated during the beginning of Operation Pied Piper.

Doris Edmunds was one of those children.  At age eight, she arrived by train in a small village that had no electricity.  Gas lights lit streets and a local town crier (the mayor), complete with a three-cornered hat, red coat and bell, regularly wrote war notes on a board for all to read about what was happening in mainland Europe.

Doris was greeted at the train station by “Uncle” Ted and “Aunt” Millie, who took her into their home.  Other children also disembarked and were taken in to other residences.  The evacuation location was not a good match for little Doris; local livestock and farms brought about a recurrence of her asthma.

Doris was sent back to her mother in London; she had remained in the capitol to work in a munitions facility putting together military aircraft radios in a store front converted by the government.  Doris’ father was a member of the Royal Engineers.  He flew gliders in behind enemy lines to make way for the Allies.

During this time, Doris lived through the bombing of London, called Total War by the Germans.  At 11 years old, Doris went out to ride her neighbor’s bicycle.  A rocket came down, hit a wall next to her, falling apart, it knocked her to the ground. Doris suffered a broken nose, a broken arm, and missing teeth.

Doris remembers the bombings—buzz bombs, small pilotless winged missiles; they could be heard coming from several miles away.

She also recalls V2 ballistic missiles (“V” for vengeance) primarily directed at London, against which there was no defense.

Doris and her mother lived across the Thames River in Streatham, greater London. Regularly, 6PM sirens would sound, requiring everyone in London to descend to a nearby shelter because German bombings often occurred at night.  Doris’ shelter was concrete and built partially underground.  It had bunks for sleeping.  The children of three families would sit upon the steps leading out and watch searchlights scanning the sky for planes.  If one was spotted, all lights would turn toward that plane and focus on it.  Anti-aircraft guns shot incendiary shells.  The military attempted to shoot down enemy aircraft outside London’s city limits preventing further civilian damage. 

Blackout was strictly enforced. Doris recalls, “A local warden would pound on your door if any chinks of light showed through.  Almost all fathers and older brothers went off to fight.”

Strict rationing of foods was typical in Britain.  Each person had a ration book containing coupons.  Doris received special allowances because of her poor health—three eggs a week instead of one. 

Before the end of the war, Doris became very sick.  A doctor came to the house and decided she needed to be taken to the hospital. Because there were no phones, the doctor himself left to go and bring an ambulance.  Doris had developed pleurisy and pneumonia in both lungs.  The British government sent her to a convent on the Isle of Wight to convalesce. 

Run by Episcopal nuns, Doris first learned about Jesus there.  She returned home after a year and two Christmases at the age of 13.  The war was almost finished.

Evacuation of children was very traumatic because of the separation from their parents.  In many cases, living through bombings was less traumatizing than evacuation.  Doris Edmunds states, “For me, we made the bombings fun, making up games.  War games.  Boys were fighter pilots, girls were nurses.”

There was great celebration with VE Day, Victory in Europe, May 8, 1945.  It’s been more than 70 years, but Doris recalls the happiness: enormous block parties, conga lines, bonfires, and the return home of her father.

In 1952, Doris met her first husband in London.  An American Army serviceman, he brought her to the United States. The week of her departure from London, Queen Elizabeth was crowned.  Doris saw the coronation parade from her workplace in the capitol.  She has made the United States her home since 1953 and at 86 years old is a great grandmother. Doris Edmunds resides in Port St. Lucie.

© 2017 "Hometown Heroes"  Kelly Jadon

In Florida, Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County, Treasure Coast, London Tags WW II, Queen Elizabeth, London, Nazis
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Martin County, Florida

  • May 2025
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    • Apr 11, 2025 The Japanese "I AM JESUS" Apr 11, 2025
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    • Apr 7, 2025 The Berber "Jesus" Apr 7, 2025
    • Apr 4, 2025 The Romanian "I AM" Apr 4, 2025
    • Apr 2, 2025 The Georgian "I AM" Apr 2, 2025
  • March 2025
    • Mar 22, 2025 The Turkish "I AM" Mar 22, 2025
    • Mar 16, 2025 The Kurdish "I AM" Mar 16, 2025
    • Mar 7, 2025 The Farsi "I AM" Mar 7, 2025
  • January 2025
    • Jan 24, 2025 The English "I AM" Jan 24, 2025
    • Jan 11, 2025 The Ge'ez "I AM" Jan 11, 2025
    • Jan 6, 2025 The Coptic "I AM" Jan 6, 2025
    • Jan 6, 2025 The Arabic "I AM" Jan 6, 2025
    • Jan 3, 2025 The Hebrew "I AM" Jan 3, 2025
    • Jan 2, 2025 The Russian "I AM" Jan 2, 2025
  • December 2024
    • Dec 30, 2024 The Ukrainian "I AM" Dec 30, 2024
    • Dec 29, 2024 The Armenian "I AM" Dec 29, 2024
    • Dec 28, 2024 The Macedonian "I AM" Dec 28, 2024
    • Dec 28, 2024 The Greek "I AM" Dec 28, 2024
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