Wiganers turn out in numbers to bid farewell to a much-loved shop worker, 74
Joan Carter wasn’t a millionaire businesswoman or high profile politician who brought about major community changes. But she was beloved by many for the smiles she put on people’s faces.
A retail assistant at Standish Co-op on Pole Street for three decades, the 74-year-old grandmother was one of the most familiar faces in the village.
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Hide AdWhat better measure of her popularity than the fact that two books of condolence, put out at the store after she died, were completely filled with staff and customer tributes?
And an estimated 330 people squeezed into the church for her funeral on Monday.
Former colleagues lined up outside her workplace and applauded as the hearse bearing Joan’s body slowly passed by and paused before they accompanied it on foot to nearby St Wilfrid’s.
The service was followed by committal at Charnock Richard crematorium.
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Hide AdLiverpool-born Joan, who came to live in Standish when she married Richard Carter 55 years ago, also leaves children Andrew and Linda, and grandchildren Ashley and Oliver.
She had still been working at the Co-op three days a week up until a few weeks ago but died in late April from the pancreatic cancer with which she had only been diagnosed a fortnight earlier.
For tributes see this week's Wigan Observer.