News

After Nearly 60 Years of Marriage, This Missouri Couple Stayed Together to the End

This story also ran on St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It can be republished for free.

Arthur Kelley could barely raise his voice above a whisper last fall when he told a nursing assistant he never wanted his wife, Maggie, to be alone. After almost 60 years of marriage, five children and a lifetime filled with more victories than defeat, Kelley wanted to be there for his ailing wife, even if she didn’t know he was there.

He got to be there for her. But like so many other people who have died of covid-19, he died without his family.

Dementia had stripped Maggie Kelley of her memory, so her family had moved her into a nursing home in 2015. Arthur, who had received care for Parkinson’s disease at home, moved to the same facility in the St. Louis suburbs two years later to be closer to Maggie.

“It was a literal choice to go be there with Mom,” said their youngest son, Kevin Kelley. “He really desired to be there.”

Their parents shared meals, watched television and slept in the same room for three years. They were separated only once, when Maggie, 81, contracted an asymptomatic case of covid early in August.

“He protected her like Superman protects Lois Lane,” said their oldest daughter, Lisa Kelley-Tate. “That’s how he was with her.”

Arthur, 80, would often ask when he could see his wife again.

“He wanted to make sure he didn’t pass before she did,” Kelley-Tate said a staffer at the nursing home told her. “It was his job to make sure he was there for her. Maybe he knew then that his time wasn’t going to be long.”

Maggie finished her quarantine and they reunited. But only briefly. She died of complications of dementia on Nov. 2.

That afternoon, Arthur held her hand as long as he could. When Kelley-Tate arrived, he was still holding on, so she took her mother’s other hand. She carefully painted Maggie’s nails red, her favorite color. But Arthur still wanted more time with Maggie.

“It took a while before he had me call the mortician to come pick her up,” Kelley-Tate recalled. “He said, ‘I want her here with me just a little longer.’”

Maggie and Arthur grew up together in Coffeeville, Mississippi, a small town about 90 miles south of Memphis, Tennessee. Maggie was the daughter of a teacher and a farmer. Arthur helped his family run its dry-cleaning business. He also learned to play the piano well enough to perform in juke joints and churches.

Their relationship bloomed in high school. Arthur took Maggie to the prom before they headed off to college. Maggie attended two historically Black colleges in Mississippi: what’s now known as Alcorn State University in Lorman and Rust College in Holly Springs. Arthur left the South for the Midwest, where he attended Southern Illinois University in Carbondale.

After their wedding on June 3, 1961, in Coffeeville — Maggie walked down the aisle in a lace dress with a sweetheart neckline; Arthur wore a white jacket and a wide grin — the couple decided to put down roots in St. Louis. Their lives revolved around the children they soon had, church and music. Maggie taught elementary school and took care of the children while Arthur studied speech pathology.

“They would always talk about how they would work together,” said their youngest daughter, Gina Kelley. “They worked as a team.”

Arthur became the pastor of Greater Faith Missionary Baptist Church in 1977. He juggled life as a speech pathologist and minister, their children said. Maggie, who at this point was home raising the kids full time, established a routine for them that included prayer time, gospel music and home-cooked meals, including her beloved “Heath bar cake.”

Arthur and Maggie Kelley stayed dedicated to each other, in good times and bad. One of their toughest moments was the death of their 3-year-old son, Arthur Jr.

In their final years, both struggled with their health, but they never complained about their conditions. They leaned on their faith instead as he pushed through the challenges caused by Parkinson’s disease while her dementia progressed.

“At times, I said if my father had my mom’s body and my mom had my father’s brain we would be all good,” their son Kyle Kelley said.

After Maggie died, Arthur helped his children make funeral arrangements for her. He picked out her casket, and then he selected one for himself. Two of his children lifted him out of a chair so he could see the inside.

“He said, ‘I like that,’” Kelley-Tate recalled. “I said, ‘OK, we’ll keep that in mind,’ not thinking it would happen 30 days later.”

He too had contracted covid, one of the more than half-million nursing home residents nationwide to catch the contagious virus. Arthur wanted to attend his wife’s service, so his family decided to hold off on the funeral until he got better.

He never recovered. Exactly one month after Maggie’s death, he died in the covid ward of a nearby hospital. No family was allowed to be with him. A nurse called Kelley-Tate by video after he died.

But the family came together for what was now a double funeral with the caskets close to each other — the mauve one Arthur had picked for Maggie and the mahogany casket he had picked for himself.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

Syndicated from https://khn.org/news/article/after-nearly-60-years-of-marriage-this-missouri-couple-stayed-together-to-the-end/

New Jobs
Here's What's Getting Coders Hired in 2026 - YouTube Uncovr Raises $7 Million in Seed Funding from Index Ventures to Build the System of ... Changes at Springfield-based health system affect 53 employees 1 in 12 medical billing companies just vanished - KevinMD.com Photos: Ozarks Lunkers fall to Memphis in nail-biter - Springfield Daily Citizen AI won't kill work but entry-level jobs may get scarce—here's how India should address it Driver arrested after deadly crash on I-44 in Springfield AI is making your medical bills higher, not lower, PwC report shows | Fortune Automation impacts 53 jobs at CoxHealth - Springfield Daily Citizen I've been unemployed since March…..yesterday I started my first coding job! - YouTube Huge Fraud in the Name of Medical Coding in Nandyal | TV5 News - YouTube Fake Jobs Scam in The Name Of Medical Coding At Nandyal District | Sakshi TV - YouTube Medical Coding Specialist (Dual Posted with Job ID 59698) - Chronicle of Higher Educat... Lawsuit: Man was framed by childhood friend, charged by CMPD, then fired - Charlotte Observer Today is Medical Coder Day: The importance of medical coding - The Hans India Nurse.org's 2026 Beyond the Bedside Poll: 500+ Nurses Left the Bedside—But Not Nursing Remote Medical Billing and Coding Roles Are Booming in 2026 - MSN 20 remote jobs that don't require a degree revealed — and the pay is surprisingly good There are sterile processing jobs you can get without certification - YouTube AI-Driven Layoffs In Healthcare: Navigating Legal Risks and Operational Challenges Jobs You Can Train for in Under a Year That Pay Well - Cheapism This “Hidden” $50K Healthcare Role Has Massive Demand #shorts - YouTube If you want to land your first job medical device sales without a degree or previous experien... I'm a Nurse Who Can't Find a Job, so I Became a Realtor. Here's Why It Makes Sense Minnesota West Medical Coding Specialist Program earns national PCAP approval How Nagaharini Yakkaluru, CPC-A, Is Gaining Real-World Coding Experience Through Project Xter... Standard AI is a Black Box. Here is Why RAAPID Built a Glass One for Risk Adjustment. 40 best remote jobs to boost your income and fit your schedule - MSN Part-Time Adjunct Instructor - Medical Billing and Coding Specialist Program St. Mary's Law master's degree provides legal foundation AI Didn't Fix HCC Coding—It Made It Harder; This is How to Fix It | Healthcare IT Today 20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor's Degree PeopleShores taps Missouri health care talent for new medical billing and coding roles Corti's new Symphony AI beats OpenAI and Anthropic on medical coding - TNW INLEXZO™ (gemcitabine intravesical system) Assigned Permanent Billing Code, Supporting ... Corti Ships Symphony for Medical Coding with more than 25% Accuracy Edge Over OpenAI ... San Jacinto College opens fast-track pathways to high-demand allied health careers How Amazon Connect Health brings agentic AI to the point of care | AWS for Industries A Nurse Worked 17 Hours—What Happened When She Got Home Is Going Viral Clash of insurers, providers takes us into the weeds of the hospital bill - The Boston Globe The 2026 guide to St. Louis health care training and education services 8 careers that can land you best remote jobs - Vanguard News Mayor Chess: 'Welcome to the neighborhood, Cornerstone Medical Training' Your Health Deploys Fathom Autonomous Medical Coding Platform Across All Service Lines UPMC, Microsoft invest in AI medical coding startup - Becker's Hospital Review Healthcare careers in months, not years - Times Republican Pickaway-Ross student's BPA win leads to national competition - Chillicothe Gazette Microsoft Launches Copilot Health 'Hub' to Access and Interpret All Users' Health Data HIMSS26: Innovaccer Launches Flow Capture to Bring Autonomous AI to Medical Coding Innovaccer Launches Flow Capture, Bringing Autonomous Coding to the Frontlines of ... - WFXG