
| Name | Pamela Ann “Pam” MANCILL [3, 4] | |
| Birth | 1974 | Germany |
| Gender | Female | |
| HIST | PAMELA M. ROGERS Posted Sunday, May 19, 2019 6:00 am Pamela Ann Mancill Rogers, age 45, beloved wife of 23 years to David Michael Rogers, died on Thursday, May 16, 2019, at Prisma Health Tuomey. Born in Germany, she was the daughter of Gerald Mancill and Donna Turk Mancill. Pamela adored her family and enjoyed spending all the time she could with them. She was a strong believer in her Christian faith and believed all things were possible. She fought her illness to the end. She was a member of the Westminster Presbyterian Church. She will be remembered as a loving, wife, mother, daughter, sister, grandmother, aunt, daughter-in-law, sister-in-law and friend. She will be dearly missed by all who knew her. Surviving in addition to her husband and parents are: two children, Anthony Michael Rogers and his wife, Alyssa, of Fayetteville, North Carolina, and Sarah Christine Rogers of Sumter; one brother, Matthew Todd Mancill and his wife, Diana, of Warner Robins, Georgia; mother-in-law, Page Rogers; father-in-law, David F. Rogers; sister-in-law, Carrie Rogers Murphy and her husband, Stephen, of Waxhaw, North Carolina; one grandchild, Audrey Mae Rogers; and four nephews. A funeral service will be held on Tuesday at noon in the Bullock Funeral Home Chapel. Interment will follow in the Ft. Jackson National Cemetery at 2 p.m. The family will receive friends tomorrow from 6 to 8 p.m. at Bullock Funeral Home. You may go to www.bullockfuneralhome.com and sign the family's guest book. The family has chosen Bullock Funeral Home for the arrangements. Saturday Snapshot: Pamela Rogers - lead nurse for Sumter School District 2 Posted: Saturday, May 15, 2010 6:00 am | Updated: 12:28 am, Sat May 15, 2010. By JADE ANDERSON janderson@theitem.com Pamela Rogers, a registered nurse, is the lead nurse for Sumter School District 2. This is her first year as the lead nurse and her fifth year with the district. The 36-year-old has been a registered nurse for 16 and a half years. She attended Central Carolina Technical College's Sumter campus for her nursing classes. Being lead nurse means Rogers is the clinical supervisor for all the other school nurses in the district. She also works part time at Furman Middle School as a school nurse and is now working on earning her bachelor's in nursing degree from South University. Rogers lives in Sumter with her husband, David, who works for International Paper. They have two children, Sarah, 9, and Anthony, 20. Her son is about to join the Navy. "I like Sumter," Rogers said. "I like the fact it is a small town, but you have access to bigger cities like Columbia." She also likes its proximity to the mountains and the beach. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE THING ABOUT YOUR JOB? "I like helping people. I always liked being a school nurse because the kids make you feel important. Now (being lead nurse) not only do I get to help kids, I get to help nurses help kids. We (often) help children who don't access to good medical care otherwise. We let them know what they are experiencing is normal. We give them affection and attention." WHAT IS ONE THING YOU WISH YOU COULD CHANGE? "I wish more people in (the) Legislature who fund programs and (more people in) the community understood how important having a school nurse in every school is. We're not just giving pats on the head and Band-Aids anymore. So many children with health conditions that used to keep them at home are now in school - children with severe handicaps, diabetes, asthma. They have a right to free, public education like everyone else, and it's the responsibility of the school district to keep them safe. Full-time nurses help these children have better attendance and academic success. Their parents can also feel more confident (about their safety) when sending them to school. We were not meant to be a health care facility, but we've become that. It's more complicated than cleaning up boo-boos." WHAT IS SOMETHING INTERESTING ABOUT THE JOB THAT MOST PEOPLE DON'T KNOW? "Well, one of the most complicated issues is caring for children with diabetes. More and more children are being diagnosed with diabetes, and almost every school (in District 2) has at least one student with diabetes. Most children take their insulin at lunch. You have to find out how many (carbohydrates) the child had at lunch, plug that information into a formula and come up with the right dosage. We also educate the students on a healthy diet and how to care for themselves." WEDNESDAY WAS NATIONAL SCHOOL NURSES DAY. HOW DID YOU CELEBRATE? "Actually, National Nurse Week was May 6 through May 12, and Wednesday of that week is National School Nurses Day. I've had several phone calls (of thanks). I hope the nurses are getting recognition in the schools. I've got cards for the monthly meeting (Wednesday afternoon). It's mostly a normal day with an extra smile as people tell you they appreciate what you do." DO YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO ADD? "I thought we were very successful with our H1N1 flu vaccine clinics in all the schools between November 2009 and January 2010. We coordinated with the (Department of Health and Environmental Control). The elementary schools had two because children 9 and under had to have two shots. We vaccinated about a third of the population at each school. Since then, there (have) been no more outbreaks in the schools. We report any child that is sent home with flu-like symptoms to DHEC." Posted in News, Local news on Saturday, May 15, 2010 [1, 3] | |
| HIST | PAMELA M. ROGERS Posted Sunday, May 19, 2019 6:00 am Pamela Ann Mancill Rogers, age 45, beloved wife of 23 years to David Michael Rogers, died on Thursday, May 16, 2019, at Prisma Health Tuomey. Born in Germany, she was the daughter of Gerald Mancill and Donna Turk Mancill. Pamela adored her family and enjoyed spending all the time she could with them. She was a strong believer in her Christian faith and believed all things were possible. She fought her illness to the end. She was a member of the Westminster Presbyterian Church. She will be remembered as a loving, wife, mother, daughter, sister, grandmother, aunt, daughter-in-law, sister-in-law and friend. She will be dearly missed by all who knew her. Surviving in addition to her husband and parents are: two children, Anthony Michael Rogers and his wife, Alyssa, of Fayetteville, North Carolina, and Sarah Christine Rogers of Sumter; one brother, Matthew Todd Mancill and his wife, Diana, of Warner Robins, Georgia; mother-in-law, Page Rogers; father-in-law, David F. Rogers; sister-in-law, Carrie Rogers Murphy and her husband, Stephen, of Waxhaw, North Carolina; one grandchild, Audrey Mae Rogers; and four nephews. A funeral service will be held on Tuesday at noon in the Bullock Funeral Home Chapel. Interment will follow in the Ft. Jackson National Cemetery at 2 p.m. The family will receive friends tomorrow from 6 to 8 p.m. at Bullock Funeral Home. You may go to www.bullockfuneralhome.com and sign the family's guest book. The family has chosen Bullock Funeral Home for the arrangements. Saturday Snapshot: Pamela Rogers - lead nurse for Sumter School District 2 Posted: Saturday, May 15, 2010 6:00 am | Updated: 12:28 am, Sat May 15, 2010. By JADE ANDERSON janderson@theitem.com Pamela Rogers, a registered nurse, is the lead nurse for Sumter School District 2. This is her first year as the lead nurse and her fifth year with the district. The 36-year-old has been a registered nurse for 16 and a half years. She attended Central Carolina Technical College's Sumter campus for her nursing classes. Being lead nurse means Rogers is the clinical supervisor for all the other school nurses in the district. She also works part time at Furman Middle School as a school nurse and is now working on earning her bachelor's in nursing degree from South University. Rogers lives in Sumter with her husband, David, who works for International Paper. They have two children, Sarah, 9, and Anthony, 20. Her son is about to join the Navy. "I like Sumter," Rogers said. "I like the fact it is a small town, but you have access to bigger cities like Columbia." She also likes its proximity to the mountains and the beach. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE THING ABOUT YOUR JOB? "I like helping people. I always liked being a school nurse because the kids make you feel important. Now (being lead nurse) not only do I get to help kids, I get to help nurses help kids. We (often) help children who don't access to good medical care otherwise. We let them know what they are experiencing is normal. We give them affection and attention." WHAT IS ONE THING YOU WISH YOU COULD CHANGE? "I wish more people in (the) Legislature who fund programs and (more people in) the community understood how important having a school nurse in every school is. We're not just giving pats on the head and Band-Aids anymore. So many children with health conditions that used to keep them at home are now in school - children with severe handicaps, diabetes, asthma. They have a right to free, public education like everyone else, and it's the responsibility of the school district to keep them safe. Full-time nurses help these children have better attendance and academic success. Their parents can also feel more confident (about their safety) when sending them to school. We were not meant to be a health care facility, but we've become that. It's more complicated than cleaning up boo-boos." WHAT IS SOMETHING INTERESTING ABOUT THE JOB THAT MOST PEOPLE DON'T KNOW? "Well, one of the most complicated issues is caring for children with diabetes. More and more children are being diagnosed with diabetes, and almost every school (in District 2) has at least one student with diabetes. Most children take their insulin at lunch. You have to find out how many (carbohydrates) the child had at lunch, plug that information into a formula and come up with the right dosage. We also educate the students on a healthy diet and how to care for themselves." WEDNESDAY WAS NATIONAL SCHOOL NURSES DAY. HOW DID YOU CELEBRATE? "Actually, National Nurse Week was May 6 through May 12, and Wednesday of that week is National School Nurses Day. I've had several phone calls (of thanks). I hope the nurses are getting recognition in the schools. I've got cards for the monthly meeting (Wednesday afternoon). It's mostly a normal day with an extra smile as people tell you they appreciate what you do." DO YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO ADD? "I thought we were very successful with our H1N1 flu vaccine clinics in all the schools between November 2009 and January 2010. We coordinated with the (Department of Health and Environmental Control). The elementary schools had two because children 9 and under had to have two shots. We vaccinated about a third of the population at each school. Since then, there (have) been no more outbreaks in the schools. We report any child that is sent home with flu-like symptoms to DHEC." Posted in News, Local news on Saturday, May 15, 2010 | |
| Occupation | a registered nurse, she is the lead nurse for Sumter School District 2 [3] | |
| Occupation | a registered nurse, she is the lead nurse for Sumter School District 2 [3] | |
| _UID | 71599927BB4242288930506DE6CF26F53715 | |
| _UID | 71599927BB4242288930506DE6CF26F53715 | |
| Death | 16 May 2019 | Prisma Health Tuomey Hospital, Sumter, Sumter County, South Carolina |
| Burial | 21 May 2019 | Ft. Jackson National Cemetery, Ft. Jackson, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina [1] |
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| Person ID | I255131 | Singleton and Related Families |
| Last Modified | 13 Jul 2023 | |
| Father | Gerald MANCILL, Jr. | |
| Mother | Donna TURK | |
| _UID | 6B8C1717472E4CEB9327541EAF9D2FA21AA4 | |
| _UID | 6B8C1717472E4CEB9327541EAF9D2FA21AA4 | |
| Family ID | F178278 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Family | David Michael ROGERS | |||||
| _UID | 17B294D517564F14A5732C7D6EA65383ADF0 | |||||
| _UID | 17B294D517564F14A5732C7D6EA65383ADF0 | |||||
| Children |
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| Family ID | F172060 | Group Sheet | Family Chart | ||||
| Last Modified | 23 Mar 2026 | |||||
| Sources |