Lois (Burns) Stevens, 91, of Portsmouth, N.H., died peacefully Jan. 20.
She was born in Rockport, to Orra (Meader) and Orris Burns.
“Burnsie” was a widely loved physical therapist and tireless champion in the treatment of polio patients in the State of Maine.
Her many patients have said how she taught them not only how to walk again, but how to hope again. She has inspired countless people, not only patients, to see the best, do their best, and hope for the best.
She led a lifetime of nurturing, helping, and healing, and was a loving, happy soul, prone to peals of ringing laughter.
She graduated from Sargent College with a degree in Physical Education and taught from 1941-1945.
In 1945 she attended Harvard Medical School for the Registered Physical Therapist program and after graduation in 1946, was sent to a Jackson, Miss. polio clinic to work with patients early in the epidemic.
She returned home to Maine in 1947 and became a specialist in the treatment of polio patients at the Hyde Home in Bath. It was there that she would meet her future husband, Arthur Stevens, who was a polio survivor in 1950, and a Navy veteran of WWII.
Lois’s professional career continued at the Regional Memorial Hospital in Brunswick in 1965. She was head of the first physical therapy department until her retirement in 1978. She continued to work another three years as a visiting therapist for the Brunswick-Bath area Community Home and Nursing Services.
She was active in the Pine Tree Society of Maine, and was a Board Member for The Post Polio Support Group of Maine for nearly two decades. She remained a firm proponent of childhood vaccinations in debate on the issue.
She was a life member of the American Physical Therapy Association, and the Order of the Eastern Star, Ocean View Chapter 291 of Camden-Rockport.
Lois was predeceased by her husband, Arthur; and siblings, Orris Burns Jr., Dorothy Kennedy, and Caroline Barrows.
She is survived by her sons, Edward and wife Cathy of North Hampton, N.H., and Ronald and wife Janice, and their two children and grandchildren of Paris; as well as many nieces and nephews, who called her “Sweet Aunt Lois.”
In accordance with her wishes there will be no memorial services. She held the view that people will say goodbye in their own way.
Her final resting place will be next to her husband at Maine Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Mount Vernon Rd., Augusta.
In lieu of flowers, friends are asked to donate to either of the following: Pine Tree Society, P.O. Box 518, Bath, ME 04530, www.pinetreesociety.org, or The Post Polio Support Group of Maine, c/o 674 Hallowell-Litchfield Rd., West Gardiner, ME 04345, www.ppsgm.org.
Arrangements are under the care of Direct Cremation of Maine, 182 Waldo Ave., Belfast.