Joan Hammerly Tjossem

Dec. 26, 2021

Joan Hammerly Tjossem passed away on December 26th, 2021, in hospice care at Wesley Village in Indianola, Iowa.  She had celebrated her 100th birthday in June in the company of many of her extended family members gathered at the family church near the Hammerly farm north of Newton, Iowa.

Joan Eloise Hammerly was born on June 25th, 1921, the eldest child of Lawrence Watt Hammerly and Lucille Scott Hammerly.  She attended local public schools, graduating from Newton High School in 1939.  After a year working on the family dairy farm and doing photographic work for Tyler Studios in Newton, she enrolled at Webster City Junior College in the fall of 1940.  She transferred to William Penn College in the fall of 1941.  It was there that she met Wilmer LuVerne Tjossem, whom she married on Christmas Day in 1943.  Her husband was assigned in that same year to work in various mental hospitals in fulfillment of his obligation to Civilian Public Service (CPS) as a Quaker conscientious objector, and Joan accompanied him to a state hospital in Medical Lake, Washington.   She returned to Newton in 1945 to give birth to her first son, Norman.  After WW II, Wilmer returned to complete his undergraduate education at William Penn in Oskaloosa, Iowa, where their second son, Bradley, was born in 1949.

Wilmer was hired to manage fundraising and finance for the American Friends Service Committee’s North Central Regional Office in Des Moines.  The family resided in nearby Ankeny and, later, in Des Moines until 1964 when they moved to a new assignment for the AFSC in Denver, Colorado.  Wilmer was transferred to the national headquarters of the AFSC in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1968.  Joan was hired by the AFSC to do secretarial and clerical work until their retirement in 1985.  Joan was a member of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), joining Des Moines Valley Friends Meeting, attending Mountain View Friends Meeting in Denver, and, later, Media Friends Meeting in Pennsylvania.  They rejoined the Des Moines Valley Meeting upon their return to Iowa in 1985 following retirement.  After several years residing in Newton, Joan and Wilmer moved to the Wesley Village life care community in Indianola.

Classical music was always at the heart of the Hammerly family and Joan became an accomplished cellist, frequently performing with the family ensemble at public and private events in the Jasper County area.  Joan was a meticulous and skilled archivist, dedicating many years to extensively researching family trees and preserving documents and photographs.  She traveled widely in Europe, Latin America, and China.

Joan is predeceased by her husband, three sisters, and one brother. She is survived by her two sons, two grandchildren, and one great grandchild.