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Tyler John McDonald

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Tyler John McDonald

Tyler John McDonald

Tyler John McDonald of Greenport died Jan. 1. He was 21. 

The son of Thomas McDonald and Toni Lee Mokus, he was born Aug. 26, 1995, at Stony Brook University Hospital.

Mr. McDonald worked as a plumber on Shelter Island.

Family members said he enjoyed living life with his dog, Rocco and skateboarding.

Mr. McDonald is survived by his mom, Toni Lee Mokus of Summerville, S.C.; his father, Thomas, of Cottageville, S.C. and his siblings, James “JR” Meehan of Summerville, T.J, of Summerville and Jennifer, of Cottageville.

The family will receive visitors Friday, Jan. 6, from 3 to 7 p.m. at Horton-Mathie Funeral Home in Greenport. Cremation will be private.

Memorial donations may be made to Southold American Legion Post 803, P.O. Box 591, Southold, NY 11971.

 

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Helen C. Price

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Former longtime Greenport and Southold resident Helen C. Price died Jan. 3 in Jupiter, Fla. She was 92. 

The daughter of Helen (Olson) and Clifford Crafts. she was born Dec. 19, 1924, in Plainfield, N.J.

Ms. Price attended Friends Academy, Bryn Mawr College and the University of Pennsylvania Dental School. She ran a dental practice in Greenport and retired in 1979.

On June 19, 1950, she married William Price Sr. in Greenport.

Ms. Price was a Girl Scout leader; a member of the American Association of University Women, Shakespeare Club, the Minnepaug Club and North Fork Country Club; a volunteer for Family Service League and Community Action Southold Town and a Sunday School teacher.

Family members said she enjoyed art, golf and traveling abroad.

Predeceased by her brother, Clifford Jr. in 2000, Ms. Price is survived by her husband, Bill Sr., of Jupiter, Fla., son, Bill Jr., of Greenport, daughters Judy Hamm of Sundance, Wyo. and Sue Anderson of Southold and five grandchildren.

The family will receive visitors Friday, Jan. 13, from 4 to 7 p.m. at Horton-Mathie Funeral Home in Greenport. A funeral service will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church in Greenport, officiated by the Rev. Garret Johnson. Interment will be private.

Memorial donations may be made to CAST or First Universalist Church of Southold.

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Kathrine Buckley Farr

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Kate Buckley, Sailor, Musician, Aunt Extraordinaire.

Kathrine “Kate” Buckley Farr, a longtime resident of Greenport, died Jan. 7, 2017, at San Simeon by the Sound in Greenport. 

Born in Brooklyn on May 15, 1942, Kate was a Renaissance woman.  She was the youngest of nine children of John “Jay” Buckley and Kathrine Behan “Mimi” Buckley, respectively second and first generation Americans of Irish ancestry. Kate was extraordinarily gifted musically, playing three instruments, her favorite of which was the piano. Kate took up sailing at a young age, keeping up with her siblings when the family spent summers in Southold.

After graduating from Manhattanville College, with a degree in music, Kate lived and worked in Manhattan. She began her career at the Columbia Records division of CBS, initially promoting classical musicians and then moving to promoting rock musicians.  Her nieces and nephews vividly recall getting early copies of Big Brother and the Holding Company, an early release of Janis Joplin’s and The Early Beatles album.  Two nieces will never forget Kate taking them to David Bowie’s performance at Carnegie Hall during the Ziggy Stardust Tour in 1972, as guests of Columbia Records.

Kate continued to spend every free moment in Southold, sailing her Pearson on the local bays. During an emergency trip from New York City to the North Fork to secure her sailboat as a hurricane advanced towards the East End, Kate realized that her first love was sailing and began to hatch a plan to move to the East End. The plan came to fruition when Kate, who had married William Farr, a longtime colleague from Columbia Records, started Fairwind Yachts, a sailboat charter business in Greenport, which they successfully ran for many years.

Kate was an intelligent, talented, exuberant woman with an extraordinary commitment to and love for her immediate and extended family. There was always room for any and all family members on her sailboats; she provided summer jobs and housing for nieces and nephews at Fairwind Yachts; she was an avid participant in local sailing races and played ferociously competitive Monopoly games with two generations of nieces and nephews. She was handy with all manner of tools and could fix anything—an outboard motor, a broken chair, her VW beetle.  She found life way too much fun to fuss or stew about any inconvenience.  While her family sorely misses her, she is now at peace.

Kate’s family extends thanks, gratitude and appreciation to all of the staff at San Simeon by the Sound for the wonderful care Kate received during her stay.

Kate is survived by her sisters, Jane Steinbugler and Frances Little Soule and dozens of nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews.  She was predeceased by her siblings Mary Elizabeth Buckley, Father John Buckley, Mercedes Buckley Waples, Clifford Buckley, James “Jimmy” Buckley, and Anne Buckley Riley.

The Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at St. Patrick’s R.C. Church in Southold. Interment will follow at the church cemetery.

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

This is a paid notice. 

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David Owen Averette Sr.

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David Owen Averette Sr. of Southold died suddenly at his home Jan. 5, 2017. He was 80.

He was born in Southold June 10, 1936, to Mildred (Kolymago) and Owen Witt Averette and was a graduate of Southold High School.

Dave initially worked with his father at Averette’s Gas Station in Southold before embarking on a career of 32 years as a mechanic with Grumman in Calverton.

In his free time, he enjoyed crossword puzzles. Family members said he was a real handyman and very mechanically inclined.

Predeceased by his wife of 44 years, Patricia (née Brooks), on June 6, 1999, he is survived by four children and their spouses: Doreen Fitzpatrick (Dan) of Georgia, David O. Averette Jr. (Stacy) of Iowa, Duane Averette (Allison) of New Hampshire and Drew Averette (Karen) of Southold; a brother, Swanson Averette of Hawaii; nine grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.

Services will be private. DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home is assisting the family.

Memorial donations in Dave’s name may be sent to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

This is a paid notice.

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Stephen Weeks Mowry III

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Stephen Weeks Mowry III

Stephen Weeks Mowry III

Stephen Weeks Mowry III, 24, died unexpectedly Jan. 6, 2017, at his parents’ home in Kingsport, Tenn.

Stephen was born and raised in Kingsport. He was a kindhearted young man who genuinely cared for his family and friends. His hobbies included swimming and photography. He was a 2010 graduate of Dobyns-Bennett High School, where he was a member of the swim team.

Stephen attended the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, graduating in 2015 with a Bachelor of Science degree in aerospace engineering. He was employed as an engineer with Peerless Blowers in Hot Springs, N.C.

Stephen was baptized and was a member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Kingsport.

He was the beloved son of Steve and Eileen Mowry. “We love you to the stars and back.”

Left to cherish his memory along with his parents are his godmother, Carol Taggart of Southold; his godfather, Bill Mowry of Charlotte, N.C.; along with his uncles, John, Bill and Billy; his aunts, Tricia and Carol; his cousins, Richard, Matthew, Peter, Eva, Diana and Gracie; his special cousins, Mary Jean Conlon and Warren Mowry; and many lifelong friends from Kingsport.

Proverbs 3:5, “Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.”

The family will receive visitors Friday, Jan. 13, from 5 to 7 p.m. at Oak Hill Funeral & Cremation Services in Kingsport. A private family funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Kingsport, the Rev. W. Steve White officiating.

The family requests memorials in Stephen’s honor be made to the Haven of Mercy Ministries, P.O. Box 5490, Johnson City, TN 37602.

The care of Stephen Weeks Mowry III and his family has been entrusted to the staff of Oak Hill Funeral & Cremation Services.

This is a paid notice. 

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Winifred Caprise Cannon

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Winifred Caprise Cannon of Newtown, Conn., formerly of Orient, died Jan. 8, 2017 at Masonicare in Newtown. She was 91.

The Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, at St. Agnes R.C. Church in Greenport. Interment will follow at the Orient Central Cemetery.

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

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White’s Hardware owner remembered as Greenport’s go-to guy

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Bob White

In the 50 years he owned and operated White’s Hardware in Greenport, Sundays were Bob White’s only day off. And although he worked Monday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., it wasn’t uncommon for Mr. White’s home telephone to ring on a Sunday when someone, in the middle of painting their living room, inevitably found their supplies running low.

Such scenarios were never a problem for Mr. White, who would open his Main Street shop without hesitation so that a neighbor in need could grab a gallon of lacquer.

“That’s just how he was and that’s why people remember him and respect him,” said his daughter, Marilyn Corwin.

Mr. White, who was known as Greenport’s go-to guy for anything and everything, died at home Dec. 28 after suffering complications from congestive heart failure, Ms. Corwin said. He was 90.

The Greenport native was born March 2, 1926, at his family’s home on South Street and joined the U.S. Army in 1944. His service during World War II took him to Germany and Italy and he fought in the Battle of the Bulge.

Soon after returning to Greenport in 1946, Mr. White took over his father, Washington’s, hardware store, which had opened in the early 1930s. There, he continued to sell gloves and nets to fishermen who made their way to the harbor, sometimes astounding customers with his inventory.

“You could be looking for the most minute, crazy thing and he’d say, ‘Hold on a minute, I think I have one of those upstairs’ — and then he’d walk upstairs and he’d come down with it,” Ms. Corwin recalled. “People were amazed because he had so many different, unusual things. He was always wanting to help people out, especially if they were in a mess.”

Mr. White’s help extended to Greenport newcomers looking to establish their own businesses. Young strangers would visit the store, his daughter said, asking if he’d extend a line of credit to help get them started. Her father always did so with nothing more than a handshake.

“My father believed in a gentleman’s agreement and he stood by it,” she said, adding that everyone he assisted was faithful about paying him back.

Mr. White’s civic-mindedness reached well beyond the walls of the hardware store, which changed owners in 1990. The shop was listed for sale in 2014 and is now closed.

“He was a pillar of Greenport,” said Greenport Mayor George Hubbard, who noted the numerous groups and village committees Mr. White belonged to. He once served as a Greenport Village trustee and was a past board president of Floyd Memorial Library and a member of the Greenport chapter of the American Legion.

Possessing a wealth of knowledge about all things Greenport, Mr. White was also treasurer of Stirling Historical Society for around 35 years. He could answer any question about anyone or anything, Ms. Corwin said, including who grew up in what house and when local churches were founded.

“He had the most amazing memory,” she said. “He was one of the last ones who could really tell you what is the actual fact, not the made-up fact.”

In 1990, Mr. White became a founding member of the Railroad Museum of Long Island in Greenport, going on to offer his carpentry skills and knowledge of paint to the “Tuesday crew” who worked to restore a wooden 1927 Long Island Rail Road caboose. He and his wife, Lillian, who died in 2014, were both active in the museum and created a lasting legacy there, said the organization’s president, Don Fisher.

The couple was particularly interested in the history of railroads in Greenport and the theory that the village was the inspiration behind the founding of the Long Island Rail Road, Mr. Fisher said. He and other founding members made sure the former LIRR freight house the organization calls home didn’t go to waste.

“Bob really, essentially, saved a very important part of Long Island history,” Mr. Fisher said.

Early last month, the Greenport Fire Department threw a party to celebrate Mr. White’s 70th year as a member. He served as chief for three years in the 1950s and drove the department’s Relief Hose Co. truck well into his 80s — something his grandson and namesake, Bob Corwin, now handles. He never stopped attending meetings and was active with the department’s scholarship committee, Ms. Corwin said.

“He gave back to the community 100 percent and now his grandchildren are doing the same thing,” said Greenport native James Glew, a family friend who attributes his career in the professional fire service to encouragement and a reference from the Whites.

Fellow members looked up to Mr. White, said Greenport Fire Chief Wayne Miller.

“He was a great guy to have around the firehouse,” he said. “He had a lot of knowledge for the firefighters, young and old. Everybody respected Bob. He was a good man.”

In addition to being Greenport’s “go-to guy,” Mr. White’s daughter said, he was always there for his family. He could do anything, she said, whether it was providing financial advice, fixing a plumbing problem or solving car troubles.

“I have to say he was a family man first and foremost,” she said. “I have two brothers and he was always there for the three of us. We couldn’t have asked for a better father, I’ll tell you that.”

In addition to his daughter, Ms. Corwin, Ms. White is survived by his sons, Robert White Jr. of Hayes, Va., and David White of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., along with five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

kzegers@timesreview.com

File photo: Mr. White in 2012 when he was honored  for 65 years of continuous service to the Greenport Fire Department. (Credit: Katharine Schroeder)

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Richard V. Hurley

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Richard V. Hurley of Cutchogue died Jan. 10 at his home. He was 84. 

A memorial visitation will take place Sunday, Jan. 15, from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Coster-Heppner Funeral Home in Cutchogue. Cremation was private. Interment will take place at 11 a.m. Monday, Jan. 16, at Calverton National Cemetery.

A complete obituary will follow.

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Richard A. Grigonis

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Richard A. Grigonis of Greenport, formerly of Southold, died at his home  Jan. 12. He was 79.

The family will receive visitors Friday, Jan. 20, from 4 to 7 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Southold. The Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 21, at St. Patrick R.C. Church in Southold. Interment with U.S. Marine Corps honors will follow at the church cemetery.

Memorial donations to East End Hospice or Southold Fire Department would be appreciated.

A complete obituary will follow.

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Vera Barker Cowan

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Vera Barker Cowan

Vera Barker Cowan

Former Southold resident Vera Barker Cowan passed away unexpectedly Jan. 4, 2017, at the age of 92.

Born June 13, 1924, in Long Beach, Calif., to John and Esther Barker, she grew up with her brother, Herbert John Barker. She graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in 1942 and attended Long Beach Junior College. Vera worked at Douglas Aircraft, building C-47s and B-17s during the war effort while attending classes at night. She married Keith Morris Cowan, an air transport pilot in the Army Air Corps Oct. 5, 1944, at First Presbyterian Church of Long Beach.

Vera and Keith eventually moved to Maryland, where Keith earned his Doctor of Science degree at Johns Hopkins University. In their lifetime together, they lived in Connecticut, Africa, New York, Turkey and eventually retired to the San Diego, Calif., area in 1981. In July 2001 they moved to Scotts Valley, Calif., where Keith died in December of that year.

Vera is survived by her son Richard, and his wife, Micah, of Soquel, Calif., her son Jack and his partner, Belinda, of Nyack, N.Y., and her daughter, Marilyn, of Medway, Mass., as well as three grandchildren, Ian, Ben and Jenna.

Vera was gregarious, loved life and lived it to the fullest every day. She was active in many local community organizations wherever she lived, and was especially proud of her success in raising funds for Friends of the Temecula Libraries.

In her younger years, Vera played tennis and golf, and was lucky enough to have made a hole-in-one, to the chagrin of her golf-enthusiast husband. She was a world traveler and loved to entertain. Cooking, gardening and sewing were some of her favorite activities. She was a film lover and avid reader. Nothing delighted Vera more than hearing and telling jokes, and she did not shy away from bawdy humor. She maintained lifelong friendships, being a diligent correspondent.

Keith called her a “late bloomer” as she finally earned her Bachelor of Arts with honors in education from Long Island University in 1969, at the age of 45, earning her certification for teaching grades K-12.

In her later years Vera enjoyed living at Valley Heights in Watsonville, Calif., with her loving dog, Casey. There she continued making new friends, tending her plants and playing card games, Scrabble and Dominoes. She was keen on art, joined a writing group, wrote a life-history journal and regularly wrote letters to the editor of the Santa Cruz Sentinel.

Vera wanted loved ones to remember her with joy. “The Wind Beneath My Wings” was a favorite song. No sad songs for her. She lived an extraordinary life, enjoying a loving marriage and raising three children, of whom she was very proud.

In lieu of flowers, please donate to your local hospice.

If you would like to offer condolences to Vera’s family, share your memories and light a candle in her honor, please visit scmemorial.com.

This is a paid notice. 

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Lillie Mae Johnson

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Former Greenport resident Lillie Mae Johnson of Coram died Jan. 16 at the age of 100.

Wake services will take place on Sunday, Jan. 22from 4 to 7 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Southold. Homegoing services will be held at 11 a.m. Monday, Jan. 23, at Shiloh Baptist Church in Southold. Interment will follow at the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Southold.

A complete obituary will follow.

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Ethel Kehrbaum

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Former Mattituck resident Ethel Kehrbaum of Weeki Wachee, Fla. died Jan. 13 in Spring Hill, Fla. at the age of 90.

The family will receive visitors Sunday, Jan. 22, from 2 to 6 p.m. at  DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck, where funeral services will take place at 5 p.m., officiated by the Rev. George Summers of Advent Lutheran Church in Mattituck. Interment will take place at 11 a.m. Monday, Jan. 23, at Calverton National Cemetery and the funeral procession will leave the funeral home at 10:30 a.m.

A complete obituary will follow.

 

 

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Jeanne R. Schlachter

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Jeanne R. Schlachter of Southold died at her home Jan. 15, 2017. She was 86.

She was born in Huntington Oct. 3, 1930, to Edward and Emma Reddy.

After her marriage to Harry E. Schlachter, they resided in Northport before moving to the North Fork in the early 1960s.

For many years, Jeanne was the attendance lady at Southold schools. In her free time, she enjoyed traveling, cross stitch, reading and crossword puzzles.

Surviving are her husband, Harry, her son, Greg, and daughter-in-law, Denise, all of Southold, and many friends.

The family would like to thank Chris Adipietro, Pam Abele and East End Hospice for the loving care given to Jeanne.

The family will receive visitors Wednesday, Jan. 18,  from 3 to 7 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Southold, where religious services will be held at 6 p.m., officiated by the Rev. Dr. Peter J. Kelley.

Memorial donations to Southold Fire Department or East End Hospice would be appreciated.

This is a paid notice. 

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Paul A. Gancarz

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Paul A. Gancarz of Cutchogue died at his home Jan. 17. He was 90.

The family will receive visitors Saturday, Jan. 21, from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Southold. The Liturgy of Christian Burial follow at 1 p.m. Jan. 21, at Our Lady of Ostrabrama R.C. Church in Cutchogue. Interment will take place at Sacred Heart R.C. Cemetery in Cutchogue.

Memorial donations to East End Hospice would be appreciated.

A complete obituary will follow.

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Joan R. Schwab

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Joan R. Schwab of Mattituck, formerly of Levittown, died Jan. 19, 2017. She was 84.

The family will receive friends on Tuesday, Jan. 24, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home in Mattituck, where funeral services will take place at 8 p.m. Interment will take place on Wednesday, Jan. 25, at Oakwood Cemetery in Bay Shore. The funeral procession will be leaving the funeral home at 10 a.m.

A complete obituary will follow.

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Doris A. Lindley

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Doris A. Lindley of Southold died Jan. 5, 2017, at San Simeon by the Sound in Greenport on at the age of 93.

She was born July 13, 1923, in York, Pa. to Selma (Miller) and John Eades.

Educated in York, she attended Katharine Gibbs Secretarial School. For 10 years, she was a church secretary at Levittown Community Church. She was also a homemaker.

A resident of the North Fork since 1984, she lived in Founders Village until 2001. Prior to that she lived in Levittown for 28 years.

Doris was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Southold.

Predeceased by her husband Howard M. Lindley Feb. 27, 1997, whom she married May 14, 1955, in Dover, N.J.,  she is survived by a daughter, Carol M. Lindley (Rory C. Klinge) of Greenport and a granddaughter, Emma S. Klinge.

A memorial service will be held at a future date.

DeFriest-Grattan Funeral Home is assisting the family.

 

This is a paid notice. 

 

 

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Jacqueline Christie Hennelly

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Jacqueline Christie Hennelly, gifted teacher and tireless volunteer, died Jan. 19, 2017, at Winthrop University Hospital in Garden City. She was a resident of Garden City and East Marion. 

Mrs. Hennelly was born Sept. 9, 1926. She graduated from Marymount College in Tarrytown, N.Y. in 1948 with a degree in English and philosophy and later received an Master of the Arts in education from Adelphi College. She began her teaching career at The Wheatley School in Old Westbury in 1963 and was a tenured member of the Department of English there for 34 years. At the same time, she began her long-term volunteer career with the Girl Scouts of Nassau County, first as a troop leader and later in the executive offices, serving as president for several years. She continued to volunteer at the Girl Scouts both on the finance committee and the history committee up until the time of her death, for a total run of 58 years.

Mrs. Hennelly was the first woman to serve on the planning and zoning commission in Munsey Park, N.Y. in the 1980s. She was a contestant on Jeopardy in 1964, and more recently was delighted to serve as a Eucharistic minister at St. Francis Hospital in Port Washington for the last many years.

She was a brilliant tennis player, and enjoyed playing bridge up to the time of her death. She was a devoted animal supporter and a generous advocate for those who are poor, downtrodden, and oppressed. She was known for playing “Hail and Farewell” to guests on one of her several bugles.

Her interests were boundless, her adventures legendary, her curiosity beyond measure. Her sense of humor fused with a deep faith in God and her endless wonder and belief in the goodness and kindness of humans were her most defining qualities.

She is survived by her daughters, Patricia Anglin and her husband, John Taylor and Pamela Farley and her husband, Andrew; a former son-in-law, Michael Anglin; five grandchildren, David and Patrick Anglin, and Kathleen, Maura, and Andrew Farley, and a niece, Carol Lind Stone. Her many cousins and friends were a great delight in her life and she loved them dearly.

The family received visitors Jan. 23 at Fairchild Sons Funeral Chapel in Manhasset. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 24, at St. Mary’s R.C. Church in Manhasset. Interment will follow at Holy Rood Cemetery in Westbury.

Memorial contributions can be made to the Girl Scouts of Nassau County, 325 Duffy Avenue, Hicksville, NY 11801.

This is a paid notice. 

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Bernard P. Creedon

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Bernard P. Creedon of Greenport died Jan. 21. He was 80. 

The family will receive visitors Monday, Jan. 30, from 3 to 7 p.m. at Horton-Mathie Funeral Home in Greenport. A funeral Mass will take place at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 31, at St. Agnes R.C. Church in Greenport. Burial will follow at the church cemetery.

Memorial donations may be made to to East End Hospice – Kanas Center For Hospice, Eastern Long Island Hospital or Greenport Fire Department Rescue Squad.

A complete obituary will follow.

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Raymond R. Luca

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Raymond R. “Sookie” Luca, of Exton, Pa., formerly of The Villages, Fla. and Laurel, passed away Jan. 21, 2017, at Paoli Hospital in Paoli, Pa. He was the beloved husband of Joan Anne (née Malito) Luca, sharing 64 years of marriage together.

Born in Valley Stream, he was the son of the late William and Dorothy (Bremmer) Luca.

Raymond was a graduate of Valley Stream Central High School. After high school, he proudly served his country in the U.S. Army Air Corps, serving in Guam and Saipan during World War II from 1944 to 1946, earning the Victory Medal. After the war, Raymond attended Tusculum College in Greenville, Tenn. He went on to have a career in sales in the New York metropolitan area then as a real estate agent with the Suffolk County Department of Real Estate.

In his early days, Raymond enjoyed playing golf and boating on the Peconic Bay. He was very meticulous with his lawn, having the thickest, greenest, weed-free lawn in the neighborhood. Raymond was a unique individual, very entertaining, and known for his sense of humor. He was a loving husband, father, and grandfather, and he will be deeply missed.

In addition to his wife, Raymond is survived by his daughter, Diane (Larry) McCabe, of Minnesota; sons, Guy (Holly) Luca, of Iowa, and Robert (Lydia) Luca, of Pennsylvania and grandchildren, Kerry, Gregory, and Connor McCabe, and Callie and Christopher Luca. He was predeceased by a brother, Peter Luca.

Services will be private. Interment will be private at Calverton National Cemetery, Calverton, NY.

In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Wounded Warrior Project, support.woundedwarriorproject.org.

To leave an online condolence, please visit jamesterryfuneralhome.com.

This is a paid notice. 

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Norman Arthur Reich

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Norman Arthur Reich of Orient died Jan. 25. He was 93. 

The son of George and Adelina Reich, he was born July 29 1923, in Patchogue and attended Patchogue High School.

Mr. Reich served in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1942 to 1946.

He was the owner of Reich Bros. Trucking in Patchogue.

Family members said he enjoyed fishing.

Predeceased by his wife, Irene and brother, George, Mr. Reich is survived by her son, Rick, of East Marion, Mike, of Southold and daughter, Carol Lynn Merlo of Virginia; eight grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

The family will receive visitors Monday, Jan. 30, from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. at Coster-Heppner Funeral Home in Cutchogue, where U.S. Coast Guard military honors will take place at 3 p.m. Cremation will be private.

Memorial donations may be made to Orient Fire Department or Southold PBA.

 

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