| Jessica
Hammill Cowling, 31, founder of Internet cookie firm
By
Frederick N. Rasmussen
(Baltimore) Sun Staff
Originally published July 9, 2002
Jessica
Hammill Cowling, who during her two-year struggle with
cancer founded Sleepy Badger Brand, an Internet cookie
company, and helped other cancer sufferers, died of
breast cancer July 4, 2002 at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
She was 31.
Born
in Lynchburg, Va., and raised in Painesville, Ohio,
and Cincinnati, Miss Cowling moved in 1984 with her
family to Federal Hill, then to Rodgers Forge.
She
was a 1988 graduate of the Baltimore School for the
Arts and in 1992 earned a bachelor's degree in history
from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Miss
Cowling had worked as a sales associate at The Bead
in the Rotunda for several years, and was office manager
for Davis Designs when her breast cancer was diagnosed.
After
leaving the Canton graphics company because of failing
health, she established Sleepy Badger Brands in the
kitchen of her Hampden home.
Miss
Cowling's logo featured a badger, and her slogan was:
"Purveyors of yummy snacks." She also specialized in
custom corporate branding, whereby a company could place
its logo on her cookies, which would be used for promotional
purposes.
"Badger
your clients. So the next time you need to reach out
to a key contact, hit them in the stomach with a badger,"
she wrote on her Web site.
She
was known for her triple ginger, citrus almond, chocolate
cherry pecan and chocolate chip macadamia cookies, which
were favorites not only with family and friends, but
customers as well.
"She
got interested in baking when she was in her 20s and
just loved to cook," said her mother, Lark Schulze of
Rodgers Forge.
"Even
though she had been diagnosed with cancer, she kept
planning for the future. She had a wonderful sense of
humor and never abandoned it. When she was in the hospital,
one of the last things she said was, 'This is enough
of this. I've got to go home. I've got cookies to bake,'"
she said.
Miss
Cowling faced her illness with a mixture of courage,
humor and willingness to share her experiences with
others who also were ill with cancer.
Ginny
Schardt, a professor who teaches sports psychology at
Towson University and also has cancer, met Miss Cowling
at the Wellness Community in Towson, a nonprofit group
that provides education and support services to cancer
patients.
"She
was a nice, gentle and appealing person who brought
a great sense of humor and hope," said Dr. Schardt,
who was profiled by The Sun last month.
"She
refused to be defined by her breast cancer. She was
very anxious to help people. She was very proactive
and had so much courage. I was lucky to have known her,
and she really helped me and others through their own
personal battles with cancer," Dr. Schardt said.
Tony
W. Buechner, a retired Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
surveyor and draftsman who lives in the city's Tuscany-Canterbury
section, also met Miss Cowling through the Wellness
Community.
"She
was in our group and the only way to get into our club
is to have cancer. I met her my first week with the
group, and she was one great lady. She was a real joy,"
said Mr. Buechner, who is recovering from prostate cancer
and is a volunteer docent at the B&O Railroad Museum.
"She
was an extremely generous and kind person who was always
very nurturing," said Rebecca H. Berger, a former roommate
and co-worker at The Bead.
"I
just found her inspiring. We all looked to her as an
example and wondered if we would ever be able to comport
ourselves with such grace and selflessness. As she fought
cancer, she tried to find balance in her life. She never
allowed herself to be overcome by depression, anger
or self-pity," she said.
"Her
life was one of playful grace and gentle wit, filled
with friends and the cats she insisted on rescuing and
cajoling her friends to adopt," said her brother, Michael
Cowling of Baltimore.
"The
home she shared with her cherished friend Henry Mitchell
was filled with books, music, laughter and the wonderful
smell of cookies," he said.
A
memorial service will be held in the chapel of the Episcopal
Church of the Redeemer, 5603 N. Charles St., at 4 p.m.
tomorrow.
In
addition to her mother and brother, Miss Cowling is
survived by her father, Samuel Cowling of Painesville;
her paternal grandmother, Adele Cowling of Painesville;
her stepfather, Maurice Rottenberg of Rodgers Forge;
her stepmother, Susan Cowling of Painesville; a half-sister,
Dorigan Cowling of Painesville; and a stepbrother, Gavin
Malcolm of Boston.
Copyright
© 2002, The Baltimore Sun
More photos
Help
Jessica's family and friends fight breast cancer by
visiting the-red-devils.org.

Sleepy Badger Brand is not taking orders at this time.
T-shirts available here.
Contact / Email : henrymitchell@silvercrayon.com
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