ANN
ANNABLE
ANNAERT
ANNAND
ANNANDALE
ANNEN
ANNESLEY
ANNETT
ANNING
ANNION
ANNIS
ANNUNTIATA
ANN o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2006-03-15 published
NANCY
ANN
DUNLOP
In loving memory of Nancy Ann Dunlop who died tragically on Sunday, March 5,
2006 at the age of 54. Nancy worked as an
RPN at Sudbury General Hospital
for over 20 years, moving to the Island she worked at both Little Current
and Mindemoya Hospitals. She was an avid curler and will be remembered for
her happy, friendly way, her affection and devotion to her family. Born to
Bob and Edith Fogal (both predeceased). Beloved wife of Chris Dunlop of
Sheguiandah. Loved mother of Karen and Karla both of Sudbury. Dear sister of
Marie and Lawrence Clarke, Shirley and Bob Graham, Pat and Doran Bryant,
Arla (predeceased) and Cam Thibeault, Mike and Valinda Fogal.
Daughter-in-law of Leila Dunlop (Burton predeceased). Remembered by in-laws
Garfield and Lenora, Fraser and Wendy, Mark and Margit, Kevin and Lynn. Will
be missed by special Friends Nicholas and Xander. Visitation was from 7 - 9
pm Tuesday at Island Funeral Home. Cremation. Donations to Mindemoya
Hospital Auxiliary would be appreciated.
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ANNABLE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-23 published
PARKES,
Kathleen
Loretta
Passed away quietly and peacefully at Lakeshore Lodge on Friday,
January 20, 2006 at the age of 95. Predeceased by her husband
Harry and sisters Mary
ANNABLE,
Helen
FITZHENRY and brother Bill
FITZHENRY.
Kay will be sorely missed and lovingly remembered
by her children, Carole
McDOWELL and Paul
PARKES and his wife
Anne, her grandchildren Jim
McDOWELL,
Mary and Brian
SHERMAN,
John and Angie
McDOWELL,
Paul
PARKES and Fee
TOTONCHIAN, Lori
and Steve HAENEY, her five great-grandchildren Kyle and Jessica
SHERMAN,
Stefan and Liam
McDOWELL and Ryan
HAENEY. Kay was dearly
loved by her nieces, nephews, family and Friends. Friends may
call at the Turner and Porter "Peel" Chapel, 2180 Hurontario Street,
Mississauga (Hwy. 10, North of Queen Elizabeth Way) on Saturday,
April 8, 2006 from 2 o'clock until the time of Service of Remembrance
in the Chapel at 3 o'clock. If desired, remembrances may be made
to the Canadian Cancer Society. Mom, thank you for your love,
guidance and generous heart; Nana, thank you for the love and
wonderful memories, we will all miss you.
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ANNAERT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-10-03 published
McKAY,
Margaret (formerly DE
PAEPE,
WINDSOR, née
ANNAERT)
Peacefully at Victoria Hospital with her family by her side on
Sunday,
October 1, 2006, Margaret
McKAY of Lambeth in her 69th
year. Cherished wife of John
McKAY of Lambeth. Loving mother
of Delbert DE
PAEPE and his friend Gayle of Norwich. Dear mother-in-law
of Larry LISABETH of Fairground and Darlene DE
PAEPE of Leamington.
Loving stepmother of Robin and Steven
LEGEN,
Jodi
WINDSOR and
her friend Frank, Kim and Dan
VAN
SCHAIK and Jeff and Chris
McKAY.
Proud grandmother of Shawn and Tammi, Travis and Annette
LISABETH,
Delbert Jr. and Kelsey DE
PAEPE,
Brandi DE
PAEPE, Michelle and
Mathew LEGEN,
Bradley and Carrie
VAN
SCHAIK, Connor and Curtis
McKAY.
Special great-grandmother of Taylor
LISABETH. Also survived
by her brothers Willy and Andrea
ANNAERT,
Luke and Pat
ANNAERT
and sisters-in-law Denise
ANNAERT their families and many other
extended family members. Predeceased by her husbands Alfred DE
PAEPE
Sr. (1982) and Edward
WINDSOR (1993;) her children Robert
DE PAEPE (1964,) Alfred DE
PAEPE
Jr. (1993,) Dianne
LISABETH
(2004) and brothers Roger and Maurice
ANNAERT. Dear daughter
of the late Karel and Madeleine
ANNAERT.
Friends may call at
the McFarlane and Roberts Funeral Home, (2240 Wharncliffe Road
South, Lambeth 519-652-2020) on Tuesday from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
then to Saint_Justin's Roman Catholic Church where the Funeral
Mass will be held on Wednesday, October 4, 2006 at 11: 00 a.m.
with Father Rick
HURDLE celebrating. Cremation with interment
Delhi Cemetery at a later date. Donations to the London Regional
Cancer Centre gratefully acknowledged. The "Duchess" was known
for working hard and playing hard, too. She will be remembered
for her great loves: her family, her Friends and her flowers.
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ANNAND o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-11-28 published
Larry HENDERSON,
Broadcaster And Editor: (1917-2006)
He was the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's first regular
newsreader on what became The National, only to leave for becoming
a household name. He later became editor of The Catholic Register
By F.F. LANGAN,
Special to The Globe and Mail; Globe and Mail
archives, Page S9
Toronto -- For five years in the 1950s, Larry
HENDERSON owned
the most famous face in Canada. As the first regular anchor of
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's national television news
from 1954 to 1959, his steep brow and distinctive mustache were
known from coast to coast. He later went to work for other broadcast
outlets, including CTV News, then switched careers by becoming
a conservative and outspoken editor of The Catholic Register.
But it was on early television that he made his mark. "There
isn't much doubt that, in Canada, the name
HENDERSON means television
news," said Maclean's in September of 1957. Twice a day, at 6: 45 p.m.
and 11 p.m., he would read the national news on the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation, which was then the only television
network in Canada.
His newscasts left a lasting impression on a young Peter
MANSBRIDGE
growing up in Ottawa. "We bought our first television in 1956 and
all I remember is Patti Page and Larry
HENDERSON," said Mr.
MANSBRIDGE,
now the lead anchor on The National. "He was my introduction
to television news. There was a lot of Larry
HENDERSON reading,
and the odd picture back then."
At the time, all television announcers had started out in radio,
with the information coming from wire services and the front
pages of newspapers. The first newscasts were more like bulletins
rather than today's glitzy programs. To ensure that viewers paid
attention to the news and not to a single face, the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation distributed the job among a roster of
announcers. Newscasts were only five minutes long and seldom
incorporated any film. If footage could be found, it was usually
presented in the style of a Movietone newsreel without sound,
except for what might later be added in the studio.
That all changed with the arrival of Larry
HENDERSON. He had
come to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation with a background
in theatre and music. Raised in Montreal, he was educated in
the city's Protestant school board system. His father was a wool
merchant, and his mother was an artist who encouraged her son's
musical and acting talents.
As a boy, he put on plays, wrote scripts and played the piano.
He won a scholarship to McGill University, where he studied music.
After graduating, he decided to try his luck on the English stage
and took a freighter across the Atlantic. He arrived in Britain
with $50 in his pocket and fetched up in Birmingham, where he
worked in a factory before landing a job in local theatre. One
of the highlights of his acting career was to perform with a
young Alec Guinness in Romeo and Juliet in Perth, Scotland. Then
the Second World War broke out and the theatre closed, forcing
him to return to Canada.
He used his theatrical training to work as an announcer for the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, studied electrical engineering
and joined the Officer Training Corps. In 1943, he was commissioned
a lieutenant in the Canadian Army signal corps and served as
a signals officer in Italy and northwest Europe.
In 1945, with the war almost over, he was recalled to direct
the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's shortwave International
Service that was broadcast to the troops. Shortly after that,
he returned to an announcer's job at the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation.
He left the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in the late 1940s
and worked for radio station CFRB, producing a program called
Headliners, 10-minute radio items from overseas that ran five
times a week on 24 Canadian radio stations.
In 1949, he married Joan
ANNAND, whom he had met at the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation. Two years later, they set out for Europe.
Armed with a recording machine, they retraced the steps of the
Canadian army through Italy and produced segments for Headliners.
An admirer of American broadcaster Edward R. Morrow, Mr.
HENDERSON
patterned his broadcasts on that style.
In 1950, he spent six weeks in Korea. As the first Canadian broadcaster
sent to cover the Korean War, he was accredited to U.S. General
Douglas MacArthur's headquarters and toured Japan, Hong Kong,
Indochina, India and Yugoslavia, all the while filing reports.
He also turned out a similar international series for Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation Radio called Passports to Adventure.
In 1954, Mr.
HENDERSON returned to the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation to pitch an idea to Mavor Moore, Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation-television's program director. An accomplished photographer,
Mr. HENDERSON's scheme was to run his slides on air with commentary.
Mr. Moore heard him out but had other ideas. Instead of the travelogue,
he decided to hire Mr.
HENDERSON as the first permanent reader
of national television news in Canada.
The policy of using a herd of announcers had not worked, and
the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation was looking for someone
permanent to anchor the news. At the same time, though, the corporation
was nervous about allowing a television personality to develop,
and it discouraged Mr.
HENDERSON from doing much more than present
the news. The newscast was expanded to 15 minutes, and Mr.
HENDERSON
began reading his scripts over film. His role grew and he became
one of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's first television
correspondents to report from the field.
Mr. HENDERSON made several visits to the Middle East, including
one to Egypt in April of 1956. That summer, Egypt's Gamal Abdel
Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal, and soon Britain, France
and Israel went to war against Cairo. The camera equipment of
the day was bulky. Mr.
HENDERSON travelled with Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation cameraman Bob Crone and all the necessary gear they
needed to record interviews.
Like many announcers of the time, Mr.
HENDERSON's background
was more theatrical than journalistic. This was before the era
of the teleprompter. Mr.
HENDERSON would memorize a script for
at least an hour before the broadcast. That way, he would seldom
have to look down at it.
It wasn't long before he was being recognized on the street,
and soon developed ideas of his own. His plan was to work exclusively
on The National. For its part, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
continued to distrust anyone who resembled a broadcast star and
made every effort to discourage him. Somewhat short-tempered
by nature, and perhaps feeling constrained by Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation policy, Mr.
HENDERSON became the enfant terrible
of Canadian television. He had a reputation for swearing on air,
and for speaking so quickly when prompted to speed up that the
audience heard only gibberish. He once stormed off the set when
a piece of footage failed to roll.
In 1959, he left the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation after
a dispute over his contract. Mr.
HENDERSON had proposed that
he anchor only the National; the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
wanted him to do other things as well. "Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation star Henderson dropped," read the headline in The
Toronto Telegram.
He went to work for radio station CHFI in Toronto and television
station CHCH in Hamilton. Later, he joined CTV National
News as a commentator on international affairs, and the weekend
newsreader. It was during this period that he became interested
in Catholicism.
"My father met a priest in Ottawa in the late 1960s and started
talking to him about his faith," said Graham
HENDERSON, who lives
in Toronto. "When he converted to Catholicism, the whole family
was shocked. My mother brought us up as Presbyterians [and] he
had been an atheist."
After he left broadcasting full time, Mr.
HENDERSON ran a school
for broadcasting and did other work, including going to Africa
for the Canadian International Development Agency to help set
up Tanzania's broadcasting system.
In 1973, Mr.
HENDERSON began writing articles for The Catholic
Register, a Toronto-based publication that ranked among the oldest
English-language Catholic weekly newspapers in Canada. He became
editor the following year and steered the newspaper to a prominent
role in the Canadian anti-abortion movement.
In 1981, he raised a furor by directing the Register to accept
paid advertisements from an anti-abortion group recommending
that voters reject Tory candidates in the Ontario election. Campaign
Life had placed ads to say Conservative candidates were poor
choices for voters and blamed then-premier William Davis for
supporting Pierre Trudeau's constitutional package, including
a Charter of Rights. Entrenchment of the Charter, it warned,
would lead to abortion on demand, homosexual marriages, adoptions
by homosexuals, and the loss by women of financial support from
their husbands.
In 1985, the Register urged Ontario voters to spoil ballots in
that year's provincial election. It was an attitude not supported
by the Archdiocese of Toronto, and the writing was on the wall.
Mr. HENDERSON left the paper the next year after having increased
subscriptions from 30,000 to 60,000, replaced by an editor with
more moderate views.
Mr. HENDERSON had the satisfaction of seeing his replacement,
Peter HOWELL, resign in little more than a year. By all accounts,
readers did not find favour with what they perceived as new liberal
views and wrote to tell him so. "Nobody likes getting hate mail,
but that's what it amounts to," Mr.
HOWELL said.
In contrast, many of the letters had praised Mr.
HENDERSON for
upholding traditional church views.
Mr. HENDERSON was not finished. He joined Challenge, a Catholic
monthly magazine, as managing editor and retired in 2002.
Larry HENDERSON was born in Montreal on September 4, 1917. He
died in Toronto of unspecified causes on November 26, 2006. He
was 89. He leaves his sons Graham and Ross. His wife, Joan, died
in 1980.
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ANNANDALE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-09-29 published
LORIMER,
Joseph
Earle
Passed away September 27, 2006 at Mississauga. Born July 17,
1916, Kerrobert Saskatchewan. Pre-deceased by first wife Esther
(1969.) Survived by 3 daughters - Judy
HUGHES,
Joanne
ANNANDALE
(Tom) and Jill
TRASOV
(Doug,) all of Vancouver, as well as by 8 grandchildren and
4 great-grandchildren. Also survived by present wife Yvonne (Avon
VANEXAN), her three children Nancy
MATTHEWS (Barry), Rick
VANEXAN
(Wendi) and Wendy
LITTLE
(Ken,) as well as by 6 more (step) grandchildren.
Aviation pioneer in the 1930s, flight instructor Commonwealth
Air Training Program World War 2, commercial pilot 35 years (T.C.A./Air
Canada) - after a long productive life and fun-filled retirement,
one last time the pilot 'slips the surly bonds of earth to dance
the skies on laughter-silvered wings…' Bon Voyage, Captain Joe.
Visitation 2pm, Memorial Service 3pm, Saturday September 30 2006,
Saint Paul's Anglican Church, 1190 Lorne Park Road, Mississauga
L5H 3A4. In lieu of flowers, donations to Saint Paul's Church would
be appreciated.
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ANNEN o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-02-18 published
DEATH,
Arthur
The family of Arthur
DEATH would like to express their sincere
gratitude to all whom supported and cared for him while in London:
Ross and Cathy
CHAPIN and the staff at Inspirit and Highview
Residences, the staff at London Health Sciences, Dr. R.
CRILLY
and staff, Geriatric Rehab Unit, Parkwood Hospital, and Dr. A.
ANNEN.
They would like to thank Dr. Patrick
POTTER for providing
the bagpipe solo and postlude at the memorial service. They deeply
appreciated all those who sent donations and flowers in remembrance,
to all who called and sent cards to express their sympathy, and
to their Friends and colleagues for the many acts of kindness
during their recent bereavement.
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ANNEN o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-05-15 published
BERGMAN,
Peter
Peacefully at University Hospital, London with his family by
his side, on Saturday, May 13th, 2006, Peter was ushered into
the presence of his Lord in his 90th year. Beloved husband of
Hilda for 66 years. Treasured father of Peter (Kathy Edelene
BRUBACHER) Lloyd, Don (Irene), Gary (Lynda), Beverley. Predeceased
by his youngest son David. Cherished by 9 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.
Peter ever devoted and faithful to his Lord has left us with
a Godly Heritage. Though he will be greatly missed we rejoice
in the fact that he's now in the presence of his Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ. Family will receive Friends on May 15, 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. at Tallman's Funeral Home, Vineland. Funeral Service
will be held at Fairview Church, 455 Geneva Street, St. Catharines
on Tuesday, May 16 at 11: 30 a.m. In lieu of flowers the family
would appreciate donations to North Park Community Church in
Peter's memory. A special thanks to Doctor
ANNEN,
University
Hospital
6th floor Palliative Care.
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ANNESLEY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2006-12-16 published
David PARTRIDGE,
Painter And Sculptor (1919-2006)
With a 'virtuosity of hammering,' his hard-edged, tactile and
sculptural Naillies transformed nails and wood into art forms
that are both evocative and spiritual, writes Sandra
MARTIN
By Sandra MARTIN,
Page
S11
What came first, the nail or the hammer? That is the question
people ponder about artist David
PARTRIDGE.
Although he began
his artistic career as a painter and a printmaker, he is best
known for his Naillies. To create them, he would begin with a
piece of plywood, although he was known to use doors, beams and
other surfaces, which he sometimes covered in buffed or abraded
aluminum. Then he would hammer in nails of all sorts (aluminum,
copper and steel) and lengths, beginning with the shortest to
create a "relief sculpture." According to his fancy, he polished
or trimmed the hammered nail heads, wrapped the Naillie in duct
tape to give the surface more texture and lacquered or painted
portions of the finished work.
The
Naillies were quite spectacular, said artist Tony
URQUHART,
who was mentored by Mr.
PARTRIDGE in the 1950s. Although a very
different type of artist, Mr.
URQUHART also creates sculptural
collages or "boxes" out of wood, nails and many other things.
"They were things that had never been done before and they were
made at a very high level." And they also reflected many of the
artistic and social concerns of the time.
Besides the visual, tactile and auditory sensations of the works,
Mr. URQUHART was really impressed by "the virtuosity of his hammering."
By that, he meant Mr.
PARTRIDGE's workmanship in getting the
nails in straight and figuring out how deep to hammer them. "I
couldn't do that," he said. "If you X-rayed one of my boxes.
I would be embarrassed because the nails go in at different angles
and now I pre-drill them. But with the Naillies, one nail out
of line and …"
Mr. PARTRIDGE was an intensely creative person who seemed to
make art instinctively and organically rather than consciously
and deliberately. His daughter, Kate, says his life was a series
of creative cycles interspersed with down or resting phases until
something dramatic happened in his life or his environment, and
that would spark another creative synergy.
He is curiously not well known, said artist Ron
BLOORE, who had
known Mr. PARTRIDGE as an artist and a friend since the late
1950s. "That guy had a real collection of weird wild nails."
The works, especially the later ones, sometimes got to be quasi-religious
or spiritual, he said, because they explored "a visionary experience."
David Gerry
PARTRIDGE was the youngest child of Albert Gerry
and Edith (née
HARPHAM)
PARTRIDGE.
His favourite toy as a child
was a hammer, which he used to drag around with him and hit things
although not always from a creative impulse. One of his grandfathers
was a roofer, and the other was an undertaker, so that's where
he may have inherited his affinity for hammering nails, his wife
suggested this week. His other great love was flying, a passion
that can be dated to seeing his first airplane in the 1920s on
a family visit to Florida.
His father was a senior executive with Goodyear Tire, and so
David, his mother and his older sisters, Elspeth and Emily, moved
across the Atlantic in 1928 when Mr.
PARTRIDGE was transferred
to England. During the seven years that his father served as
president of the British firm, David went to Mostyn House School
in Cheshire, then Radley College in Oxfordshire. When they moved
to Canada in 1935 so that Albert
PARTRIDGE could head the Canadian
operations of Goodyear, David was sent to Trinity College School
in Port Hope.
That's where he met Edward
CAYLEY, who always called him Birdy
and considered him his closest friend for the next 76 years.
"We were opposites. He was stubborn and impatient, but for some
reason we got on," said Mr.
CAYLEY, noting that his friend had
a great sense of humour. "He was always restless, and that's
where the creativity came in."
After
Trinity
College School, Mr.
PARTRIDGE went to Trinity College
at the University of Toronto, concentrating on English, history
and geology, and graduated in 1941. He immediately enlisted in
the Royal Canadian Air Force, where he scored so highly on his
training courses that he was made a flight instructor and spent
the war, much to his chagrin, on this side of the Atlantic.
On June 14, 1943, he married Helen Rosemary
ANNESLEY (always
known as Tibs), who was serving as a Women's Royal Naval Service.
The couple had known each other slightly at university until
their final year, when his mother spotted Ms.
ANNESLEY at a reception
for visiting parents and told her son that he should "marry that
girl."
The year after they had both graduated, they began seeing each
other socially, and became even closer when both of them were
posted to Ottawa, she with the Royal Canadian Navy and he with
the air force. By then, his mother was dead and it was her mother
who was issuing the directives that Mr.
PARTRIDGE should "marry
that girl."
After the war, the
PARTRIDGEs moved to St. Catharines, Ontario,
where he taught art first at Appleby College and then at Ridley
College. Their two children -- Katharine (always called Kate),
a psychologist, and John, a reporter at The Globe and Mail --
were born there in 1945 and 1947. This was the period in which
he was finding himself as a water colourist and a printmaker.
He won a British Council scholarship to study at the Slade School
at the University of London, so the whole family lived in Hampstead
for the academic year 1950-51. Afterward, Mr.
PARTRIDGE enthused
about working with artists Tom Monnington and Edward Ardizzone,
the "wonderful introduction into etching and engraving" he received
from John Buckland-Wright, and the stimulation of being in contact
with Graham Sutherland and John Piper, among other Slade professors.
After returning to Canada, he taught high school art at St. Catharines
Collegiate and Vocational Institute, co-founded the St. Catharines
Art Association and the St. Catharines Public Library Art Gallery
(and was its first curator) and taught summer school at Queen's,
the same place he had himself studied a decade earlier.
The PARTRIDGEs, who were both anglophiles, lived in Sussex with
their children from 1956 to 1958 and for a longer stint beginning
in 1960. All the while, he was showing in group and solo exhibitions
in Canada and abroad. In February and March of 1958, he was studying
etching and engraving with William Hayter at Atelier 17 in Paris
when he had a creative breakthrough.
"I was fascinated by the irregular surfaces of deep-etched copper
and zinc plates, irrespective of their purpose in printing. They
became low-relief sculptures, which seemed to my ex-pilot's eyes
like aerial views of topography," is the way he described the
process later. One Saturday, he was gallery-hopping and came
across an exhibition by Hungarian sculptor Zoltan Kemeny that
he described as "bas-reliefs using all manner of metal bits and
pieces, welded into an even more exciting aerial vision than
the etched plates had provided."
The eureka moment came in Ottawa (where the family was then living)
the following winter when he came across a piece of plywood left
over from a renovation. "Nails were at hand and a hammer! I descended
to the basement and made my first nail sculpture." The Naillies,
as Mr. PARTRIDGE called them, were born. Wood, the most basic
building material, became a platform for work that undulated
with rhythm, light and texture. Hard-edged, tactile and sculptural,
Naillies transcended their utilitarian origins and transformed
nails and wood into something evocative and spiritual. Naillies
seemed too skinny a word for a new art form, so at a dinner party
with Alan Jarvis of the National Gallery and his wife, Mrs.
PARTRIDGE
came up with the term "configurations."
He had his first solo exhibition of paintings, drawings and configurations
at the Robertson Galleries in Ottawa in October of 1960, the
same year he gave up full-time teaching and moved his family
back to England. They stayed until 1974. Since then, Naillies
have been acquired by the National Gallery, the Art Gallery of
Ontario, the Tate Gallery, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and
the Gallery of New South Wales and many other institutions. He
also won commissions, such as Metropolis, a huge mural for the
new city hall in Toronto and the Royal Canadian Air Force Memorial
in Westminster Cathedral in London.
After returning from England, they settled in Toronto, spending
summers at a cottage near Stony Lake, Ontario, that they bought
from Mrs. PARTRIDGE's family. By 1980, Mr.
PARTRIDGE, who had
some spare cash after having sold a big Naillie, indulged his
unquenchable love of flying by buying himself a do-it-yourself
kit for an ultra-light plane. He partially constructed it at
his studio on Queen Street and then hauled it up to the cottage,
where he attached floats and set off across the lake, never having
flown that kind of plane before.
He took some great photographs, said Mrs.
PARTRIDGE, by tying
a string around his big toe and attaching it to a camera "so
he could fly with both hands, which he needed to do, and his
big toe would pull on the thread and snap a photograph." Once
again, he was interested in aerial views of the landscape, the
same topographical impressions that he created in his Naillies.
About this time, Mr.
PARTRIDGE reconnected with his old friend
Ed CAYLEY, who had also been living abroad, by phoning to ask:
"Do you still like movies?" The two men resumed a ritual weekly
trip to the movies that had begun in their undergraduate days
at the University of Toronto. After Mr.
PARTRIDGE had a stroke
a little more than three years ago that seriously hampered his
mobility, Mr.
CAYLEY brought lunch and a DVD to watch with
his old friend at home.
David Gerry
PARTRIDGE was born on October 5, 1919, in Akron,
Ohio. He died of heart disease on December 11, 2006, after a
stroke and a heart attack. He was 87. He is survived by his wife,
Tibs, his daughter Kate, his son John and their spouses. There
will be a public graveside service today at 10 a.m. at Saint_James-the-Less
Cemetery in Toronto.
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-03-10 published
WHALE,
Gordon
L.
A resident of Sombra Township, passed away peacefully on Wednesday,
March 8, 2006 in his 71st year. Gord lived his whole life on
the family homestead in Duthill and was the
son of the late Walter
Reginald and Lavina Irene
(McINTYRE)
WHALE. He had worked for
the Ministry of Transportation in Lambton County and loved his
trees, flowers, birds, cattle and cats Flip and Flop. Beloved husband
of Midge and the late Christina (1985). Loving father and father-in-law
of Karen and Jerry
ANNETT of St. Clair Township, Kevin and Judi
of Ottawa, David and Lynne of Aylmer and stepfather of Jim and
Robin McRAE,
Kathy and Tom
O'CONNOR, Donna and Garnet
FOX, Joe
and Ellen MILNER and the late Roy. Dear grandfather of 10 grandchildren.
Brother of Jean
RICHARDSON, Eileen
ANDERSON, Bill
WHALE and the
late Beulah
KALAR, Maude
TAILOR/TAYLOR, Hilda
PERRY, Harry
WHALE, Betty
WILSON and John and Huey
WHALE.
Gord will be missed by his mother-in-law
Annie JOYCE and his many nieces and nephews. Friends may call
at the Haycock-Cavanah Funeral Home, 409 Nelson Street in Wallaceburg
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on Friday. The funeral services will be
held on Saturday, March 11, in the chapel at 2 p.m. The interment
will follow at Duthill Cemetery. If desired remembrances to the
Canadian Cancer Society or the Wilksport United Church may be
left at the funeral home. 519-672-3231.
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-03 published
PALOCZ,
Austin
Nash
Raymond
Infant son of Ray and Tracy
(ANNETT)
PALOCZ, died suddenly in
Wallaceburg on Wednesday, May 31, 2006. Loved brother of Miranda.
Dear grand_son of Glen and Edna
ANNETT of Petrolia and Gus and
Helen PALOCZ of Port Lambton. Special nephew to Chris and Sylvanna
PALOCZ, Larry and Barb
PALOCZ, Jeff
PALOCZ, Sandy and Pete
WELSH,
and Brian ANNETT.
Friends may call at the Haycock-Cavanagh Funeral
Home, 409 Nelson Street (at Elgin) in Wallaceburg from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. on Sunday. The funeral service will be conducted from
the funeral home by Rev. Dean
ADLAM on Monday, June 5 at 11 a.m.
Interment will follow at Riverview Cemetery. If desired, remembrances
to the C.D.L.S. Foundation may be left at the funeral home. 519-627-3231.
Online condolences may be sent to austin.palocz@cavanaghfuneralhome.ca
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-17 published
ANNETT,
June▼
In memory of a sister June who passed away June 17th, 2005.
Although we're not together
The way we used to be
Memories of yesteryear will be
Forever in our minds.
Loved and sadly missed by Allan and Billie.
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-17 published
ANNETT,
June▲
When I look around today, It seems so few people ever get to
know, What it feels like to be that special to someone as they
grow… Love you forever, Gram. Tammy, Craig, Tyler, Chase
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-07-08 published
PEASLEE,
Shirley
(SIMPSON)
Peacefully at Bluewater Health Norman Street Site, Sarnia on
Thursday,
July 6, 2006 Shirley
(SIMPSON)
PEASLEE, age 80 of Sarnia.
Shirley was a long time member of Saint Paul's United Church, active
in the United Church Women and served for 20 years organizing
community outreach for Saint Paul's. She was an avid participant
with her Bridge Club buddies. Beloved wife of Frank
PEASLEE.
Loving mother of Janice and David
ADAM/ADAMS,
Brenda and Mike
WALTERS
and the late Joan
GARRISON.
Also survived by son-in-law David
GARRISON and his wife
Connie.
Loved grandmother of Jake and Jeremy
FELKER,
Nicholas and Devin
WALTERS, Jesse and Mackenzie
GARRISON,
step-grandmother to Nicole
GALLANT and her husband Trevor, Stuart
ADAM/ADAMS and step-great-grandmother to Tristan, Aspen and Tage.
Dear sister to Gertrude
HALL,
Audrey and Cecil
ARMSTRONG, Edna
and Glen ANNETT,
Maxine and Ross
HELPS. Also survived by sisters-in-law
Marion SIMPSON,
Evelyn
DEKEYSER and Margaret
PEASLEE. Predeceased
by her brothers James
SIMPSON,
Wray
SIMPSON and her sister Lois
LANGIS. A memorial service will be held at Smith Funeral Home,
1576 London Line, Sarnia on Monday, July 10, 2006 at 2: 00 p.m.
Cremation has taken place. Family and Friends will be received
at the Smith Funeral Home on Sunday evening from 7 to 9 p.m.
Sympathy through donations to the Joan Garrison Memorial Fund-Saint_Joseph's
Health Care Foundation in London or the Charity of Choice would
be appreciated by the family. Memories and condolences may be
sent online at www.smithfuneralhome.ca
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-09-16 published
ROBICHAUD,
Peter
Raymond
Peacefully surrounded by his family at London Health Sciences
Centre, University Hospital on Thursday, September 14, 2006 Peter
Raymond ROBICHAUD in his 65th year. Dear wife of Betty. Loving
father of Charlene
ROBICHAUD-
TERMEER.
Loved
son of Dora
ROBICHAUD.
Stepfather of Teresa and Dave
McCORMACK,
Paula and Philip
HUGHES
and Alex ANNETT.
Proud "
Poppi" of Zackery
TERMEER, Katherine
and Kylie. Dear brother of Lucille and John
FRENETTE,
Simone
and Leonard
LEBLANC,
Bob and Mary
ROBERTS, Jo-Anne
ROBICHAUD,
Valerie and Tom
GOURLEY and John and Diana
ROBICHAUD.
Predeceased
by his sisters Roberta, Francine and Marcia. Uncle Peter will
be missed by Lee, Liesje, Jason, Dave, Stacie, Shawn and several
other nieces, nephews and cousins. Thanks to the staff, doctors
especially the nurses and
PSAs at University Hospital for
their care and support. Visitors will be received at John T.
Donohue Funeral Home, 362 Waterloo Street at King Street, on
Sunday from 4-6 o'clock, where the funeral service will be held
on Monday at 12 noon. Cremation with interment in Mount Pleasant
Cemetery. Donations to the Multi-Organ Transplant Unit, c/o London
Health Sciences Foundation would be appreciated.
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-10-02 published
LEBERT,
Julien
At Four Counties Health Services, Newbury, on Friday, September 29,
2006. Julien
LEBERT, 85 years, of Petrolia. Beloved husband of
the late Germaine (née
COMARTIN) (2000.) Dear father of Paul
and Karen LEBERT of Petrolia, Joanne
PHILLIPS of Saskatoon, Pat
REDICK of Alvinston, Gisele and Rick
DEW of Alvinston, Elaine
NEVE of Petrolia, Pierre and Lori
LEBERT of Petrolia, Angela
and Mark ANNETT of Wyoming and Doris and Dave
THROWER of Petrolia.
Dear brother of Aurele and Nadia
LEBERT of Miller Lake, Urbain
and Bernadette
LEBERT of Watford, Rosaire
LEBERT of Belle River,
Marie UEBBING of Michigan, and the late Zoville
GAGNIER,
Briget
DESMARAIS,
Gerard,
George, and Leo
LEBERT. Also survived by 20 grandchildren
and 14 great-grandchildren. Visitors will be received on Monday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the Needham-Jay Funeral Home,
where a prayer vigil will be held at 8: 45 p.m. The funeral mass
will be celebrated at St. Phillips Church, Petrolia, on Tuesday,
October 3, 2005 at 11: 00 a.m. Interment in Mount Calvary Cemetery,
Wyoming. As expressions of sympathy, memorial donations may be
made by cheque to the Canadian Cancer Society or the Heart and
Stroke Foundation of Ontario. Memories and condolences may be
sent on line at www.needhamjay.com
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-10-04 published
DROPE,
Jean
Victoria (née
McCAUSLAND)
At Bluewater Health -- C.E.E. Site, Petrolia, on Monday, October 2,
2006. Jean Victoria
DROPE (née
McCAUSLAND,) 86 years, of Petrolia.
Beloved wife of the late Harold
DROPE
(July 4, 1997.) Dear mother
of William Harold
DROPE of Petrolia. Dear sister of Helen
McCAUSLAND
of London. Dear aunt of Cathy
McCRAE of London. Also survived
by a nephew, Keith
DROPE and predeceased by a sister, Mary
McCRAE
(1996,) a sister-in-law, Erma
STRANGWAY, a niece Helen
ANNETT
and a nephew, Murray
DROPE.
Also survived by several cousins.
Jean was a retired teacher, having taught for the public school
system in Petrolia, Sarnia and Plympton, Enniskillen and Sarnia
Townships. Visitors will be received on Thursday, October 5,
2006, at the Needham-Jay Funeral Home, Petrolia, from 10 a.m.
until service time at 11: 00 a.m. with Rev. Dr. Robert M.
GIBSON
of Saint Paul's United Church, Petrolia, officiating. Interment
in Wyoming Cemetery. As expressions of sympathy, memorial donations
may be made by cheque to the C.E.E. Hospital Foundation or the
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario. Memories and condelences
may be sent online at www.needhamjay.com
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-10-19 published
ANNETT,
Alice
Dorothy
Of Caressant Care Nursing Home, Saint Thomas and formerly of Ottawa
on Wednesday, October 18, 2006, at her late residence, in her
82nd year. Alice was born in Calgary, Alberta on January 23,
1925, the daughter of the late Gerald Sydney and Melissa
BIEHL)
ANNETT and sister of the late Frances
WITHEROW,
Margaret
BOWLBY
and Sydney Henry
ANNETT.
Sadly missed by a number of nieces and
nephews. Alice worked for the Government of Canada. She was a
member of the First Baptist Church, Ottawa, the Royal Canadian
Legion, and supported the Save the Children Program. A private
family service will be held at Williams Funeral Home, 45 Elgin
Street, Saint Thomas on Tuesday morning. Cremation to follow, with
interment of ashes in Fingal Cemetery. No public visitation.
Remembrances may be made to the charity of choice
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ANNETT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-11-06 published
SIGSWORTH,
V.
Marguerite
(JENNINGS)
At Longworth Long Term Care, London on Saturday, November 4th,
2006 V. Marguerite
(JENNINGS)
SIGSWORTH of London in her 88th
year. Beloved wife of John
SIGSWORTH. Dear mother of Grant
SIGSWORTH
and his wife
Olwen of whitby. Dear sister of Helen
HESS of Wallaceburg,
Dorcas HARRIS and her husband Carman of Sarnia and sister-in-law
Alice SIGSWORTH of London. Predeceased by her brother Harold
JENNINGS and his wife
Ethel and her sisters Nellie
JENNINGS,
Esther LEWIS and her husband Charles, Mabel
DAWSON and her husband
Neil and Gertrude
JENNINGS and her brothers-in-law Harry
ANNETT
and Morris
CHILDS.
Loving grandmother of Michael
SIGSWORTH and
his wife Natalie and Bryan
SIGSWORTH all of Whitby. Fondly remembered
by her nieces and her nephews. Marguerite was born in Dawn Township
near Dresden, trained in nursing at London's Victoria Hospital
and the University of Washington. Before marriage in 1964 she
served as head Nurse at Imperial Oil's Medical Clinic in Sarnia.
Friends will be received by the family from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday
at the A. Millard George Funeral Home, 60 Ridout Street South,
London where the funeral service will be conducted in the chapel
on Tuesday, November 7th, 2006 at 11: 00 a.m. with Reverend Terry
MOWAT of Free Methodist Church, London officiating. Interment
in Harrowsmith Cemetery, Harrowsmith, Ontario. As an expression
of sympathy, memorial donations may be made to International
Child Care Ministries c/o the Free Methodist Church, 402 Commissioners
Road West, London, Ontario N6J 1Y3. (online condolences accepted
at www.amgeorgefh.on.ca)
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ANNETT - All Categories in OGSPI
ANNING o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-06-17 published
ANNING,
John "
Jack"
Henry
It is with great sadness that the family of John (Jack) Henry
ANNING announces the passing of their father at Marshall Gowland
Manor peacefully with his family at his side, on Friday, June 16,
2006, in his 90th year. Beloved husband of the late Ina
(RIDDELL)
ANNING (2004.) Jack and Ina were happily married for 65 years.
He will be sadly missed by his children and their spouses, Jane
and Jim GALLIE,
Beth and Bob
HYSTEAD, Gary and Ginny
ANNING and
Bill ANNING all of Sarnia, 9 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren.
Born in Kincardine, Ontario, he came to Sarnia as a youngster.
Jack was a member of Liberty Lodge #419 Ancient, Free and Accepted
Masons and the Mocha Shrine. Predeceased by his siblings Elizabeth,
Lillian, Greta and Dorothy. The funeral service will be held
on Monday, June 19, 2006 at 12: 00 noon from Smith Funeral Home,
1576 London Line, Sarnia. Interment will follow in Lakeview Cemetery.
Family and Friends will be received at Smith Funeral Home on
Monday from 10: 30 a.m. until service time at 12:00 noon. As an
expression of sympathy, memorial donations may be made to the
charity of your choice. Memories and condolences may be sent
on line to www.smithfuneralhome.ca
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ANNING o@ca.on.simcoe_county.nottawasaga.stayner.stayner_sun 2006-02-08 published
ANNING,
Jean
(May 17, 1929-February 11, 2004)
"Gone are the days we used to share,
But in our hearts you are always there,
The gates of memory will never close,
We miss you more than anyone knows,
With tender love and deep regret,
We who love you will never forget"
Forever loved and remembered by husband Les; sons Leslie Jr.
and Lee; daughters-in-law Helen, Brenda and Gerda; and grand_sons,
Ryan and Devon
Page 14
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ANNING - All Categories in OGSPI
ANNION o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-23 published
TAAL,
Maarten
Born in Scheveningen, the Netherlands on October 23, 1934, passed
away on January 21, 2006 in his 72nd year with his family by
his side. Maarten is survived by his wife of many years Lainie.
Loving "Pa" of Riekie
RONCINSKE (Lucky), Brian (Laura), Paulien
ANNION (Dave), Maarten Jr. (Michele). Proud Opa of Lainie
RIDE-
OUT
(Barry,) Maarten
ANNION
(Janet,)
Brian
ANNION (Tina,) Gavin,
Emily, Jacob, and Maxwell and Great Opa of Elise, Georgia, Thea,
Clayton, and Brianna. Dear brother of Jan (Chris), Henk (Lainie),
Rinus (Mia). He will be sadly missed by numerous nieces and nephews
in the Netherlands. Maarten founded Taalman Engineered Products,
a family run company that has become an industry leader in the
radiator aftermarket of North America. This was made possible
through his hard work and determination. Qualities that all who
knew him would attest that he had in abundance. A loving father
and devoted husband, Maarten will be missed by all those whose
lives he has touched. The family wishes to thank the Victorian
Order of Nurses and Community Care Access Centre of Hamilton
for all of their efforts. Family and Friends will be received
at the Glen Oaks Visitation, Chapel and Reception Centre, 3164
Ninth Line, Oakville (Ninth Line and Dundas Street) on Tuesday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. A celebration of Maarten's life will be
held at the Glen Oaks Memorial Chapel on Wednesday January 25,
2006 at 4 p.m. Cremation.
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ANNION - All Categories in OGSPI
ANNIS o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2006-01-21 published
ARMSTRONG,
Mary▼
Irene▼ (née
ANNIS)
Passed away peacefully, in the arms of her children at Grey Bruce
Health Services, Owen Sound, Friday January 20th, 2006. Mary
Irene (ANNIS)
ARMSTRONG of Markdale in her 90th year. Registered
Nurse, Life time member of Grey Chapter #170 Order of Eastern
Star, long time member of Annesley United Church. Beloved wife
of the late Nelson
ARMSTRONG (1966.) Devoted mother of Lynn
WYVILL
(Ron) of Markdale, Stan (Diane) of Keswick, Dave (Dale) of Markdale,
and Ted (Jean) of Thunder Bay. Loving grandmother of Jennifer
(George), Wendy (Brian), Greg (Julie), Brad, Mark, Meaghan, Amy,
Heather, Thomas and Myles. Special great-grandmother of Emily,
Hannah, Jacob and Sophia. Sadly missed by brother Lloyd
ANNIS
(Hennie) of Owen Sound. Predeceased by her parents the Reverend Stanley
ANNIS and Agnes (Gregg
DAVIS)
ANNIS (missionaries - West China
Mission 1916-1927) and brothers Edward, Harold and Bill. The
family will receive Friends at the May Funeral Home, Markdale
on Sunday 2: 00 to 4:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. A Funeral Service
will be held at Annesley United Church, Markdale, Monday January
23rd, 2006 at 1: 30 p.m. Interment in Markdale Cemetery. If desired,
donations to Annesley United Church or charity of choice would
be appreciated. Grey Chapter #170 Order of The Eastern Star will
hold a memorial service in the funeral home Sunday at 4: 15 p.m.
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ANNIS o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2006-10-10 published
ANNIS,
James
Thomas
It is with great sadness that we announce that Jim passed away
on October 7, 2006 at the Garry Armstrong Home in Ottawa. Jim
was born on December 13, 1917 in Hibbert Township. Predeceased
by his parents Wilbert and Mabel Margaret
(FAWCETT)
ANNIS, brother
Gordon and daughter Evelyn
FISHER
(David deceased.) Lovingly
remembered by his wife of 65 years, Marie (née
VINCENT,) his
daughters Dorinda
McCARTHY and Sandra
WALKER
(David,) grandchildren,
Melanie, Lori (Bob), Matthew (Kendra), Michael, Meagan, Erin,
Alicia and Jessica, sisters Frances
NELLIGAN
(Frank deceased)
and Doris McDERMOTT
(Robert deceased.) Jim graduated from the
Ontario Veterinary College, in Guelph. Following his graduation,
he practiced for a year at Blyth, Ontario before joining the
Department of Agriculture with the federal government. He was
assigned to Vancouver until 1948 and later worked in Windsor,
Toronto, Regina, Ottawa and Moncton retiring to London, Ontario
in 1978. He and his wife moved to Ottawa in the spring of 2005.
Friends will be received at the Lockhart Funeral Home, 109 Montreal
Street, Mitchell on Thursday from 1: 00 p.m. until time of funeral
service at 2: 00 p.m. Interment in Woodland Cemetery, Mitchell.
Online condolences at www.lockhartfuneralhome.com.
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ANNIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-22 published
ARMSTRONG,
Mary▲
Irene▲ (née
ANNIS)
Passed away peacefully, in the arms of her children at Grey Bruce
Health Services, Owen Sound, Friday, January 20, 2006. Mary Irene
(ANNIS)
ARMSTRONG of Markdale in her 90th year. Registered Nurse,
Life time member of Grey Chapter No. 170 Order of Eastern Star,
long time member of Annesley United Church. Beloved wife of the
late Nelson
ARMSTRONG (1966.) Devoted mother of Lynn
WYVILL
(Ron)
of Markdale, Stan (Diane) of Keswick, Dave (Dale) of Markdale,
and Ted (Jean) of Thunder Bay. Loving grandmother of Jennifer
(George), Wendy (Brian), Greg (Julie), Brad, Mark, Meaghan, Amy,
Heather, Thomas and Myles. Special great-grandmother of Emily,
Hannah, Jacob and Sophia. Sadly missed by brother Lloyd
ANNIS
(Hennie) of Owen Sound. Predeceased by her parents the Reverend Stanley
ANNIS and Agnes (Gregg
DAVIS)
ANNIS (missionaries - West China
Mission 1916-1927) and brothers Edward, Harold and Bill. The
family will receive Friends at the May Funeral Home, 63 Main
St. E., Markdale (1-877-986-3310) on Sunday 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m. A Funeral Service will be held at Annesley United Church,
Markdale, Monday January 23, 2006 at 1: 30 p.m. Interment in Markdale
Cemetery. If desired, donations to Annesley United Church or
charity of choice would be appreciated. Grey Chapter No. 170
Order of The Eastern Star will hold a memorial service in the
funeral home Sunday at 4: 15 p.m.
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ANNIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-01-28 published
KRIST,
Fiona (née
TERRY)
(A.Y.S.P. Social Worker and avid hockey mom and volunteer)
Peacefully at Brampton Hospital, on Thursday January 26, 2006,
at the age of 48, following a valiant battle with cancer. Loving
wife of Chris and proud and loving mother of Will (Laura), Eric
(Deanna) and Jevone. Beloved daughter of Clarice and the late
Dennis TERRY and daughter-in-law of Pieter
KRISAINT_Dear sister
of Paul (Lynn)
KNIPE and Zoe (Chris)
MULHALL,
Christopher
TERRY,
Lauren (John)
HELE and Estelle (Brian)
ANNIS and their families.
Sadly missed by brothers-in-law Ron and Peter
KRIST, relatives
and Friends in Canada and abroad. Friends may call at the Ward
Funeral Home "Brampton Chapel", 52 Main Street South (Hwy. 10),
Brampton, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. Funeral service
will be held on Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock at North Bramalea
United Church, 363 Howden Blvd. at Vodden Street, Brampton, followed
by interment at Brampton Cemetery. As expressions of sympathy,
donations to the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated.
Condolences may be sent to fiona.krist@wardfh.com
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ANNIS - All Categories in OGSPI
ANNUNTIATA o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2006-04-03 published
BROWNE,
Patrick
Francis
Passed away, at the Avalon Nursing Home, Orangeville, on Friday,
March 31, 2006, at the age of 83. Beloved father of Michael,
Eileen, Maureen
FRAWLEY,
Joseph and his wife
Marilyn and Brigid.
Loving grandfather of 11 grandchildren and great-grandfather
of 3. Dear brother of Sr. Mary
ANNUNTIATA of Ireland, Bridget
(deceased 2001), Eileen of England, Margaret of Ireland, Kathleen
(deceased 1990), Michael John of Mississauga, Elizabeth of England,
Bernard of Ireland, and Thomas (deceased 1998). Friends may call
at the Turner and Porter "Peel" Chapel, 2180 Hurontario St. (Hwy. 10,
North of Queen Elizabeth Way), from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on Tuesday.
Funeral Mass will be held on Wednesday, April 5, 2006 at 10: 00 a.m.
from Saint Mary Star of the Sea Church, 11 Peter St. S., Mississauga.
Interment Ballycastle Cemetery, Co. Mayo, Ireland.
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ANNUNTIATA - All Categories in OGSPI