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<text top="62" left="400" width="140" height="25" font="0"><b>Endnotes </b></text>
<text top="121" left="67" width="776" height="19" font="1">Endnotes  are  separated  by  sections.  They are  linked  to individual  places  in  each </text>
<text top="144" left="66" width="184" height="19" font="1">chapter or section. </text>
<text top="187" left="593" width="90" height="19" font="2">return  to </text>
<text top="188" left="685" width="32" height="17" font="3">= = </text>
<text top="186" left="717" width="19" height="20" font="4">&gt; </text>
<text top="187" left="759" width="110" height="19" font="5">home  Rage </text>
<text top="311" left="178" width="574" height="25" font="0"><b>Origins of the Foy and  McKeon  Families </b></text>
<text top="377" left="67" width="99" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 1. </i></text>
<text top="376" left="169" width="586" height="25" font="7">The  house  is  owned  by John  Foy,  who  can  be </text>
<text top="408" left="67" width="757" height="25" font="7">contacted  at John  Foy,  Garryedmond,  Claremorris,  County </text>
<text top="438" left="68" width="190" height="25" font="7">Mayo,  Ireland. </text>
<text top="495" left="67" width="319" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 2.  Josephine Mullin </i></text>
<text top="495" left="390" width="465" height="25" font="7">(1902-2002)White (marriage lasted </text>
<text top="526" left="67" width="730" height="25" font="7">only a few  months)  became  a school  teacher in  the  New </text>
<text top="557" left="66" width="731" height="25" font="7">York City school  system.  She  also  worked  for the UN  for </text>
<text top="588" left="67" width="779" height="25" font="7">several  years after World  War II.  She  lived  in  Manhattan  NY, </text>
<text top="618" left="68" width="771" height="25" font="7">moving  to Washington  Square  in  1938 and  remaining  there </text>
<text top="649" left="68" width="186" height="25" font="7">until  she  died. </text>
<text top="680" left="68" width="783" height="25" font="7">Margaret &#34;Peg&#34;  Mullin  (1910  - 2001)  graduated  from  Hunter </text>
<text top="711" left="67" width="763" height="25" font="7">College,  Columbia  University and  New York  University.  She </text>
<text top="742" left="66" width="778" height="25" font="7">taught high  school,  then  at NYU  and  became  Dean  at Bronx </text>
<text top="773" left="67" width="759" height="25" font="7">Community College.  She  married  Matthew  Kabriski  (1957) </text>
<text top="804" left="67" width="604" height="25" font="7">and  moved  to  Flushing,  Queens  until  she  died. </text>
<text top="835" left="68" width="734" height="25" font="7">Mary  Mullin  (1912  - 1992) married  George Gillen  (1907  -</text>
<text top="865" left="67" width="766" height="25" font="7">2001)  in  1937. The  couple  lived  in  Irvington  NY  and  owned </text>
<text top="896" left="67" width="781" height="25" font="7">simple  houses  in  East Chatham  NY.  Mary  had  abd  from  Bryn </text>
<text top="927" left="68" width="698" height="25" font="7">Mawr and  George  held  law and  history degrees.  Their </text>
<text top="958" left="67" width="715" height="25" font="7">children:  Thomas  (1938  - ), Agnes  (1941  - ),  Margaret </text>
<text top="989" left="68" width="699" height="25" font="7">(1943  - 1999), Elizabeth  (1944 - ),  Edward  (1946  - ), </text>
<text top="1020" left="68" width="502" height="25" font="7">Michael  (1948  - )  and  Walter (1950  - ) </text>
<text top="1077" left="67" width="90" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 3 </i></text>
<text top="1076" left="162" width="631" height="25" font="7">Delia  and  Mike  Martin's children:  <i>Beatrice  </i>Martin </text>
<text top="1107" left="68" width="709" height="25" font="7">(1915  - 1977)  married  Charles  Cletus  Hartman  (1913  -</text>
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<text top="50" left="68" width="637" height="25" font="7">1999). they had  one  son  Charles  Cletus  Hartman </text>
<text top="81" left="67" width="781" height="25" font="6"><i>Catherine  </i>Martin  (1917  - 1985)  married  George  Penn  (1914 </text>
<text top="112" left="67" width="719" height="25" font="7">- 1995). The  couple  had  two sons,  George and  Richard. </text>
<text top="143" left="66" width="703" height="25" font="6"><i>Mary </i>Martin  (1919  - 1994) married Joseph  Kelly(???  -</text>
<text top="174" left="68" width="748" height="25" font="7">1975). The  couple  had  three daughters Virginia  ,  Eileen  &amp; </text>
<text top="205" left="68" width="125" height="25" font="7">Kathleen. </text>
<text top="236" left="68" width="704" height="25" font="7">Mary  Martin  (1919  - 1994) married Joseph  Kelly((???  -</text>
<text top="266" left="68" width="82" height="25" font="7">1975) </text>
<text top="323" left="66" width="737" height="25" font="6"><i>Note 4  Patrick </i>Foy  (1933  - 2003)  married Ann  Heffernan </text>
<text top="354" left="68" width="762" height="25" font="7">(1936  - 2005)  and  the couple  relocated  to  London  UK.  The </text>
<text top="385" left="68" width="772" height="25" font="7">had  three children  John  (1959  - ), Annette  Foy  King  (1967  -</text>
<text top="416" left="67" width="769" height="25" font="7">)  and  Michael  (1968  - 1997). All  the children  live in  the  UK. </text>
<text top="447" left="66" width="684" height="25" font="6"><i>Mai </i>Foy  married  Brian  Gormley (1923  - 2006).  Their </text>
<text top="477" left="67" width="766" height="25" font="7">children:  Sheila  (1966  =),Vincent (1967  - ),  Brian  (1969  -</text>
<text top="508" left="76" width="281" height="25" font="7">)  and  Helen  (1971  - ) </text>
<text top="539" left="65" width="739" height="25" font="6"><i>John  </i>Foy  (1936  - )  married  Margaret Cunnane  (1938  - ). </text>
<text top="570" left="66" width="764" height="25" font="7">Their children:  John  Francis  (1965  - 1965);  William  Joseph </text>
<text top="601" left="68" width="791" height="25" font="7">&#34;Liam&#34;  (1966  - );  John  Noel  (1967  - );  Mathew  Patrick (1973 </text>
<text top="632" left="67" width="354" height="25" font="7">- ) ;  Cristina  Mary ( 1986 - ) </text>
<text top="663" left="66" width="771" height="25" font="6"><i>Margaret &#34;Peggy&#34; </i>Foy  (  )  married  Bart Comer (???  - 2001); </text>
<text top="694" left="66" width="755" height="25" font="7">their children Therese  (1975  - ), John  (1976 - )  and  Barry </text>
<text top="724" left="68" width="122" height="25" font="7">(1978  - ) </text>
<text top="781" left="66" width="67" height="25" font="6"><i>Note </i></text>
<text top="782" left="135" width="22" height="24" font="8"><i>5 </i></text>
<text top="781" left="161" width="637" height="25" font="6"><i>Francis  </i>O'Grady (1919  - 1968)  married  Margaret </text>
<text top="812" left="67" width="754" height="25" font="7">Wilson  (1922  - 1998). The  couple  had  four children:  Brian </text>
<text top="843" left="68" width="758" height="25" font="7">(1946  - ),  Bridget (1948  - ),  Brenda  O'Grady Gall(1953  - ) </text>
<text top="874" left="67" width="546" height="25" font="7">and  Bernadette O'Grady  Mansolil(l 958  - ) </text>
<text top="905" left="66" width="784" height="25" font="6"><i>Robert </i>O'Grady (1923  - 2005)  married  Marion  Walsh  (1922  -</text>
<text top="936" left="67" width="670" height="25" font="7">2009).  The  couple  had  six children:  Robert (???  - ), </text>
<text top="967" left="68" width="765" height="25" font="7">unknown  girl  (???  - ???),  Mary  Beth  O'Grady Cook(??? - ), </text>
<text top="998" left="66" width="725" height="25" font="7">Timothy (???  - ),  Kevin  (???  - ), and  Jane  Ellen  O'Grady </text>
<text top="1028" left="68" width="187" height="25" font="7">Rubino  (???- ) </text>
<text top="1060" left="67" width="726" height="25" font="6"><i>Thomas  </i>O'Grady(1925  - 2010)  married  Hedy  Holzhauer </text>
<text top="1090" left="68" width="787" height="25" font="7">(1930  - )  in  1954. Their children:  Diane  Pauline  O'Grady  Ray </text>
<text top="1121" left="68" width="723" height="25" font="7">(1954);  Eugene  Francis  (1956  - ); Thomas John  (1956 -</text>
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<text top="50" left="66" width="739" height="25" font="7">twin);  Susan  Marie  (1957  - )  and  Kathleen  Ann  (1959  - ) </text>
<text top="81" left="65" width="744" height="25" font="6"><i>Jane  Frances  </i>O'Grady (1933  - 1999)  married  Kevin  Flood </text>
<text top="112" left="68" width="744" height="25" font="7">(1920  - 2007)  in  1970. Their children:  Andrew  (1971  - ); </text>
<text top="143" left="66" width="735" height="25" font="7">James  Flood  (1972  - )  and  Maura  Flood  Lentini  (1973  - ) </text>
<text top="200" left="66" width="67" height="24" font="6"><i>Note </i></text>
<text top="199" left="136" width="646" height="25" font="7">6  Patrick and  Susan  Foy  had  five  children:  Patrick </text>
<text top="230" left="66" width="719" height="25" font="7">Joseph  usually called  Joe  (1919  - 1999), Peter Aloysius </text>
<text top="261" left="68" width="720" height="25" font="7">(1922  - 1964) who  married  Ruth  Brown  (1922  - 2009), </text>
<text top="292" left="68" width="742" height="25" font="7">Kathleen  (1923  - ),  Eileen  Foy  Zysk (1925  - )  and  Monica </text>
<text top="323" left="68" width="198" height="25" font="7">(1929  - 1999). </text>
<text top="380" left="66" width="67" height="24" font="6"><i>Note </i></text>
<text top="380" left="136" width="22" height="24" font="7">7 </text>
<text top="379" left="162" width="623" height="25" font="7">Peter Joseph  Foy  married Virginia  McKean  at St. </text>
<text top="410" left="68" width="743" height="25" font="7">Bartholomew's Church  in  Elmhurst NY.  The  reception  was </text>
<text top="441" left="68" width="788" height="25" font="7">held  in  Virginia's  parents'  house on  Glean  Street, after which </text>
<text top="472" left="66" width="714" height="25" font="7">the couple  went on  a  honeymoon to Atlantic City.  They </text>
<text top="503" left="68" width="737" height="25" font="7">returned  to the  Bronx home described  as  at Bolyn  Court. </text>
<text top="534" left="66" width="755" height="25" font="7">The  couple  had  two children  Peter Joseph  Jr (1917  - )  and </text>
<text top="565" left="68" width="317" height="25" font="7">Richard  Daniel  (1929  - ) </text>
<text top="622" left="66" width="91" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 8 </i></text>
<text top="621" left="162" width="643" height="25" font="7">Mary  Patricia  Anderson  (  1927 - )  married Jusdon </text>
<text top="652" left="67" width="785" height="25" font="7">Stokely (1925  - 1980) and  afterwards Theodore  Klos  (1915  -</text>
<text top="683" left="68" width="433" height="25" font="7">1993) The  Stokely children  were: </text>
<text top="714" left="68" width="701" height="25" font="7">Margaret Mary  Elizabeth  (1949- );  Peter Martin  (1950-</text>
<text top="745" left="68" width="93" height="25" font="7">1977); </text>
<text top="776" left="66" width="768" height="25" font="7">Anne  Marie  Stokely Bailey  (1951  - );  Joseph  Lee  (1953  - ); </text>
<text top="807" left="67" width="377" height="25" font="7">and  David  Nicholas  (1955  - ) </text>
<text top="864" left="66" width="67" height="24" font="6"><i>Note </i></text>
<text top="863" left="136" width="659" height="25" font="7">9 Virginia  McKean  (1916  - 1992) may have  been  a </text>
<text top="894" left="68" width="698" height="25" font="7">nursing  classmate  of her aunt Anita  McKean.  She  was </text>
<text top="925" left="68" width="794" height="25" font="7">reported  to  have  married  an  airline  pilot and  lived  on  eastern </text>
<text top="956" left="68" width="163" height="25" font="7">Long  Island. </text>
<text top="987" left="68" width="764" height="25" font="7">Lawrence  McKeon(1919  - )  was  divorced  by the time of his </text>
<text top="1018" left="68" width="747" height="25" font="7">uncle Thomas  McKeon's  death  in  1960.  I  lost track of him </text>
<text top="1049" left="67" width="150" height="25" font="7">after 1960. </text>
<text top="1080" left="66" width="791" height="25" font="7">John  McKean  (1924 - 1999)  married  George  Bouchard  (1921 </text>
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<text top="50" left="67" width="737" height="25" font="7">- 1995) who  maintained  an  electronics shop.  Last  known </text>
<text top="81" left="67" width="308" height="25" font="7">address was  Shirley  NY. </text>
<text top="138" left="66" width="110" height="24" font="8"><i>Note 10 </i></text>
<text top="137" left="178" width="578" height="25" font="7">Eugene  McKean  (1922  - 1990)  married Alice </text>
<text top="168" left="66" width="743" height="25" font="7">Thatcher (1917  - 1986).  Gene  was  a tank driver in  World </text>
<text top="199" left="67" width="642" height="25" font="7">War II, was  captured  and  spent about a year in  a </text>
<text top="230" left="67" width="773" height="25" font="7">concentration  camp.  When  he  left the service,  he  took over </text>
<text top="261" left="68" width="744" height="25" font="7">his father's trucking  business.  The  McKeon's adopted  two </text>
<text top="292" left="67" width="731" height="25" font="7">children:  Dorothy McKean  Jacoby  ( cl 957  - )  and  Francis </text>
<text top="322" left="68" width="128" height="25" font="7">(c1959  -) </text>
<text top="354" left="66" width="772" height="25" font="7">Arthur McKean  (1925  - 1994) joined  the  Navy during  World </text>
<text top="385" left="67" width="751" height="25" font="7">War II by fibbing  about his age.  He  remained  in  the  Navy, </text>
<text top="416" left="67" width="744" height="25" font="7">serving  for some time as  a  medical  corpsman  on  the first </text>
<text top="447" left="67" width="244" height="25" font="7">atomic submarine. </text>
<text top="503" left="66" width="106" height="24" font="8"><i>Note 11 </i></text>
<text top="503" left="176" width="670" height="25" font="7">Arthur McKean  (1926  - 1984) married  Lisa(???  - ), </text>
<text top="534" left="68" width="753" height="25" font="7">producing  one  daughter Barbara.  The  couple  divorced  and </text>
<text top="565" left="66" width="712" height="25" font="7">Arthur married  Carol  Wurtz  )1923  - 2010).  The  second </text>
<text top="596" left="68" width="773" height="25" font="7">marriage  produced  the following  children:  Charlene,  Arthur, </text>
<text top="627" left="66" width="778" height="25" font="7">Jeannine,  Brendan, Thomas,  Kathleen  and  Sean.  No  further </text>
<text top="658" left="68" width="370" height="25" font="7">info available at this writing. </text>
<text top="714" left="66" width="110" height="24" font="8"><i>Note 12 </i></text>
<text top="714" left="178" width="666" height="25" font="7">My  last contact with  Leo's  daughter Dolores  (1928  -</text>
<text top="745" left="67" width="752" height="25" font="7">)  was  in  the late  1930s.  Florence  McKean  told  me she  had </text>
<text top="776" left="68" width="742" height="25" font="7">met Dolores when  she  was  shopping  in  Flushing;  Dolores </text>
<text top="807" left="67" width="766" height="25" font="7">was  a saleslady.  William  McKeon(1941  - )  became  a career </text>
<text top="838" left="68" width="791" height="25" font="7">Marine,  marrying  Kazuko  Higa  in  1974. The  couple  had  three </text>
<text top="869" left="67" width="685" height="25" font="7">daughters  : Ayumi  McKean  van  Winkle  (1969  - )  and </text>
<text top="900" left="68" width="791" height="25" font="7">Kathryn  Ann  McKean  Bruno  (1975  - ).  When  I  communicated </text>
<text top="931" left="67" width="743" height="25" font="7">with  Leo  in  early  1980 he  was  living  with  a  Rose  McKean: </text>
<text top="961" left="67" width="704" height="25" font="7">whether a second  wife or a significant other unknown. </text>
<text top="1019" left="66" width="110" height="24" font="8"><i>Note 13 </i></text>
<text top="1018" left="178" width="580" height="25" font="7">Mary  Ellen  Morley- (1938  - 2006)  grew up  in </text>
<text top="1049" left="68" width="791" height="25" font="7">Richmond  Hill  NY.  She  taught exceptional  children  for several </text>
<text top="1080" left="66" width="732" height="25" font="7">years,  then  attended  Catholic University for a  bachelor's </text>
<text top="1111" left="67" width="757" height="25" font="7">degree  in  nursing,  beginning  at Lenox  Hill  Hospital  in  NYC. </text>
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<text top="50" left="66" width="787" height="25" font="7">After marrying  Richard  Foy,  she  supervised  nursing  students </text>
<text top="81" left="67" width="655" height="25" font="7">at Mount St.  Mary College  in  Newburgh  and  Ulster </text>
<text top="112" left="67" width="720" height="25" font="7">Community College  in  Kingston  NY.  The  couple  had  two </text>
<text top="143" left="67" width="766" height="25" font="7">children  Peter Joseph  Foy  (1974 - )  and  Bridget Morley  Foy </text>
<text top="173" left="68" width="122" height="25" font="7">(1976  - ) </text>
<text top="231" left="67" width="109" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 14 </i></text>
<text top="230" left="177" width="558" height="25" font="7">Anna  McKeon(1949  - )  joined the Air Force </text>
<text top="261" left="68" width="785" height="25" font="7">immediately after graduation  from  high  school.  She  met and </text>
<text top="292" left="68" width="726" height="25" font="7">married  Eugene  DeRoche.  They  lived  in  Houma  LA  after </text>
<text top="323" left="66" width="766" height="25" font="7">Anna  left the service.  Anna  obtained  her masters degree  in </text>
<text top="354" left="67" width="787" height="25" font="7">social  work and  works  in  social  service  in  New  Orleans.  They </text>
<text top="385" left="68" width="710" height="25" font="7">have two children:  Patricia  Ann  De Roche  ( 1973  - )  and </text>
<text top="416" left="66" width="431" height="25" font="7">Travis  William  DeRoche  (1976  - ) </text>
<text top="447" left="68" width="729" height="25" font="7">Daniel  McKeon  (  1946 - )  served  several  years  in  the US </text>
<text top="478" left="66" width="690" height="25" font="7">Army,  then  returned  to  Denver CO.  I  have  no  further </text>
<text top="509" left="68" width="306" height="25" font="7">informatioon  on  Daniel. </text>
<text top="573" left="67" width="486" height="26" font="0"><b>Birth and time living  in  the Bronx </b></text>
<text top="639" left="76" width="67" height="24" font="6"><i>Note </i></text>
<text top="639" left="145" width="662" height="25" font="7">99 We  considered  our neighborhood  to  be  a  mix of </text>
<text top="669" left="67" width="705" height="25" font="7">Irish,  German  and  Jewish  families.  Italian families  had </text>
<text top="700" left="68" width="786" height="25" font="7">moved  across  White  Plains  Road,  but their presence  was  not </text>
<text top="731" left="68" width="780" height="25" font="7">noticed  in  the school  system  until the end  of the  1930s. The </text>
<text top="762" left="68" width="696" height="25" font="7">1930 census  records for 237  street may be  viewed  at </text>
<text top="762" left="766" width="74" height="25" font="9">north </text>
<text top="793" left="67" width="58" height="25" font="9">side </text>
<text top="793" left="128" width="506" height="25" font="7">(across the street from  our house)  and </text>
<text top="793" left="639" width="138" height="25" font="9">south  side </text>
<text top="793" left="780" width="62" height="25" font="7">( our </text>
<text top="824" left="67" width="237" height="25" font="7">side  of the street) </text>
<text top="855" left="66" width="663" height="25" font="7">The  Italian church  of Saint Anthony was  located  on </text>
<text top="886" left="68" width="792" height="25" font="7">Richardson  Avenue  north of Nereid  Ave  (238 st).  Our church, </text>
<text top="916" left="67" width="769" height="25" font="7">St Frances  of Rome  was  originally a  branch  of St Barnabas, </text>
<text top="947" left="67" width="759" height="25" font="7">located  in  Woodlawn,  across the  Bronx  Park.  There  was  an </text>
<text top="978" left="67" width="705" height="25" font="7">old  building  called  the  K of C on  Richardson  Ave  which </text>
<text top="1009" left="67" width="721" height="25" font="7">served  as  the church  until the  main  church  was  built on </text>
<text top="1040" left="68" width="534" height="25" font="7">Barnes Avenue  across  White  Plains  Road. </text>
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<text top="51" left="66" width="127" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 100 </i></text>
<text top="50" left="195" width="619" height="25" font="10">Peter applied  for Naturalization  at the  New York </text>
<text top="81" left="67" width="568" height="25" font="10">County Superior Court on  23  July  1919  [vol </text>
<text top="82" left="639" width="21" height="23" font="11"># </text>
<text top="81" left="668" width="135" height="25" font="10">362,  page </text>
<text top="112" left="67" width="748" height="25" font="10">204].  His  two sisters,  Cecelia  and  Hannah  had  applied  for </text>
<text top="143" left="67" width="730" height="25" font="10">and  received  citizenship  in  1918 just before they left for </text>
<text top="174" left="68" width="792" height="25" font="10">France  as  Army nurses.  Peter must have  waited  for the  usual </text>
<text top="205" left="67" width="733" height="25" font="10">five  years  period.  It was  unusual  for women  to apply for </text>
<text top="235" left="67" width="666" height="25" font="10">citizenship,  as  they were  not allowed  to vote.  Their </text>
<text top="266" left="67" width="772" height="25" font="10">applications  may have  something  to do  with  their service  in </text>
<text top="297" left="68" width="97" height="25" font="10">France. </text>
<text top="354" left="66" width="123" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 101 </i></text>
<text top="354" left="192" width="667" height="25" font="10">The  Manhattan  directories for 1889 and  1891  show </text>
<text top="385" left="66" width="743" height="25" font="10">two Andrew  Davey stores on  the  upper East  Side.  I  think </text>
<text top="415" left="68" width="769" height="25" font="10">Peter Foy  became  associated  with  a group of at least seven </text>
<text top="446" left="66" width="691" height="25" font="10">Andrew  Davey stores located  in  Mount Vernon,  North </text>
<text top="477" left="68" width="773" height="25" font="10">Pelham,  and  Yonkers  in  Westchester County.  The  stores are </text>
<text top="508" left="67" width="432" height="25" font="10">listed  in  city directories for 1925. </text>
<text top="565" left="66" width="126" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 102 </i></text>
<text top="565" left="192" width="623" height="25" font="10">There  were twelve  Royal  Food  Stores.  The  two I </text>
<text top="595" left="68" width="714" height="25" font="10">remember most were  Morley's  Food  Market on  Yonkers </text>
<text top="626" left="66" width="771" height="25" font="10">Avenue  operated  by Jack Morley  (1898  - 1975)and  later by </text>
<text top="657" left="68" width="775" height="25" font="10">his  nephews and  nieces  imported  from  Ireland  and  Morley's </text>
<text top="688" left="68" width="716" height="25" font="10">Market near Palisades Avenue  operated  by  Mike  Morley </text>
<text top="719" left="68" width="753" height="25" font="10">(1900  - 1987) and  later by  his  nephew  Mike  Morley,  again </text>
<text top="750" left="67" width="765" height="25" font="10">an  Irish  immigrant. The  stores struggled.  As  children  Peter </text>
<text top="781" left="67" width="768" height="25" font="10">and  I  would  go to stores with  our mother to take  inventory </text>
<text top="812" left="67" width="700" height="25" font="10">on  Sundays.  Eventually the company failed.  Peter Foy </text>
<text top="843" left="68" width="782" height="25" font="10">managed  to arrange for the  purchase  of individual  stores  by </text>
<text top="874" left="66" width="718" height="25" font="10">their operators in  the bankruptcy action.  Jack and  Mike </text>
<text top="905" left="68" width="748" height="25" font="10">purchased  their stores in  this  manner and  managed  them </text>
<text top="936" left="67" width="300" height="25" font="10">successfu I ly thereafter. </text>
<text top="993" left="66" width="127" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 103 </i></text>
<text top="992" left="194" width="648" height="25" font="10">Gus  Gieg  was  a bachelor,  very set in  his ways and </text>
<text top="1023" left="67" width="769" height="25" font="10">very set in  his thinking.  He  owned  a  Packard  auto which  he </text>
<text top="1054" left="68" width="767" height="25" font="10">kept in  the garage  in  back of our house.  Every Sunday was </text>
<text top="1085" left="66" width="774" height="25" font="10">the same  pattern.  Gus  would  drive his aunt to the  Lutheran </text>
<text top="1116" left="67" width="743" height="25" font="10">Church  on  Nereid  Avenue;  it was  not known  if he  himself </text>
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<text top="50" left="67" width="792" height="25" font="10">attended  services.  Mrs.  Wimmer would  return  home to  make </text>
<text top="81" left="67" width="727" height="25" font="10">delicious chicken  soup  and  give  Peter and  myself a  bowl </text>
<text top="112" left="67" width="732" height="25" font="10">around  11 :00am  before  noon.  Gus's and  Mrs.  Wimmer's </text>
<text top="143" left="68" width="731" height="25" font="10">noon  dinner would  consist of chicken  soup  followed  by a </text>
<text top="174" left="67" width="751" height="25" font="10">steak.  After dinner,  Gus  would  take  his  Packard  for a ride, </text>
<text top="204" left="67" width="496" height="25" font="10">often  bringing  Mrs.  Wimmer with  him. </text>
<text top="235" left="68" width="731" height="25" font="10">Mrs.  Wimmer had  trouble  navigating  stairs,  so  she  often </text>
<text top="266" left="67" width="711" height="25" font="10">asked  Peter or myself to do  some  shopping  for her.  We </text>
<text top="297" left="67" width="759" height="25" font="10">would  help  her out,  as  she  gave  us  a tip of 10 or 15 cents. </text>
<text top="328" left="68" width="790" height="25" font="10">Mr.  Gieg  celebrated  Christmas  in  grand  fashion.  He  had  a set </text>
<text top="359" left="67" width="735" height="25" font="10">of tree ornaments from  Germany;  our dog  Echo  was  not </text>
<text top="390" left="67" width="739" height="25" font="10">allowed  upstairs to view the tree  lest her tail  engage  and </text>
<text top="421" left="68" width="771" height="25" font="10">perhaps  break the  precious ornaments.  At the  beginning  of </text>
<text top="451" left="68" width="775" height="25" font="10">December the  heat was turned  off the front living  room  and </text>
<text top="482" left="66" width="769" height="25" font="10">the outside  porch  to  preserve the tree which  was  not taken </text>
<text top="513" left="67" width="396" height="25" font="10">down  until  the end  of January. </text>
<text top="544" left="68" width="735" height="25" font="10">Mr Gieg  was  the only one  we  knew  who took the train  to </text>
<text top="575" left="67" width="392" height="25" font="10">work,  probably at Wall  Street. </text>
<text top="632" left="66" width="779" height="25" font="12"><i>Note 104 </i>John  Dumolo could  not read  or write.  He  operated </text>
<text top="662" left="67" width="767" height="25" font="10">a vegetable truck very succesfully.  They owned  a store and </text>
<text top="693" left="68" width="765" height="25" font="10">parked  their truck alongside  as  well  as  sold  vegetables and </text>
<text top="724" left="67" width="753" height="25" font="10">fruits from  this  permanent stand.  They owned  their house </text>
<text top="755" left="66" width="775" height="25" font="10">just behiind  the store.  Millie  Dumolo took care  of the family </text>
<text top="786" left="67" width="119" height="25" font="10">finances. </text>
<text top="817" left="67" width="728" height="25" font="10">When  Peter and  I  decided  to go  to  Esopus,  the  Dumolos </text>
<text top="848" left="67" width="740" height="25" font="10">invited  us  to a Sunday dinner,  Italian style.  The  food  was </text>
<text top="879" left="67" width="720" height="25" font="10">delicious,  served  on  tables outside the  house  under the </text>
<text top="910" left="67" width="756" height="25" font="10">shade  of some trees.  I  learned  later that the  Dumolos  had </text>
<text top="941" left="67" width="762" height="25" font="10">given  the  same  farewell  dinner for James  Kinsella  when  he </text>
<text top="972" left="67" width="511" height="25" font="10">entered  the Juniorate some years  later. </text>
<text top="1003" left="67" width="787" height="25" font="10">I  recontacted  the  Dumolos  in  the early  1950s. They  had  sold </text>
<text top="1034" left="66" width="772" height="25" font="10">their house  and  store and  moved  to  Dunedin,  Florida.  Millie </text>
<text top="1065" left="68" width="789" height="25" font="10">had  invested  much  of their savings  in  real  estate  in  Dunedin. </text>
<text top="1096" left="67" width="762" height="25" font="10">!asked  her how she  managed  to  purchase  a new auto;  she </text>
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<text top="50" left="66" width="679" height="25" font="10">told  me  she  sold  off one  of her lots.  They were  good </text>
<text top="81" left="68" width="109" height="25" font="10">people ... </text>
<text top="137" left="68" width="791" height="25" font="10">Note  105 The  Smiths accross the street spent their summers </text>
<text top="168" left="68" width="767" height="25" font="10">in  Atlantic Highlands  NJ.  The  Weidners  (and  Mrs.  Weidner's </text>
<text top="199" left="67" width="769" height="25" font="10">sister,  Peggy  O'Neill)  from  Richardson  Avenue  had  one  son, </text>
<text top="230" left="68" width="762" height="25" font="10">Henry Jr,  who  always  seemed  to  have change  and  later did </text>
<text top="261" left="68" width="788" height="25" font="10">his  PhD  in  English  at Columbia.  The  Burkes across the street </text>
<text top="292" left="67" width="692" height="25" font="10">sent their two youngest sons  to  Fordham  Prep,  which </text>
<text top="323" left="67" width="382" height="25" font="10">entailed  trainfare and  tuition. </text>
<text top="380" left="75" width="131" height="24" font="6"><i>Note105a </i></text>
<text top="379" left="210" width="620" height="25" font="10">My  sharpest memory of Robert Wallace  was  my </text>
<text top="410" left="67" width="715" height="25" font="10">first great moral  conflict.  Robert attended  the  Lutheran </text>
<text top="441" left="67" width="776" height="25" font="10">church  on  Barnes Avenue  and  was  scheduled  to appear in  a </text>
<text top="472" left="67" width="785" height="25" font="10">play to  be  held  in  the church.  He  invited  me and  my brother. </text>
<text top="503" left="68" width="726" height="25" font="10">But the Sisters and  our parish  priests  had  taught us  not </text>
<text top="534" left="67" width="694" height="25" font="10">enter churches of different denominations.  Given  this </text>
<text top="565" left="67" width="782" height="25" font="10">dilemma,  I  decided  to go to the church,  but take a long  way </text>
<text top="595" left="67" width="766" height="25" font="10">around  so  that I  would  not be  seen  by either the  priests or </text>
<text top="626" left="66" width="771" height="25" font="10">the  nuns.  Instead  of walking  up  237th  street,  I  detoured to </text>
<text top="657" left="67" width="706" height="25" font="10">238th, then  to  Barnes Ave  and  back to the church.  We </text>
<text top="688" left="67" width="721" height="25" font="10">sneaked  into the church,  attended  the  play,  and  left for </text>
<text top="719" left="68" width="750" height="25" font="10">home on  the same  route.  So  even  early on,  I  had  decided </text>
<text top="750" left="66" width="658" height="25" font="10">that people  were  more important then  rules.  (Hey, </text>
<text top="781" left="68" width="432" height="25" font="10">remember this was  about  1938!) </text>
<text top="838" left="67" width="137" height="24" font="6"><i>-Note 106 </i></text>
<text top="837" left="205" width="637" height="25" font="10">Jimmy Saunders'  father was  an  electric engineer. </text>
<text top="868" left="68" width="699" height="25" font="10">He  rigged  up  a platform  which  took up Jimmy's entire </text>
<text top="899" left="68" width="788" height="25" font="10">bedroom,  but which  could  be  hoisted  to the ceiling  when  not </text>
<text top="930" left="68" width="741" height="25" font="10">in  use.  Before Christmas the Saunders would  take all  the </text>
<text top="961" left="67" width="759" height="25" font="10">furniture out of the  room,  lower the platform  and  lo!  there </text>
<text top="992" left="67" width="788" height="25" font="10">was  a complete train  system  ready for Christmas.  Sometime </text>
<text top="1023" left="68" width="691" height="25" font="10">in  January it would  be  hoisted  back to the ceiling  and </text>
<text top="1054" left="66" width="548" height="25" font="10">Jimmy's bedroom  would  return  to  normal. </text>
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<text top="51" left="66" width="128" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 107 </i></text>
<text top="50" left="195" width="630" height="25" font="10">Peter Esposito  was  a  butcher with  a large family. </text>
<text top="81" left="66" width="768" height="25" font="10">The  Esposito  boys  were  older than  us,  but the nuns always </text>
<text top="112" left="67" width="789" height="25" font="10">cited  Peter who  a scholarship to Regis,  the Jesuit high  school </text>
<text top="143" left="68" width="744" height="25" font="10">in  Manhattan.  Peter was  a few  years older than  us,  so  we </text>
<text top="174" left="68" width="751" height="25" font="10">know of him  but didi  not socialize.A few  years  later Henry </text>
<text top="205" left="67" width="704" height="25" font="10">Weidner married  an  Esposito  girl.  Henry's aunt,  Peggy </text>
<text top="236" left="67" width="714" height="25" font="10">O'Neill  disapproved  of the  marriage and  it caused  a  rift </text>
<text top="266" left="67" width="780" height="25" font="10">which  was  not healed  before  Henry's untimely death  shortly </text>
<text top="297" left="67" width="726" height="25" font="10">after he  had  taken  a position  to teach  English  at Kansas </text>
<text top="328" left="67" width="140" height="25" font="10">University. </text>
<text top="385" left="75" width="127" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 108 </i></text>
<text top="385" left="203" width="630" height="25" font="10">We  grew close  to the O'Connors.  The  oldest boy, </text>
<text top="416" left="66" width="771" height="25" font="10">Thomas was  six days older than  me  (a  distinction  he  never </text>
<text top="446" left="67" width="717" height="25" font="10">fails  to  mention  when  we  mention  elders),  but was  two </text>
<text top="477" left="67" width="745" height="25" font="10">grades  behind  me,  not because  of lack of intelligence  but </text>
<text top="508" left="68" width="732" height="25" font="10">because  I  was  young  getting  into elementary school  and </text>
<text top="539" left="67" width="715" height="25" font="10">skipped  second  grade.  The  other boys  were  Danny and </text>
<text top="570" left="66" width="450" height="25" font="10">Jimmy.  Their father was  a banker -</text>
<text top="570" left="541" width="312" height="25" font="10">he  banked  garbage  into </text>
<text top="601" left="67" width="751" height="25" font="10">a garbage truck,  but he  had  a steady job, a great asset in </text>
<text top="632" left="66" width="689" height="25" font="10">those times.  They O'Connors  lived  with  the  Kiernans. </text>
<text top="662" left="68" width="745" height="25" font="10">Mrs.Kiernan  was  their aunt.  Mr.  Kiernan  was  connected  in </text>
<text top="693" left="67" width="764" height="25" font="10">some  way with  my father or the  Morley boys.  Tommy later </text>
<text top="724" left="67" width="746" height="25" font="10">went to  Esopus  with  the group which  included  Gus  Nolan. </text>
<text top="755" left="67" width="775" height="25" font="10">We  have  remained  close  ever since.  Joan  and  my wife  Mary </text>
<text top="786" left="67" width="757" height="25" font="10">were  exceptionally friendly.  When  Mary was  pregnant with </text>
<text top="817" left="68" width="731" height="25" font="10">Bridget,  we  dropped  little Peter off at the O'Connors and </text>
<text top="848" left="66" width="587" height="25" font="10">took a short second  honeymoon  to  Bermuda. </text>
<text top="905" left="75" width="127" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 109 </i></text>
<text top="905" left="201" width="611" height="25" font="10">Timmy Smith's father operated  a steam  shovel </text>
<text top="936" left="67" width="750" height="25" font="10">during  the warm  months. Traditionally heavy construction </text>
<text top="967" left="67" width="706" height="25" font="10">and  building  construction  shut down  during the winter </text>
<text top="997" left="68" width="791" height="25" font="10">months.  Tim's father then  traveled  to  Florida  where  he  found </text>
<text top="1028" left="67" width="497" height="25" font="10">employment operating  steam  shovels. </text>
<text top="1085" left="75" width="127" height="24" font="6"><i>Note 110 </i></text>
<text top="1085" left="203" width="613" height="25" font="10">Henry Weidner senior worked  in  the  Navy Yard. </text>
<text top="1116" left="68" width="702" height="25" font="10">His  family,  of German  descent,  can  be  found  in  earlier </text>
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<text top="50" left="67" width="785" height="25" font="7">censuses  living  on  Arthur Avenue.  His  wife  Helen  O'Neill  was </text>
<text top="81" left="67" width="783" height="25" font="7">of Irish descent.  Her sister Margaret O'Neill  lived  with  them; </text>
<text top="112" left="67" width="685" height="25" font="7">she  had  the same  birthday as  me  (17  November but </text>
<text top="143" left="67" width="675" height="25" font="7">different year).  Every for my birthday (probably the </text>
<text top="174" left="67" width="766" height="25" font="7">weekend  before or after the day itself),  she  would  take  me </text>
<text top="205" left="67" width="744" height="25" font="7">on  a tour of the  'underground  city'  of Rockerfeller Center, </text>
<text top="236" left="67" width="615" height="25" font="7">and  then  to  Radio  City for the show and  movie. </text>
<text top="266" left="67" width="730" height="25" font="7">I  still  have  photos of the scuttling  of the German  pocket </text>
<text top="297" left="68" width="774" height="25" font="7">battleship Graff Spee  which  I  received  from  Peggy  O'Neill  in </text>
<text top="328" left="67" width="775" height="25" font="7">later years.  Either Henry's father or an  uncle  was  in  Buenos </text>
<text top="359" left="66" width="699" height="25" font="7">Aires  at the time of the scuttling  and  took the  photos. </text>
<text top="390" left="66" width="788" height="25" font="7">Young  Henry (Hank or Junior to us)  went to Columbia  for his </text>
<text top="421" left="67" width="793" height="25" font="7">education,  graduating  around  1960 with  a  PhD  in  English.  He </text>
<text top="452" left="68" width="724" height="25" font="7">moved  to  Kansas  University,  but died  shortly thereafter, </text>
<text top="483" left="67" width="703" height="25" font="7">leaving  a  wife  (an  Esposito  girl) and  one  or two young </text>
<text top="514" left="67" width="116" height="25" font="7">children. </text>
<text top="570" left="75" width="747" height="25" font="6"><i>Note 111  </i>We  referred  to  Helen  Gallagher as  &#34;Bunny&#34;,  but </text>
<text top="601" left="67" width="759" height="25" font="7">when  she  returned  from  California  she  insisted  we  call  her </text>
<text top="632" left="68" width="743" height="25" font="7">Helen.  She  appeared  in  many Broadway shows,  including </text>
<text top="663" left="68" width="710" height="25" font="7">Brigadoon,  Sweet Charity,  No  No  Nanette, and  Finian's </text>
<text top="694" left="68" width="718" height="25" font="7">Rainbow.  But she  is  best known  for her role  in  the soap </text>
<text top="725" left="67" width="774" height="25" font="7">opera  Ryan's  Hope  which  ran  from  1975 through  1989.  She </text>
<text top="756" left="67" width="694" height="25" font="7">also  appeared  in  All  My  Children  and  One  Life  to  Live. </text>
<text top="812" left="67" width="445" height="25" font="13"><b>Marist Preparatory 1942-1945 </b></text>
<text top="869" left="67" width="576" height="25" font="13"><b>Novitiate and Scholastic ate 1945-1950 </b></text>
<text top="925" left="66" width="771" height="25" font="13"><b>Teaching at Saint Ann's Academy and Cardinal  Hayes </b></text>
<text top="956" left="67" width="354" height="25" font="13"><b>High School  1950-1958 </b></text>
<text top="1013" left="67" width="576" height="25" font="13"><b>President of Marist College  1958 -1964 </b></text>
<text top="1069" left="67" width="482" height="25" font="13"><b>European trips  1964, 1967, 1968 </b></text>
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<text top="50" left="67" width="561" height="25" font="13"><b>President of Marist College  1964-1970 </b></text>
<text top="107" left="67" width="561" height="25" font="13"><b>President of Marist College  1970-1979 </b></text>
<text top="163" left="67" width="663" height="25" font="13"><b>COO  of Boyden World Corporation  1979-1990 </b></text>
<text top="220" left="67" width="593" height="25" font="13"><b>COO  of Boyden  in  Hawthorne 1991-1999 </b></text>
<text top="276" left="67" width="260" height="25" font="13"><b>Retirement 1999 </b>-</text>
<text top="373" left="301" width="284" height="18" font="14">Print too small? Try <i>control </i>&amp; </text>
<text top="371" left="589" width="40" height="21" font="16">&#34;+&#34; </text>
<text top="396" left="306" width="318" height="18" font="14">Print too  large? Try <i>control </i>&amp;  &#34;-&#34; </text>
<text top="420" left="143" width="639" height="18" font="15"><i>This  works for Internet Explorer </i>7 <i>and Mozilla  Firefox but not AOL </i></text>
<text top="465" left="56" width="415" height="18" font="14">Endnotes  page first designed  19 July 2010 </text>
<text top="488" left="56" width="436" height="18" font="14">Most recent additions/revisions 22 July 2010 </text>
<text top="533" left="456" width="90" height="18" font="17">return  to </text>
<text top="534" left="549" width="32" height="17" font="3">= = </text>
<text top="532" left="580" width="19" height="20" font="4">&gt; </text>
<text top="533" left="601" width="114" height="18" font="18">toR  of Rage </text>
<text top="533" left="725" width="110" height="18" font="19">home Rage </text>
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