IN MEMORIAM: Anne Bookhout, 68;
Founded Ithaca Public Health Agency
ONEONTA – Anne Bookhout, an Oneonta native who, with an Ivy League education and a nursing degree from Hartwick College, launched a county-wide public health agency in Tompkins County, died unexpectedly May 28 at her Brooktondale horse farm. She was 68.
Bookhout was born March 23, 1948, in Oneonta, the fourth child of Judge Richard J. and Florence Fieg Bookhout. She attended Bugbee School and Oneonta public schools, graduating from Oneonta High School in 1966 and from Cornell University in 1970. She worked in various capacities in the healthcare field in Oneonta after receiving a nursing degree from Hartwick College.
In 1984 she returned to Cornell to earn a master’s in healthcare administration. Anne then founded a key city-county public health agency, Visiting Nurse Service of Ithaca and Tompkins County, serving 20 years as chief executive officer.
Having owned and loved horses since the age of 12, she later founded Quickland Stables, a commercial equestrian riding and boarding facility at her residence in the Ithaca suburb of Brooktondale. She operated the business until her death.
Anne is survived by her husband of 25 years, Robert Morgan, whom she assisted in running a commercial trucking fleet.
She is also survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Andrew and Denise Shedlock of Tallahassee, Fla., and their children Madeline and Ryan; a step-daughter and her husband, Janice Morgan-Solano and Nickie Solano of Edmonton, Ont., and their son Kyle. Anne also leaves siblings Kathryn Bookhout Biggerstaff of Delmar, William Bookhout of St. Augustine, Fla., Mary Bookhout Wolcott of St. Augustine, Fla. and Richard Bookhout, Jr. of Troutman, N.C. Surviving nieces and nephews include Jennifer Boggs Murphy and Kathy Boggs Clancy, both of Cooperstown.
She was preceded in death by her parents and a sister, Elizabeth Bookhout Boggs, of Oneonta.
Funeral services were held June 5 at Bangs Funeral Home in Ithaca.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in her memory to the Cornell School of Veterinary Medicine.