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Archive for the ‘Obituaries’ Category

PostHeaderIcon DAVID RUSSELL CARLSON of AMHERST, MASS, December 2, 1935 – November 17, 2019

Amherst – David Russell Carlson, 83, of Amherst, passed away Sunday November 17, 2019, at his home surrounded by his loving family, following a long illness.

David was born on December 2, 1935, in Norwood, MA to the late Fred Alphons and Astrid Elizabeth (Peterson) Carlson. He graduated from Norwood High School in 1953. He graduated with honors from Upsala College in East Orange, NJ, in 1957. He met his wife, Mary Ellen Backels, at Upsala, and they were married on August 23, 1958 at the First Congregational Church in Waterbury, VT.

David and Mary lived in East Orange, NJ and moved to Lindsborg, KS, finally settling in Amherst in 1964. David’s career was rooted in higher education, first as Dean of Students at Upsala College, Dean of Admissions at Bethany College, and then Professor of English at Springfield College where he taught for 36 years until his retirement in 2003. He was a favorite professor and mentor to many Springfield College students.

David earned his PhD in Linguistics at the University of Massachusetts in 1973. His fields of research were the common speech of Boston, the history and structure of the English Language, and Medieval Literature. He was field researcher and contributor to The Dictionary of American Regional English, a member of the Linguistic Atlas Project, and served on the Board of the American Dialect Society.

David’s contributions to the Amherst community include a long tenure as Chair of the Zoning Board of Appeals. He identified improvements to the downtown area including the Bangs Community Center, the Carriage Shops and other building development projects. He and his neighbors formed a wetlands protection advocacy group to promote conservation in town neighborhoods.

A life-long Lutheran, he was proud of the fact that his childhood church was founded in the living room of his grandparents’ house. He was a member of Immanuel Lutheran Church in Amherst where he held several positions of leadership. He was on Immanuel’s first council, and chaired the property and space utilization committees, and the building expansion project. In addition to his contributions at the local level, David served on the New England Synod Council.

David loved golf, sports, his family, and his dogs. Golfing was one of David’s greatest passions. He was a long-time member of the Amherst Golf Club, where he played with the Legends and attained a hole-in-one. His friends will remember his dry wit and love for the Red Sox, Patriots, and Celtics. Ever devoted to his family, he cared for his wife, Mary, during her final illness, and was always quietly supportive, cooking the family dinners, providing advice, and leaving the porch light on so we could find our way home in the dark. He always had a pet dog, and his faithful dog Eddie was at his side at his passing.

David was predeceased by his wife of 59 years, Mary, and his sister, Betty (Carlson) Boaz. He is survived by his children, Kathryn, of Hadley, Daniel and his wife Carolyn, of Litchfield, CT, Claire and her husband Jack Czajkowski, of Hadley, and Peter Augustus “Gus” Carlson and his wife Jessica Carlson-Belanger, of Shutesbury; five grandchildren: Hilary, Andrew, Mary, Peter and Anna; his brothers, Fred Carlson and his wife Shirley, of Kingsport, TN, and Neil Carlson and his wife Marilyn of Lake Suzy, FL; and many nieces and nephews.

Calling hours will be held on Thursday, November 21 from 4:00 to 7:00pm at the Douglass Funeral Service, Amherst, MA. The funeral service will be held on Friday, November 22 at 10:00am at Immanuel Lutheran Church, Amherst, MA, followed by burial at Wildwood Cemetery. There will be a reception at Immanuel Lutheran Church immediately following the burial.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Immanuel Lutheran Church, 867 N. Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002.

PostHeaderIcon DANIEL KRAUSE, JR. of AMHERST, MASS, February 21, 1945 – November 13, 2019

Dr Daniel Krause Jr. a longtime resident of Amherst passed away on November 13th. Dan grew up in Sudbury, MA where early on his interest in the sciences and experimentation were nurtured by his family. His older brother and sister, Frank and Helen, who predeceased him also heavily influenced his life.

Dan received a PhD in physics from The University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He worked for 30 years at Amherst College beginning as a researcher in the physics department and later becoming a valued machinist. As a machinist, he helped create very tiny specialized parts for his fellow scientists’ experiments. He enjoyed teaching an intersession hands-on machining course and proudly proclaimed all his students ended his class with the same number of digits as they began the course. He was an avid gardener and black smith. His garden grew the usual collection of vegetables as well as a bumper crop of amaryllises. He freely shared his blooming amaryllises brightening local nursing homes. He enjoyed using his artistic side and sense of humor to create many metal sculptures including a scale model of the solar system, a trebuchet and many flying pigs. People who traveled down his street might be familiar with the large yellow orb (the sun) in his side yard. He always enjoyed when someone stopped to inquire about his lawn art.
Always ready for a challenge, he assisted creating a large solar whistle, a camera obscura as well as many other projects that caught his interest.

He had two great loves in his life: his wife of many years, Cynthia and physics. Dan’s and Cynthia’s lives intertwined and grew with each passing year. They supported and inspired each other’s idiosyncrasies. After the passing of his wife, Daniel found great love, friendship and community at Hope Community Church in Amherst.

Dan grew peaceful in his last days for he knew he would soon be rejoined with his beloved Cynthia. Dan leaves behind his blended family at Hope Community church, his sister -in-law Christine Harding, his brothers-in-law, William Tenanes and Jay Girard.

His life celebration will be held at Hope Community Church on Saturday, November 23rd at 3pm. It is requested that participants celebrate Dan’s casual style by wearing suspenders, red if you have them, but any color is acceptable.

In lieu of flowers please send donations to Hope Community Church.

Dan, a delightful human being, will be dearly missed.

PostHeaderIcon DR. JOHN ALDEN BARBARO of AMHERST, MASS, September 9, 1946 – November 15, 2019

Dr. John Alden Barbaro, born in Boston on September 9, 1946, to Deborah Sampson (Lee) Barbaro and Santo Carmelo (Samuel) Barbaro, then of Roxbury, MA, was a gifted psychologist and artist, beloved husband, treasured father, and active member of the Amherst community. Growing up in Quincy, MA, he attended UMass at Amherst as an undergraduate from 1964 to 1969, and then as a graduate student, where he earned a Doctor of Education in 1982. He married the love of his life, Susan Trottier Barbaro, on May 28, 1970, and they founded the private therapy practice High Street Therapy Associates in 1980, where he worked until he became incapacitated by his illness, progressive supranuclear palsy. John was involved in many local organizations throughout his life: President and Paul Harris Fellow of the Amherst Rotary Club, President of the Bioenergetic Society of CT, a member of the UU Society of Amherst, Assistant Scout Master of Troop 504, a Mason, a rank of 6th Yodan blackbelt in Aikido, and later a practitioner of Tai Chi. He was an active anti-war protester during the Vietnam War and was a passionate metal sculptor.
John leaves behind his wife of 49 years, Susan Trottier Barbaro; son, Gabriel A. T. Barbaro, daughter-in-law, Kaye Tengco Barbaro, and grandson, Theodore Jules Omer Barbaro, of Jersey City, New Jersey; daughter, Alethea B. T. Barbaro, son-in-law, Daniel Balague Guardia, and granddaughter, Nuria Susan Balague Barbaro, of Cleveland, Ohio; his older brother, Lee Barbaro, and sister-in-law, Chiyomi Kiode, of Kyoto, Japan; his younger brother, George Brooks, and nephew, John Woods Brooks, of Tampa, Florida and Louisiana, respectively; his youngest brother, Henry Barbaro and nephew, Lee Barbaro, of Boston; and many dear cousins and friends.
Calling hours are 5-7pm on Tuesday, November 19, at the Douglass Funeral Home. Burial will be Wednesday, November 20, at 10am in Wildwood Cemetery in Amherst. A Memorial service will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in John’s name to Cure PSP, 1216 Broadway, 2nd Floor, NY, NY 10001.

PostHeaderIcon JOSEPH R. LEAL of SOUTH HADLEY, MASS, September 14, 1918 – November 1, 2019

Joseph R. Leal, 101, passed away quietly at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home, surrounded by his loving family, November 1. Born September 14, 1918 to Mary Rogers and Joaquin Leal, Dr. Leal was raised in New Bedford and graduated from the New Bedford Textile School (UMass Dartmouth). Although he was deferred, Dr. Leal joined the Army in 1943. Following basic training he was stationed in Amherst, MA where he met Mary Desmond. They were married in April 1944 while he was on a weekend pass from Ft. Detrick, MD where he was a Chemical Laboratory Assistant. Following his discharge from the Army in November, 1945, Dr. Leal graduated from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, with a B.S. degree in Chemistry. He then attended Indiana University where he earned a Ph.D. in Chemistry. After graduation, Dr. Leal went to work for American Cyanamid Co in New Jersey as a research chemist. While in school, Dr. Leal had two sons, Joseph and Michael. Two daughters, Patricia and Victoria, were born while in New Jersey. While working for American Cyanamid, Dr. Leal transferred to Washington, D.C., where he was a contract specialist, and to Stamford, CT, where he was a laboratory supervisor. In 1967, Dr. Leal went to work for Celanese Research Company and moved to Maplewood, NJ. As a Senior Staff Associate with Celanese, Dr. Leal worked with the US Air Force and NASA in the development of nonflammable fabrics to protect pilots and astronauts. After retiring from Celanese, Dr. Leal worked as a consultant for Contract Administration, R & D Marketing and High Performance Materials and traveled. In 1997 Dr. and Mrs. Leal moved to South Hadley, MA to be closer to their children and grandchildren. Dr. Leal was predeceased by his son Joseph and his wife of 53 years, Mary. He is survived by his son Michael, daughters Patricia (Welch) and Victoria (Leal-Bushey), daughter-in-law, Jane Leal, 7 granddaughters, 3 great granddaughters and 2 great grandsons. The family wishes to express its gratitude to the staff of the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke for the respect and care provided in the past year.

 

A Mass of Christian Burial will be Thursday November 7, 2019, 11:30 am at St. Brigid’s Church, Amherst. Burial will follow in St. Brigid’s Cemetery, Hadley. Calling hours will be from 10:00 – 11:00am at the Douglass Funeral Service, Amherst.

 

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home.

PostHeaderIcon LOUIS D. GIOVANNETTI of LUDLOW, MASS, December 9, 1938 – October 30, 2019

Louis Dante Giovannetti, 80 of Ludlow, MA passed away peacefully Wednesday, October 30th at the Center for Extended Care in Amherst, MA surrounded by his loving family.

Louis was born in the Bronx, New York on December 9th, 1938 to Dante and Pasqualena (Lena) Giovannetti. He is survived by his loving wife of 58 years and high school sweetheart Virginia (Pyrch) Giovannetti and his brother Arthur. He is also survived by his children, daughter Dina Aldrich and husband Timothy of Belchertown, MA, son Louis and wife Grace (Lombardo) of Redondo Beach, CA and their sons Lucio and Santino, his daughter Pamela and husband Robert Doiron of Charlton, MA and their daughters Fiona and Danielle and son Paul and his wife Jill (Chesler) of Golden, CO and their children Luca and Ella.

Long-time resident of Westchester County NY, Louis graduated from Roosevelt High School in Yonkers, NY in 1957. He proudly served his country as a member of the Air National Guard, then married the love of his life ‘Ginny’ on October 1st, 1961. He loved singing and began a career in entertainment, recording and making records while a member of the singing group The Velairs. After entertainment, Lou pursued a career in sales. He had a passion and knack for ‘closing the deal’. After many successful years as a sales executive, he retired in 2001 from Xerox Corporation.

Lou mostly enjoyed spending time with his family while boating in the Finger Lakes and Lake Ontario, hunting and traveling to skeet shoots across the country. He enjoyed life everywhere he lived, including Bronxville, Hopewell Junction and Pittsford, NY, Pittsburgh, PA, Falmouth, MA, Redondo Beach, CA and most recently Ludlow, MA. Lou was a great conversationalist and friend to everyone he met. He will be remembered for many things, especially his storytelling, love of the Yankees, a full head of thick hair and his love of fine Italian food.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10AM on Wednesday, November 6th at St. Elizabeth Parish, 191 Hubbard St, Ludlow, MA. Burial will follow Wildwood Cemetery, 70 Strong Street, Amherst, MA 01002 at 12:30PM. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made in Lou’s name to the Friends of Ludlow Senior Center, 37 Chestnut Street, Ludlow, MA 01056.

PostHeaderIcon MYRTLE R. BLANCHARD of SHUTESBURY, MASS, December 18, 1930 – October 25, 2019

Myrtle R. (Hiscock) Blanchard, 88, died the morning of October 25, 2019, surrounded by her family, after a period of declining health. Myrtle was a resident of Shutesbury, MA and formerly a resident of Bristol, NH and Leverett, MA. Born in Everett, MA on December 18, 1930, she was the eldest of five children to Harold and Susie (Ellsworth) Hiscock. After graduating from Everett High, she met and married her husband Robert J. Blanchard. Myrtle and Bob raised a family and were married 67 years, before his passing in March 2019.

Myrtle moved from Everett to the Pioneer Valley with Bob in 1955 where he attended the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. They settled in the area and took up careers at the University and raised a family in Leverett, MA. They spent their summers at Newfound Lake in Bristol, New Hampshire, eventually retiring there. Myrtle found her way back to the Pioneer Valley, moving to Shutesbury to be close to family.

Myrtle led an active and vibrant life. In addition to raising three children, she worked full time for thirty years at the University of Massachusetts. Her UMass career began as one of the first people to work in the new Engineering Library. She served on the Leverett and Amherst-Pelham regional school committees, from 1978-1986. Some of her favorite hobbies included gardening, watercolor painting, and baking Christmas cookies. She also had a keen interest in genealogy, and her family is grateful for the time she invested in documenting their history. She volunteered as secretary for the Newfound Lake Region Association, to support their mission to promote conservation and preservation of the region’s natural resources. In her later years, she volunteered at the Shutesbury Elementary School library, and faithfully attended the Arthritis Exercise classes every week at the Amherst Senior Center. And, of course, everyone knows what a die-hard Patriots fan she was!

Myrtle is survived by her daughter, Kerry Blanchard, her beloved granddaughter Katie Brown, and Kerry’s partner Joel Morris, and his children. She is also survived by her sisters Joan Gillespie and Marilyn Perez, sister-in-law Barbara Goodick, and many nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband Bob, daughter Suzanne and son Robert Jr., her sisters Barbara and Susan, as well as many other close family and friends.

Funeral services and a celebration of Myrtle’s life will be on Friday, November 8, 2019, at 11:00am, at Grace Episcopal Church, 14 Boltwood Avenue, Amherst, MA. Immediately following the service please visit with the family in the church Parish Hall.

In place of flowers, Myrtle’s family requests donations to the fund to build a new library for Shutesbury (https://cutt.ly/Zenrc6P), or the Newfound Lake Region Association (newfoundlake.org).

PostHeaderIcon EVERETT MAKIAH CUFFEE of NORTHAMPTON, September 30, 1997 – October 26, 2019

Everett Makiah Cuffee, Son of Isheika M. Hackett and Everett E. Cuffee. He was born September 30, 1997 in Northampton Massachusetts. He was the first Grandchild of Henry and Ann Hackett as well as Lorraine Cuffee. He was also the first great grandchild of Henry and Christine Hackett.

Makiah Spent his childhood in Amherst and his teenage years in Northampton where he graduated. Known to friends as Everett but to family as Makiah, he was a loving, caring, kind, honest special individual with a somewhat sinister sense of humor; all children who met him were drawn to this gentle giant. He was very generous to the less fortunate and compassionate to all. He was a deeply feeling sensitive person who loved to have fun. Makiah was a prince, son, nephew, cousin, grandson and friend. He was one of a kind.

He leaves behind his sister Rayauna Hackett, Doug Wessel, Tom Ziniti (Guardian angels on earth). Uncles Henry Adam Hackett, Kenneth Cuffee and Andrew Carter. Aunts Jocelyn Cuffee, Marva Cuffee, Nikiah Cuffee, Jacqueline Otero, Hannah Spencer and Mahlet Gilliam. Cousins Alyciana Hackett, Nalaysha Feliciano, Ryu Hackett, Tattie, William and Jared Cuffee, as well as an extensive amount of extended family and friends.

Calling hours will be held on Monday, November 4, from 4-6pm at the First Baptist Church in Amherst with a service to follow from 6 -7 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Makiah’s family online at

https://www.facebook.com/donate/542073966555757/?fundraiser_source=external_url

 

PostHeaderIcon BERTRAM BANDMAN of HOLYOKE, MASS, March 6, 1930 – October 23, 2019

Holyoke MA: Bertram Bandman, 89, died peacefully with his daughter Nancy at his side on Wednesday, October 23rd at 11:14 PM. He was a resident at Renaissance Manor on Cabot in Holyoke.

Bertram was born in Shanghai China, March 6, 1930, to Albert Bandmann and Edith Magnus, both of Hamburg, Germany, who had been living and managing a textile business there since 1927. He attended a British parochial elementary school in Shanghai where as budding philosopher, Bertram was constantly getting his ears pulled because he asked the nuns “why” about almost all matters.

Bertram and his mother Edith fled to Manila, Philippines when the Japanese invaded China in 1937. Soon after, Bertram was sent to live with an American family in Baguio for five years for his health. When the Japanese invaded in 1941-42, the home he was living in was bombed. A white boy mistaken for a member of the American family, Bertram spent a year and a half in a Japanese internment camp. When the war ended, he was reunited with his mother in Manila and worked at the U.S. Army officers’ mess washing dishes. At age 16, Bertram secured entry into the United States and graduated from Hebron Academy in Maine. He then moved to New York City to attend Columbia University. Bertram completed a bachelors’ and masters’ degrees and his Doctorate in Education in 1962.

During his years at Columbia, he resided at the International House and throughout school, Bertram worked as a server in the cafeteria. He met his future wife, Elsie Lucier when she criticized his undersized servings of broccoli. The first of many arguments, they fell in love over their discussions of politics, philosophy, education and health care with never a clear winner.

Bertram became a professor of philosophy at Long Island University at Brooklyn Center where he taught for forty years. The author of over sixty articles on philosophy and other disciplines such as education, health care, and critical inquiry, he wrote and published three books: The Place of Reason in Education, in 1967, Children’s Right to Freedom, Care and Enlightenment in 1999 and The Moral Development of Health Care Professionals in 2003. Bertram co-edited two books with Robert S. Guttchen entitled Philosophical Essays on Teaching and Philosophical Essays on Curriculum in 1969. Bertram co-authored three books with Elsie, a professor of psychiatric nursing: Bioethics and Human Rights in 1978, Critical Thinking in Nursing in 1988 with a second edition published in 1995 and Nursing Ethics In the Life Span in 1985 with a fourth edition published in 2002. He and Elsie frequently shared the podium at nursing and philosophy conventions and seminars speaking on issues of ethics and health care.

In 1985, Bertram and Elsie purchased their first home in Hatfield to be near their daughter Nancy. They enjoyed their weekend and summer visits while maintaining their employment in New York City. Bertram thoroughly enjoyed the bookstores, the college and local libraries and found himself often at The Raven for hours to the frustration of Elsie’s expectations of the day’s “to do” list.

After his retirement in 2003, Bertram participated in the Five College Learning in Retirement program and took turns facilitating and attending seminars. Bertram was a member of the Unitarian Society of Northampton and Florence for many years. In 2009, Bertram and Elsie moved to Applewood where they enjoyed the community’s lively activities. Bertram enjoyed classical music concerts, plays, day trips to museums, and academic lectures. At Elsie’s insistence, he accompanied her to the simulcast Metropolitan Operas at Cinemark in Hadley. He would promptly fall asleep within minutes of finishing his popcorn and Elsie would not hesitate to nudge him when his snoring disturbed the operatic arias.

In January 2017, Bertram lost Elsie, his partner of sixty-six years. Bertram moved from his beloved Applewood apartment to The Arbors in May 2018 and finally in August 2019 to Renaissance Manor on Cabot in Holyoke, a skilled nursing facility.

While at Renaissance Manor, Bertram received additional hospice services from the Holyoke VNA’s Hospice Life Care. The talented and concerned staff members prodded him to participate in activities; he played Bingo for the first time in his life and attended the daily news group, enjoying donuts Elsie would never have allowed. He seemed more content and happy to leave the management of his life to others.

With attentive care from the Renaissance nurses and CNA staff, Bertram’s last hours were comfortable and free from pain. As he took his last breaths, his daughter advised him to go find Elsie and to write another book together.

Bertram is survived by his daughter, Nancy Bandman-Boyle and her partner, Bill Ennen of Hadley, Massachusetts and by his grandson, Sam Boyle of North Adams, Massachusetts. He will be remembered by his long-time friends Pat and Seymour Itzkoff of Florida, and by Richard and Nan Lau, Owners of The Panda Garden Restaurant who always made him feel like a member of their family. Bertram will be missed at Applewood, The Arbors, and Renaissance Manor. The Douglass Funeral Home of Amherst MA has been entrusted with his arrangements. There will be a memorial service in the spring of 2020.

To honor the memory of Bertram, please consider taking some extra time at a dinner with friends and family to discuss an ethical issue, taking care to examine and think deeply about the dimensions of the matter without rushing to form a conclusion; Bertram’s belief was that we should all think more carefully. Donations in Bertram’s memory can be sent to the Holyoke VNA’s Hospice Life Care, 575 Beech Street, Holyoke, MA 01040.

PostHeaderIcon R. BRUCE HOADLEY of LEVERETT, MASS, July 24, 1933 – October 15, 2019

R. Bruce Hoadley, husband, father, and a Professor Emeritus of Wood Science and Technology and a pioneer of the Building and Construction Technology program at the University of Massachusetts, died suddenly on October 15, 2019 at home in Leverett, Massachusetts. He was 86.

Robert Bruce Hoadley was born in 1933 in Waterbury, Connecticut, one of three children of W. Fremont and Esther A. Hoadley. He realized his fascination with the natural environment during his childhood and spent his early years in the woods studying, observing and recording what he saw. He attended Naugatuck High School, and enrolled at the University of Connecticut and later the Yale School of Forestry, earning a Ph.D (Doctor of Forestry).

He married his wife Barbara L. Hoadley and relocated to what would become their lifelong home outside of Amherst, MA where Bruce began an illustrious career in Wood Technology as a teacher, author and researcher. They have spent the last five decades between the area and a home that they built for their family on Cape Cod in the 1960’s.

Bruce’s international authority in the field of Wood Technology took root in prolific publication. His book Understanding Wood has been translated into other languages and remains as the primary reference source on wood. His other books on general wood identification and wood identification in antiques are held in similar esteem. As a grassroots contributing editor of Fine Woodworking Magazine, Bruce helped to grow the publication from its inception to a national publication.

 

Bruce served as a long-term consulting expert on the analysis and identification of wood in the collections of many renowned museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (NY), the Getty Museum in Malibu, CA and the Collections of the Diplomatic Reception Rooms at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, DC. His later work at Historic Deerfield included wood identification on period furniture.
Bruce’s professional passions also brought him to highly unusual assignments as an expert consultant to high-profile forensic cases. Working for decades alongside the world-renowned forensic scientist Dr. Henry Lee, Bruce’s findings and testimony contributed to the administration of justice in many nationally publicized criminal cases. He is credited with an extraordinary contribution to the science of forensics in the area of wood technology.
As an inventor and innovator, Bruce advised Buckminster Fuller on structural problems, contributed to the design of early prototypes for contemporary wind turbine blades and helped to develop many common modern wood adhesives and finishes. He held early patents on wire management devices that are in contemporary production and everyday use.
Throughout his career Bruce’s most intense professional focus was the teaching and mentorship of his students. This passion was rewarded with the prestigious Distinguished Teacher Award at the University of Massachusetts. His unique brand of humor and kindness, combined with a commandingly gentle demeanor and his pedagogical approach of “learning how to learn,” will be remembered profoundly by his students and his family.
While Bruce’s professional life was prolific, his ultimate focus was the extraordinary devotion, love and energy that he brought to his wife Barbara, their children and grandchildren. He and his wife Barbara enjoyed the Cape Cod vacation home that they built in North Eastham, where he spent over a half century raising a family and studying native habitat and ecology by hiking, bird watching, fly fishing, clamming, duck hunting and canoeing in his beloved Nauset Marsh. He had a private passion for fly tying, drawing, and wood carving of shore birds and duck decoys. In his later days he took great pleasure in completing abstract and expressive sculptural pieces.
Bruce is survived by his wife Barbara L. Hoadley, daughter Susan Hoadley and her spouse Corina Martinez of Cohasset, daughter Lindsay Hoadley of Belchertown, grandchildren Emma Bodamer, Andrew Hoadley, and Nicholas Hoadley, his sister Lucinda Brashares of Santa Rosa, CA, and of course his faithful canine companion Henry. He is predeceased by his brother Calvin Hoadley of Greensboro, NC.
A memorial scholarship fund has been established at the University of Massachusetts. In lieu of flowers, donations are being graciously accepted for the Bruce Hoadley Building Construction & Technology Fund, which will be used for the benefit of scholarships in the field of Wood Technology for deserving students.
To donate to the R. Bruce Hoadley Building Construction & Technology Fund, make a check payable to the University of Massachusetts Amherst and note “Bruce Hoadley Memorial Fund” in the Memo line. Mail gift to:

R. Bruce Hoadley Memorial Fund
Records and Gift Processing
Memorial Hall
UMass Amherst
134 Hicks Way
Amherst, MA 01003

For instructions to give to the fund online, please email Susanhoadley@gmail.com for a link to the fund through the UMass website.

 

PostHeaderIcon MARIA F. ZRAUNIG of AMHERST, MASS, June 24, 1928 – October 27, 2019

Maria F. (Prato) Zraunig, 91, died at Charlene Manor, Greenfield, on Sunday October 27, 2019 following a period of declining health. She was born June 24, 1928 in Pozzuoli, Italy, the daughter of Edwardo and Lileratori Emilia Prato. After her parents died at an early age, she was raised in Tuscany by her grandparents. During World War II she met and married her husband Russell F. (Dutch) Zraunig, a U. S. soldier stationed in Italy. They were married for 39 years until his death in 1984.

During Dutch’s military career Maria lived in many homes in the United States and Europe, settling in Franklin County (Colrain, Shelburne Falls, Greenfield) until moving to New Port Richey, FL in 1979. In 2002 Maria returned to Massachusetts to be near family, settling in Amherst.

She leaves her four (4) children, Robert (Muriel) of Greenfield, Anna (Ronald) Patenaude of Bernardston, Russell Jr. (Joyce) of Turners Falls, and Michael (Leslie) of Greenfield. In addition she leaves (ten) 10 grandchildren, Matthew (Kelly) Zraunig of Greenfield, Mark (Kathryn) Zraunig of South Hadley, Tara Zraunig of Beverly, Lisa (Robert) Letourneau of Bernardston, Steven (Karin) Patenaude of Greenfield, Alan (Tara) Zraunig of Montague, Ryan (Emily) Zraunig of Northampton, Alicia (Eric) Toia of Sunderland, Leah Zraunig of South Grafton and Emily Zraunig of North Brunswick, NJ. Maria also leaves eight (8) great-grandchildren.

Services will be private and at the convenience of the family. Burial will be at Arlington National Cemetery. 

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