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Vera D. Doroski

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Riverhead resident Vera D. Doroski, formerly of Cutchogue, died July 28, 2022, at her home. She was 89.

Born July 16, 1933, in Greenport, she was the daughter of Martin and Veronica (Danowski) Doroski. She was a Southold High School graduate.

Ms. Doroski worked as supervisor of operations at Hazeltine in Riverhead and as a teller at Suffolk County National Bank in Cutchogue.

She was a member of the Red Hat Society, the Marian Council Columbiettes and Our Lady of Ostrabrama R.C. Church, and a past member of the Cutchogue Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary.

She enjoyed crafts, golf, traveling, making stained glass, reading and gardening.

She is survived by her nieces and nephews Toni Ann Sinning of Southold, Walter Doroski Jr. of Centereach, Cynthia Corbett of Georgia and Deanna Kirby of Shoreham; and great-nieces and -nephews Sarah Sinning, Nicole Sinning, Jack Sinning, Matthew Kirby, Thomas Kirby and John Corbett.

The family will receive visitors Tuesday, Aug. 2, from 4 to 8 p.m. at Coster-Heppner Funeral Home, 336 Marcy Ave., Riverhead. A funeral service will take place at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 3, at Our Lady of Ostrabrama R.C. Church in Cutchogue.

Memorial donations may be made to East End Hospice.

This is a paid notice.

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Dorothea Adriatico

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Dorothea Adriatico, 68, of Glens Falls, N.Y., passed away Monday, July 25, 2022, at Glens Falls Hospital, with loved ones by her side.

Born Nov. 5, 1953, in Greenport, N.Y., she was the daughter of Arthur and Dorothea (Carter) Pollock Sr.

Dorothea graduated from Greenport High School. She went on to earn her associate degree to become a licensed practical nurse from nursing school.

She worked at Eastern Long Island Hospital in Greenport as an LPN; Plum Island Animal Disease Center as a security guard; Greenport High School as the head lunch lady; and as a self-employed housekeeper.

Dorothea was also a member of the Greenport Rescue Squad as an emergency medical technician.

Some of her enjoyments in life were spending time with her granddaughters, cooking, baking, crafting, painting, reading and entertaining her cats.

In addition to her parents, Dorothea was predeceased by her sister Hilda. 

Those left to cherish her memory are her children, Joel Goldsmith, Chris Adriatico and Stephanie Adriatico; granddaughters, Anya and Norah Schaffer; sisters Regina Shedrick, Coey Pullumino and Roberta Pollock; brother Arthur Pollock Jr.; and her cats, Minga, Xavier and Boogah. 

An intimate service for family and friends will be held at the convenience of the family. For more details and to RSVP, please email the family at TheAdriaticos@gmail.com. 

The family wishes to extend a sincere thank-you to Penny Adriatico, Karen Caproud and Gina Shedrick.

Condolences may be sent directly to Baker Funeral Home, 11 Lafayette St., Queensbury, NY 12804, or through bakerfuneralhome.com.

This is a paid notice.

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Virginia Cochran Rusch

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Virginia Cochran Rusch, wife of the late John B. Rusch, died May 23, 2022, in New York City. 

She and her late husband enjoyed spending time in their second home on the North Fork, where they made many friends.

Gina joined the Peace Corps as one of its first volunteers, serving three years in the Philippines. She then worked tirelessly for underserved communities in Manhattan, notably Union Settlement Association, where she eventually rose to associate executive director and later member of the board. 

An avid history enthusiast, Gina read voraciously, traveled fearlessly and inspired others with her curiosity, openness and generosity. 

She is survived by her stepson, Derek Rusch of Oakland, Calif., and her sisters, Rita Klug of Hancock, N.H., and Nannette Braucher of Newton, Mass. 

Plans for a memorial service have yet to be determined. Contributions in her name can be made to Union Settlement, 237 East 104th St., New York, NY 10029.

This is a paid notice.

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Jeanne Patricia Marriner

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Jeanne Patricia Marriner, sailor/navigator, PR maven and savior of the Peconic Bays, as well as a beloved daughter, wife, mother, grandmother and friend, passed peacefully, surrounded by her family, on July 1, 2022. She was 93 years old.

Jeanne was born on Feb. 23, 1929, in Flushing, N.Y., the only child of Adler William Wentzel and Jeanne Mathis Wentzel. Her childhood was spent wintering in Flushing and summering in Southampton.

When she was 15, she met her true love and future sailing skipper, Philip Richard Marriner, at a high school dance. They enjoyed a whirlwind courtship until Phil was called up to the Naval Air Force in April 1945. 

Jeanne graduated from Flushing High School with high honors (“Jeanne, Jeanne, with her eyes so blue and her IQ of 152”) and then matriculated at Queens College, where she majored in English literature/creative writing and joined Phi Sigma Sorority. After college, Jeanne was hired at Time Inc. Life Magazine as an editorial trainee. At the end of her first year, the fashion department, impressed with her writing and style, asked her to join them. 

Jeanne married Phil on June 11, 1949, at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Flushing. The reception was at the Bayside Yacht Club.

While Phil was finishing his B.A. and MBA at Hofstra University, Jeanne commenced work there as the assistant to the dean of students. 

Jeanne and Phil made their home first in Westbury (where daughter Gayle was born) and then Centerport (where son Blake was born), up the hill from Centerport Yacht Club, their home away from home where they successfully raced Comets, Stars and Thistles up and down the Eastern Seaboard, and started the Penguin Frostbite Fleet. 

In 1963, Jeanne and Phil purchased their first summer home at the mouth of Deep Hole Creek in Mattituck and joined Mattituck Yacht Club and Old Cove Yacht Club, where many of Phil’s summer childhood friends raced and their children learned to sail. Jeanne became rear commodore of Mattituck Yacht Club and totally revised the Junior Sailing Program, gearing it toward FUN, seamanship and competitive racing, with a team racing component for the advanced junior sailors that had them traveling to, meeting and competing with yacht club junior sailors throughout Long Island. Jeanne and Phil were also the regatta chairmen for the Mattituck Yacht Club-hosted 1968 North American Multi Hull Championships and Little America’s Cup, the 1972 Comet Internationals and the 1974 Penguin Internationals.

A career move of Phil’s initiated a geographic move in 1965 to Woodstock, Conn., on Roseland Lake, where Jeanne and Phil taught their children, used to the predictable, steady sou’westers of the Peconics, the patience needed for the fluky wind shifts of lake sailing and, once the lake froze over in the winter, figure skating and ice hockey. 

When Phil was asked to manage Hard Sails, a sail-making loft headquartered on Long Island, Jeanne took over Hard Sails’ public relations efforts, coordinating with their advertising agency to create a strategic marketing plan that had a great impact on sales and profits, making Hard Sails one of the top sail lofts internationally. During the early ’70s, Jeanne was also editor of the newsletters “Hard Times” and the “Penguin Patter”; was a reporter and feature writer for The Suffolk Times/News-Review; and was a freelance writer for such publications as Soundings, Sail magazine and Long Island Boating. 

Jeanne also acted as one of the intervenors at the LILCO hearings for the proposed Jamesport nuclear plant, assisting to effectively nip it in the bud with her questioning regarding wind-borne radiation. With her sailor’s knowledge of the local winds, and with documentation from well-known yachting consultants, this was the perfect first melding of Jeanne’s love of sailing and of the North Fork environment. During this period, the family wintered in an 1860s sea captain’s house in Laurel and made the five-mile move to the Deep Hole Creek cottage for the summers until they purchased their Salt Lake Village house at the mouth of James Creek in Mattituck. 

At that time Phil bought a Ranger 23 to initiate his family into the world of the MORC (Midget Ocean Racing Circuit) and named her “FUN.” Jeanne, always an equal partner in their one-design racing, refused to be relegated to the galley, thus, over the winter, taught herself navigation and became a top-notch navigator during FUN’s super-successful years on the ocean racing circuit. And it was FUN, racing, and winning, together as a family.

In the mid-’70s to the mid-’80s, Phil’s career moved them to first Guilford, Conn., and then Wellesley, Mass. Jeanne attended Boston University for public relations and met Edward Bernays, the “father of public relations,” who became her mentor. In 1980, Jeanne won the New England Hospital Public Relations Association top award for her work as director of corporate communications at Charles River Hospital and Community Care Systems. Jeanne then moved on to Boston University Medical Center as part of their contract services to community hospitals. During that time Jeanne developed Glover Hospital’s corporate image with a comprehensive marketing/development/public relations program and helped Dr. Timothy Johnson of ABC-TV develop his medical television program.

In the mid-’80s, Phil retired to the Salt Lake Village summer home in Mattituck, after being invited to consult for a French textile firm in Lyon, where he and Jeanne were feted and then went on their own tour of France. Upon their return, Jeanne took on the mantle of president of the Riverhead-Southold League of Women Voters from 1985 to 1987, when she worked closely with the town boards “to gather information and set priorities on ways to ensure the economic and environmental vitality of the North Fork in the future” at a time of greatly increased debate in Southold Town on environmental issues such as the master plan. In 1985 Jeanne was appointed by the Southold Town Board to the Conservation Advisory Council. Jeanne was also active in the successful drive to pass the 1986 $1.15 billion Environmental Quality Bond Act.

The brown tide struck Jeanne’s beloved Peconic Bays in 1985. Phil now acted as Jeanne’s support system in her successful all-consuming efforts to save the bays. Utilizing all of her public relations, marketing and strategic planning skills, Jeanne started a grassroots effort that had Suffolk County appointing a Brown Tide Task Force to help determine a course of action to preserve the bays. Jeanne was appointed to the Citizens Advisory Committee and was asked to draw up a marketing plan which consisted of special events and conferences, publications/videos, a speakers’ bureau, a lobbying corps and a timetable of actions. To help with raising public concern and funding for the bay, Jeanne founded a not-for-profit, Save the Peconic Bays. The aims of STPB included massive public outreach and getting the Peconic Bay estuarine system U.S. Environmental Protection Agency designation as part of the National Estuary Program, which would bring millions of dollars’ worth of funding for developing, and implementing, a Comprehensive Conservation Management Plan for the bays. In 1992, after years of hard work, the Peconic Bays were designated the 18th estuary in the National Estuary Program! 

In 1989 Jeanne was named Civic Person of the Year by The Suffolk Times for her efforts to save the bays. And in 1991, as part of a group of concerned citizens that organized the North Fork Planning Conference, she and 12 others were named The Suffolk Times 1991 Persons of the Year. In 1993 Jeanne retired.

In 1999 Jeanne and Phil celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary at their home on the bay. In 2003, Phil felt the urge to revisit his childhood country home upstate and he and Jeanne moved up to North Chatham and spent 10 years re-exploring the majesty of upstate New York and forming many new friendships. Jeanne’s project up there was “Books & Blooms,” the annual fundraiser for the local library. At the end of 2013, these two made Phil’s final move to West Haven, Conn., to be closer to their children. Phil passed away in May 2017, leaving Jeanne heartbroken. In January 2019 she moved back down to her much-loved North Fork and lived next door to her daughter, Gayle, on Laurel Lake in Mattituck for three-and-a-half years until she suddenly passed away on July 1.

Jeanne is survived by her daughter, Gayle Marriner-Smith, and son-in-law, Christopher Field Smith of Mattituck, N.Y.; her son, Blake Richard Marriner, and daughter-in-law, Diane Milazzo Marriner of West Haven, Conn.; her grandsons, Eric and Gregory Marriner, and granddaughter-in-law, Maria Marriner; and her fox terrier, Lyra.

A celebration of Jeanne Marriner’s life will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 3, at the Mattituck home of Gayle Marriner-Smith and Chris Smith. 

Donations in Jeanne’s name may be made to Cornell Cooperative Extension of Suffolk County Marine Program’s Scallop Project or the Church of the Redeemer memorial garden in Mattituck.

This is a paid notice.

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Ruth Ann Mosback Bramson

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Ruth Ann Bramson, 79, passed away in her home surrounded by her family.

Raised in Oceanside, Ruth Ann attended Long Island schools where her father served as the principal of Oceanside High School for more than 30 years. She left Long Island for college in Iowa and graduated from Grinnell College with a B.A. She went on to receive an M.P.A. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and ultimately received a Ph.D. in public administration. 

Ruth Ann’s professional career started with teaching high school in various locales in the U.S. and Japan –— teaching both history and government. In the early 1970s she settled in Florida with her young family and became interested in driving change in her community. The League of Women Voters of Florida elected her state president. The National Democratic Party appointed her the Florida state director of the Mondale-Ferraro presidential campaign in 1984.

Ruth Ann worked as the deputy county administrator of Hillsborough County , Fla., (Tampa) for several years. She was appointed by the Florida Supreme Court as the first non-attorney ever named to the Board of Governors of the Florida Bar. 

After moving to Boston in 1992, Ruth Ann returned to teaching and taught graduate students in the Sawyer School of Management at Suffolk University atop Beacon Hill, where she lived for 30 years.

Ruth Ann raised three children, who survive her, along with seven grandchildren. Her family owned a vacation property on the eastern end of the North Fork of Long Island in East Marion. She spent virtually every summer of her life on this East Marion property and made many friends over the years, including neighbors and families who rented homes on her family’s property. Her love of East Marion and the East Marion life led to her authoring two books: a history of Plum Island (“A World Unto Itself: The Remarkable History of Plum Island, New York”) and “Charles Henry Miller, N.A., Painter of Long Island,” about the “artistic discoverer of Long Island,” the painter Charles Henry Miller, Ruth Ann’s great-grandfather and the first family member to live on her family’s property in East Marion. 

Ruth Ann was one of the co-founders of the East Marion Community Association, served as its first president, and was engaged in the activities of the organization until her death. She was one of the leaders in establishing the Main Road in East Marion as a New York State Historic District. In addition, she served as president of the Oysterponds Historical Society for several years.

Her gregarious personality and willingness to work to improve the community around her led to her involvement in various activities over her life and made her many friends around the country. Until her death she communicated with close friends from Florida, New Hampshire, New York and Massachusetts, and constantly enjoyed exchanging ideas for projects. Her family and friends will miss her dearly.

A memorial visitation for family and friends will be held Saturday, Aug. 27, from 10 a.m. to noon at Horton-Mathie Funeral Home, Greenport, followed by burial of the urn at East Marion Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family kindly request donations be made in Ruth Ann’s name to the Peconic Land Trust, East End Hospice or the League of Women Voters.

This is a paid notice.

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Gregory G. Hallock

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Gregory G. Hallock passed away on Sunday, Aug. 7, 2022, in his Southold home surrounded by his loving family. 

Born in Greenport on March 18, 1949, he graduated from Greenport High School in 1967 and was later employed by Robert T. Cooper Inc., a seafood product preparation and packaging plant. He then worked at Plum Island Animal Disease Center; for the Shelter Island School District; and he retired from Eastern Suffolk BOCES. 

Greg was predeceased by his parents, Jean (Mulhall) and Caryl Hallock. He is survived by his sister, Caryl Jarres (William). He is also survived by his wife of 53 years, Christie (née Klipp); his three daughters, Lynne Webster (Kevin), Kim Hallock and Sara Schelin (Scott); and his loving grandchildren, Jonathan, Rachael, Emily, Nora and Margo. Greg will also be missed by his faithful dog Henry.

A private graveside memorial service will be held at a later date. 

Memorial donations may be made to East End Hospice.

Horton-Mathie Funeral Home in Greenport is assisting the family.

This is a paid notice.

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Ann Mowdy

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Ann Mowdy of Jamesport died Aug. 8, 2022. She was 85.

The family will receive visitors Thursday, Aug. 11, from 3 to 7 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck.

The Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Friday, Aug. 12, at Our Lady of Good Counsel R.C. Church in Mattituck, with Monsignor Joseph Staudt officiating.

Interment will follow at Calverton National Cemetery.

Memorial donations may be made be made to East End Hospice. 

This is a paid notice.

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Robert J. Wheeler III

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Robert J. Wheeler III of Aquebogue, N.Y., passed away on July 10, 2022, after a courageous battle with cancer. He was 44 years old. 

Robert was born on Jan. 8, 1978, in Southampton, N.Y., to Robert J. Wheeler Jr. and Linda J. (Darnell) Wheeler. He was one of two children. He was raised in Southold, N.Y. He graduated from Southold High School in 1996 and then served in the U.S. Navy in the Mediterranean Sea from 1997 to 1999. He then moved to Oregon to be with his mother after his service. 

Robert was a jack-of-all-trades and worked in several different occupations on the North Fork and in Oregon. 

He was predeceased by his parents and is survived by his son, Aidan Wheeler, who was the light of his life and his biggest joy; his brother, James C. Wheeler; and many other cherished family members and treasured friends from his service, Oregon and Long Island. 

A memorial service to celebrate Robert’s life will be held Saturday, Aug. 20, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Veterans Memorial Park in Mattituck. Interment will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 24, at Calverton National Cemetery. 

Memorial donations can be made to the Go2 Foundation for Lung Cancer or East End Hospice Kanas Center for Hospice Care.

This is a paid notice.

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Jean Ann Carpenter

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Jean Ann Carpenter of Southold passed away suddenly on July 27, 2022, at the age of 38. 

Born in 1984 to Lynne B. Carpenter and Patrick L. Carpenter in Plainview, N.Y., Jean grew up in Babylon Village and moved to Southold in 2000.

Jean had a heart of gold and would do anything for anyone, especially the ones she loved. Her strength and resilience were unmatched and her family was her world. Nothing brought more joy to her life than the blessings that are her children, William and Alisa. A best friend to both her mother and brother, and the glue that held the family together. 

Predeceased by her father, Patrick, and her brother John, Jean is survived by her loving mother, Lynne; brother Patrick; her children, William and Alisa; and many friends and family members who loved her immensely. 

A celebration of life will be held at a later date at her favorite place, the beach. 

Memorial donations can be made in Jean’s name to North Fork Animal Welfare League or East End Hospice.

DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Southold is serving the family.

This is a paid notice.

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Rita Marie Schrader

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Rita Marie Schrader of Mattituck died Aug. 4, 2022, at her home. She was 89.

The family received visitors Aug. 7 at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck. The Liturgy of Christian Burial was celebrated Aug. 8 at Our Lady of Good Counsel R.C. Church in Mattituck, with Monsignor Joseph Staudt officiating. Interment followed at Holy Cross R.C. Cemetery in Brooklyn.

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Louise Waskewicz

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Riverhead resident Louise Waskewicz died Aug. 12, 2022. She was 98.

She was born Aug. 25, 1923, in Peconic to Stanley and Barbara (Yatiello) Krupski.

A graduate of Southold High School, she worked as house manager at Little Flower Children’s Services.

A member of the Polish Hall Ladies Auxiliary, she enjoyed cooking and reading and loved planning parties.

Predeceased by her husband, Walter, in 1997, she is survived by her son, Walter (Yvonne) of Commack; her grandchildren, Kathryn and Walter, and her great-grandchildren, Calvin and Christiana.

The family will receive visitors Tuesday, Aug. 16, from 2 to 4 p.m. at McLaughlin Heppner Funeral Home in Riverhead. A funeral Mass will take place Wednesday, Aug. 17, at 10 a.m. at St. Isidore R.C. Church in Riverhead. Interment will be at Sacred Heart Cemetery.

Memorial donations may be made to Little Flower Children’s Services.

This is a paid notice.

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Philip James Montgomery Sr.

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Philip James Montgomery Sr. of Mattituck died Aug. 13, 2022, in Huntington. He was 91.

The family will receive visitors Tuesday, Aug. 16, from 7 to 9 p.m. and Wednesday, Aug. 17, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck.

The Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated Thursday, Aug. 18, at 11 a.m. at Our Lady of Ostrabrama R.C. Church in Cutchogue. Interment will follow at Sacred Heart R.C. Cemetery.

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Arthur F. Siemerling

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Mattituck resident Arthur F. Siemerling died Aug. 9, 2022. He was 76.

Arthur was born on Nov. 4, 1945, in Greenport, to Dorothy (née Schiller) and Fred Siemerling. He was one of two children. After high school, he joined the U.S. Army for 18 months. He worked for Plum Island for 20-plus years and owned his own heating business as well.

Predeceased by his wife, Susan Jacobs Siemerling, and his sister, Marie Davis, Arthur is survived by his niece, Kim Ulmet; nephew, Mark Davis; step-daughter, Janet Jacobs Jackowski and her husband, Michael; and step-granddaughter, Maya Jackowski.

The family has chosen to remember Arthur’s life privately at this time.

DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck is serving the family.

This is a paid notice.

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William Watson Esseks

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William Watson Esseks of Aquebogue died on Aug. 15, 2022, at 88 years old. Bill was a lawyer in Riverhead for 54 years.

Bill and his wife, Dorothy Clark Esseks, who passed in 2017, moved to Riverhead in 1959, when Bill started practicing law here and Dorothy began teaching in the Riverhead public schools.

Bill was born in Englewood, N.J., and grew up in Tenafly, N.J., and New Rochelle, N.Y. His father was a lawyer in the United States Department of Justice and in private practice in New York City. His mother raised Bill and his three siblings. Bill’s family spent summers in Center Moriches, where he was first introduced to the wonders of the East End, which became the center of his personal and professional life. 

Bill attended New Rochelle High School and then Oberlin College, where he met Dorothy. He majored in government and spent a college semester at American University in Washington, D.C. Bill graduated from New York University School of Law in 1959. 

That same year, Bill joined the Griffing, Smith & Tasker law firm, practicing in Riverhead and Greenport. In 1965, he joined the firm Tooker Tooker & Esseks in Riverhead, and was a senior member of that firm (now Esseks, Hefter, Angel, DiTalia & Pasca) for 48 years until his retirement in 2013. Bill specialized in land use planning issues, representing individuals and businesses as well as local governments in controversies over real estate development, mostly in the five East End towns. He represented his clients in many fora, from zoning boards and town boards to the highest courts in the state and nation. He argued seven cases before New York’s highest court, winning six. 

Bill was an avid reader and devoted himself early on to the cause of public libraries, serving on the board of Riverhead Free Library and chairing the library’s building committee for the construction of its first building. He was also on the board of the Suffolk County Cooperative Library System and active in the American Library Association. He was a champion of public funding of and public access to books and knowledge. 

Bill was a dedicated runner for many years, completing innumerable 5K and 10K races locally as well as several half marathons. He also loved to sail and spend time on the water and often remarked that it made no sense to travel in the summer when this was the prettiest place in the world. Bill and Dorothy were also avid dancers, whirling each other across dance floors all around the world on their travels. 

Bill is survived by daughter Katherine; son James and his husband, Rob Ornstein; son David and his wife, Katy Stokes; grandchildren William and Eloise Esseks; and brother John Dixon Esseks and his wife, Molly Esseks, of Lincoln, Neb. 

Donations in Bill’s memory can be made to the Friends of Riverhead Free Library. 

A memorial service will be held this fall. For more information, please call Katy Stokes at 917-733-4037.

This is a paid notice.

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Anne T. Nolan

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Anne T. Nolan of Southold died Aug. 14, 2022. She was 83.

The family will receive visitors Thursday, Aug. 18, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck.

The Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated Friday, Aug. 19, at 10 a.m. at Our Lady of Good Counsel R.C. Church in Mattituck. Interment will follow at Sacred Heart R.C. Cemetery in Cutchogue.

Memorial donations may be made to the children’s lunch program at St. Joseph’s Parish in Colón, Panama. Make donations payable to Congregation of the Mission, 500 East Chelten Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19144.

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David F. Klenawicus

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David F. Klenawicus, 1956-2022, Shelter Island firefighter with 50 years of service, devoted husband and exceptional father.

This is a paid notice.

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Vincenza P. Kislow

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Vincenza P. Kislow, 91, passed away after a brief illness on Aug. 9, 2022, in Gallatin, Tenn. 

She was born in Elizabeth, N.J., on June 2, 1931, and married Henry M. Kislow Sr. of Cutchogue. They were longtime residents of Fleets Neck, Cutchogue, where they raised their family. 

She was predeceased by her husband, Henry, in 2019 and son-in-law Robert B. Dawson. She is survived by a sister, Mary (Sal) Angelo of New Jersey, and a brother, Michael Moscaritolo (Barbara) of Ocala, Fla.; her children, Paula Dawson of Gallatin,Tenn., Henry Kislow of Hermitage, Tenn., and Carla Haynes (Patrick) of Hartsville, Tenn.; eight grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. 

Burial will take place at the Nashville Veterans Cemetery.

This is a paid notice.

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Dolores Elise Angevine

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Greenport resident Dolores Elise Angevine died Aug. 13, 2022, at San Simeon by the Sound Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation in Greenport. She was 93.

She was born July 10, 1929, in Philadelphia to Harry Miller and Minnie Eckstein.

On Aug. 2, 1947, she married Joseph F. Angevine Jr. in Brooklyn.

Ms. Angevine enjoyed playing bingo, shopping, sewing and playing the lottery, and was a first-place winner in the Triangle Yacht Club’s dart league.

Predeceased by her husband in 2004 and her son Richard Paul Angevine in 2020, she is survived by her children Joseph (Ellen) Angevine and David (Donna) Angevine, both of Greenport, and Patricia (Dave) Angevine-Rackett of Homosassa, Fla.; her siblings, Marge Daniels and Harry Miller; eight grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren.

The family will receive visitors Wednesday, Aug. 17, from 3 to 7 p.m. at Horton-Mathie Funeral Home in Greenport. A funeral service will take place at 11:45 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 18, at the funeral home. Burial will follow at St. Agnes R.C. Cemetery.

Memorial donations may be made to Greenport Fire Department Rescue Squad and San Simeon by the Sound.

This is a paid notice.

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Anna Engelhardt

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Anna Engelhardt of Middle Island joined us for this life on Sept. 23, 1929, and left this life on Aug,8, 2022 after 92 long and memorable years, all of them spent on her beloved Long Island. Anna was born to John and Anna Dankievitch (née Pendzick), a former tunnel construction worker (or sandhog) in New York City, and a nurse, respectively. Prior to Anna’s birth, the couple moved from New York City to an 11acre farmstead in Yaphank that Anna would call home until she made her own.

Born the first of a family of three boys and one girl, Anna spent the better part of her early life working with her family on the farmstead, and helping raise her three younger brothers. She briefly spent time working as a secretary in New York City for a steamship company headquartered on State Street in Lower Manhattan. 

Following her stint in Manhattan, she longed for the familiar comfort of Yaphank, and returned to take a job with the United States Postal Service in her hometown, where she would eventually meet her future husband, Robert Engelhardt. What may have started as a simple trip for stamps grew into a romance and eventually marriage between Anna and Bob, and they would eventually settle in Middle Island. Anna and Bob raised two daughters, Nancy Kreppein (née Engelhardt) and Susan Brigham (née Engelhardt).

After raising her babies, Anna would take a job at the newly formed Longwood School District as a school secretary, where she was one of the first employees of the district. She would go on to serve through the early 1990s.

Throughout her life, Anna enjoyed making crafts and both attending and being a vendor at yard sales and larger community sales. Anna was a fixture at these local sales, bringing with her an eclectic collection of costume jewelry and antiques that struck many a bargain hunter’s fancy. Anna was also a member of Old Town Arts and Crafts Guild in Cutchogue, which recently recognized her length of membership and service to the Guild with free honorary membership. 

Anna was predeceased by her mother, Anna B. Dankievitch (2009); husband, Robert Engelhardt (1995); and daughter Nancy Kreppein (2015); and also her brothers Robert J. Dankievitch (2015) and John Dankievitch (2014). She is survived by her daughter, Susan Brigham; grandson Peter M. Kreppein; and brother Edward Dankievitch.

Anna’s unique crafts, words of wisdom, and love for her family and friends will be missed by all who knew her. The family received visitors Aug. 11, at McLaughlin-Heppner Funeral Home in Riverhead. Cremation was private. The family wholeheartedly appreciates any offers of flowers, but kindly requests donations in lieu, which can be sent to East End Hospice or Kent Animal Shelter.

This is a paid notice.

The post Anna Engelhardt appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Robert J. (Bobby) Bergen

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Robert J. (Bobby) Bergen passed away on Wednesday, Aug. 3, in Orlando, Fla. He was 47 years old.

He was the son of Eileen Bergen Talbot and the late Dale Bergen. He is survived by his mother, his aunt Connie Bergen, his aunt Patricia Kivlin and her husband, Dave, and his uncle Michael Ragan and his wife, Louise. He was predeceased by his father, his brother Jason, his grandparents Helen and Robert Bergen, Margaret and Tim Ragan, his stepfather Jack Talbot and his uncle Don Bergen.

Bobby attended Sacred Heart School in Cutchogue and Mattituck Middle School and High School. Growing up in Mattituck, he loved boating and could be seen in the summer slicing up the bay on skis or making “roosters” with his boat “Stretch.” He enjoyed tennis and soccer but mostly spending time with family and friends. 

A mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at Our Lady of Good Counsel R.C. Church in Mattituck Friday, Aug. 26, at 10 a.m., followed by interment at New Bethany Cemetery in Mattituck. 

Memorial donations may be made to the North Fork Animal Welfare League (northforkanimalwelfareleague.org).

Coster-Heppner Funeral Home is assisting the family.

This is a paid notice.

The post Robert J. (Bobby) Bergen appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

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