Sophie Rubeti
Sophie Rubeti was a young girl whose bequest built the Rubeti Lodge, a home for Indian girls in Highland, Kansas.
Early life
Rubeti was born c.1843 to a Sac and Fox mother and a father of French-Canadian descent. Her father was set to become a Catholic priest but instead decided to move west with the Indians and work for the American Fur Company. Sophies mother and father died in the summer of 1851 when she was around 8 years old. Sophie and her two younger sisters were brought to the Iowa and Sac & Fox Mission. The oldest two sisters walked to the mission on foot with the youngest being carried by a missionary. Sophie quickly adhered to the Christian faith being taught to her at the mission by Samuel M. Irvin and was quite devout until her death. Her health started to decline sometime after 1855 until her confirmed diagnosis of Consumption (disease) that would eventually take her in 1861.Death
On her death bed she spoke extensively about her fate to those who were attending to her in her final moments including her sisters."...I am done with the world; I am ready to go... I am going very soon, and I want all to be quiet and the room to be still and no one to cry or make a noise, that I may go quietly away and be at rest."
In her final moments fighting against death, she spoke of band playing from the village even after being told that no such event was happening.
"Is not the village band playing this evening?... I hear delightful music... it is delightful, listen... I have now lost the use of one of my hands but if I could use it, I would raise it and clap both my hands for joy."
in her last breath she spoke of Jesus coming to raise her up from the earth and then laid lifeless on the bed after the remark.
"Jesus is coming--they are coming--raise me up."
It seems that Sophie knew of her demise far before the actual event by verses found in her bible cover that she had written before she bed ridden.
"Worlds should not bribe me back to tread
Again Life's weary waste
To see again my days o'erspread
With all the gloomy past.
"My home henceforth is in the skies,
Earth, sea, and sun adieu
All heaven unfolded to my eyes,
I have no sight for you."