Theodora “Tippy” Bach was born at home in Solders Grove, a
small village in rural Wisconsin on October 16, 1918. Being a
second generation immigrant, she spoke Norwegian the first six
years of her life. An honors student throughout, she worked her
way through LaCrosse state teaching college, where she met her
husband of 68 years, Jacob Bach, in the school’s theater
company. She married Jake in 1942 and then suffered through
the horror of WWII, not knowing if her husband would return. She
was one of the “Rosie the Riveters” who did her part for the war
effort while her husband flew patrols in the Pacific Theater.
In 1951, Tippy and Jake moved to Carbondale, Illinois where she
continued to raised her family. She was active in the Garden
Club and served as a life-long member of the Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority. In 1961, she earned a Master’s degree in Speech
Pathology from SIU-C. She then commuted to three different
grade schools, assisting children with speech defects as a district
wide Speech Pathologist. In 1964 she took a job a high school
English teacher and as a coach for the speech and debate teams.
When Tippy retired, she and her husband literally traveled the
world from the Far East to the entire European continent.
Tippy lived to the ripe old age of 100 years, six months, and two
days.