PLAINS, Ga. >> Her frail husband a silent witness, Rosalynn Carter was celebrated by her family and closest friends Wednesday in the same tiny town where she and Jimmy Carter were born, forever their home base as they climbed to the White House and traveled the world for humanitarian causes.

The former first lady, who died Nov. 19 at the age of 96, had her intimate funeral at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, where she and her husband spent decades welcoming guests and where a wooden cross Jimmy Carter fashioned in his woodshop is displayed. Earlier tributes were held in nearby Americus and in Atlanta.

The former president, now 99 and in hospice care, sat in a wheelchair next to Maranatha’s front pew, wearing a dark suit and tie to say goodbye to his wife of 77 years.

Maranatha Pastor Tony Lowden said Rosalynn Carter “served every nation around the world” because she embraced the teachings of Jesus Christ and “took it outside the walls” of the church.

“She would say to you today, ‘Don’t grieve for me, for now I’m free,’” Lowden said, continuing in Rosalynn’s voice as he described her competitive nature and her belief in salvation and an afterlife. “‘Jimmy tried to beat me here. I got here first. I won the prize. Tell him I beat him and I’m waiting on him.’”

“But,” Lowden continued, “she would say ‘don’t stop — there’s too many homeless people in the world. There’s still too many people who don’t have equal rights.’ ... She would tell you don’t stop. Become that virtuous woman. And men, if you’re listening, make room for the virtuous woman.”

The Carter family later accompanied her casket to the burial plot she’ll one day share with her husband, who also attended a Tuesday memorial where two other presidents and all the living first ladies joined the extended Carter family before Wednesday’s hometown funeral.

Vernita Sampson, a school bus driver and Plains native, drove a group of area high school students, all wearing Future Farmer of America jackets, to downtown Plains, where hundreds of people soaked up the history of the day and paid tribute to the former first lady along the motorcade route.

“They were people you could relate to, not this high standard where they were up here and, you know, we’re all down there,” said Sampson, 58. “We never get used to death, no matter who we are or how long you have lived. But knowing that her suffering is no longer and to celebrate that she did live a long life, a very happy and productive life, that gives you joy.”

The mourning came with affectionate stories of her life and plenty of laughter. “It occurs to me that dad got used to mom disagreeing with him because she was really good at it,” son Jack Carter said. “And she became a partner in the true sense of the word, where they had equal footing.” Many family members, including the former president, wore leis to celebrate how much Rosalynn Carter loved living in Hawaii during the couple’s Navy years and learning to hula dance while her husband was stationed there.

Jimmy Carter met his future wife only a few days after his mother delivered her.

Coming from that town of about 600 — then and now — Rosalynn Carter changed lives across America and the developing world, mourners were told at her services this week. Jimmy Carter’s closest political adviser and a political force in her own right, she advocated for better mental health care and underappreciated caregivers in millions of U.S. households.

Traveling overseas, she fought disease, famine and the abuse of women and girls.

Even so, she never stopped being the small-town Southerner whose cooking repertoire leaned heavily on mayonnaise and pimento cheese, Jason Carter said as he told endearing stories about his grandmother.

The tributes covered the range of Rosalynn Carter’s life. Events in Atlanta reflected her grandest chapters. Mourners viewed her casket at her husband’s presidential library.