Lucille Shazier

A century of wisdom shaped through faith, endurance, and grace.

Two ladies smiling and sitting together on the porch

Lucille Shazier lived to be more than 100 years old. She was born before the Panama Canal was completed, before automobiles filled the roads, before electricity reached every home. Her life stretched across two world wars, the Great Depression, the rise of modern America, and more change than most of us could imagine. Yet through every season, Lucille carried herself with a quiet strength that only comes from a lifetime of shaping.

She was part of a generation that knew hardship firsthand — not as a story in a book, but as daily life. She learned resilience in the years when families pulled together to survive. She learned gratitude in the seasons when blessings were small but deeply cherished. And she learned faith in the moments when God’s provision was the only explanation for how things worked out.

Lucille’s shaping didn’t come from one dramatic event. It came from a century of living — from raising a family, serving her community, loving her church, and walking faithfully with God through every chapter. Her wisdom was not loud or demanding; it was gentle, steady, and earned through experience.

When you sat with Lucille, you weren’t just talking to someone who had lived a long life. You were talking to someone who had seen God’s hand across generations. Her presence reminded you that the quarry shaping process doesn’t stop at youth or middle age — it continues as long as breath remains.

Lucille Shazier’s story is a testament to endurance, faithfulness, and the beauty of a life shaped slowly, intentionally, and lovingly by God over more than a century.

Lucille’s century of shaping — and the wisdom she carried — is shared more deeply inside Shaped in Life’s Quarry. Her story is unforgettable.