(A listing of deaths of which word has been receivedwithin the past month. Full notices may appear in thisissue or a later one.)
Jackson, Robert '00, October 19 Hill, Roger F. '08, September 18 Howard, Stanley R. '10, September 6 Blanchard, Ralph H. '11, September 28 Gately, Charles E. '12, September 23 O'Connor, Johnson '12, July 1 Washburn, Albert B. '13, October 27 Dearing, Arthur H. '14, May 8 Slade, Benjamin J. '15, August 31 Shaw, Norman P. '18, September 22 Carter, James W. '19, March 2 Bellows, Raymond A. '20, July 28 Brenton, Leslie H. '25, October 1 Sailer, Henry C. '25, October 2 Heep, William G. Jr. '28, October 21 Fowler, Edward E. '29, September 14 Talbott, Raymond B. '29, September 18 Mandeville, Herbert W. '30, July 14 Nestler, Carlos W. '30, September 1 Steers, George A. '30, October 13 Leach, Stanley M. '32, September 25 Newfang, Robert W. '32, October 11 Fogarty, John G. '34 October 20 Green, Harold R. '34, July 21 Franckle, Lewis E. '36, September 22 Sullivan, J. Vincent Jr. '37, October 12 Brown, Robert F. '39, October 23 Murphy, Francis P. Jr. '44, October 4 Haigh, F. Dwight Jr. '49, September 22
1900
ROBERT JACKSON, the last surviving member of his class, died October 19 at New York Hospital. He was born in Dover, N.H., May 21, 1880 and came from Littleton (N.H.) High School to Dartmouth as the youngest member of 1900. He attended Harvard Law School with the Class of 1904 and was admitted to practice in Concord, N.H.
Mr. Jackson's experience in politics went back to the Bull Moose campaign of 1912 in New Hampshire but his continuing work was for the Democrats, the party of his family. Like his father, he became chairman of the N.H. Democratic Committee. He was a national committeeman from his state for nine years, and secretary of the national committee from 1932 to 1935, for a time also acting as treasurer. His wife, the former Dorothy Branch, who died in 1933, was the first woman elected to the national committee of a major political party.
In July of 1920 President Woodrow Wilson offered Mr. Jackson the appointment to succeed Franklin D. Roosevelt as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, but he declined. However, he did continue active in politics, including the campaign to nominate and elect Roosevelt and Garner.
He organized and was chairman of the board of Shattuck Company which built the shipyard at Newinton, N.H., in 1917, and from 1919 to 1931 he was of Dominion Stores Ltd. which he organized. Canada's largest chain store. He was also the director of numerous companies.
Multiple interests were his characteristic: he financed the first Rodgers and Hart musical, was co-owner of the first private plane in the state, a connoisseur of fine art, sponsor of the Orteig Prize for the first flight from New York to Paris (which was unsuccessful), and donor of the statue which stands at Le Bourget where Lindberg landed a year later, after having conceived his single motor plane idea in the Orteig attempt.
Surviving Mr. Jackson are two daughters, Mrs. Sarah Jackson Doyle and Mrs. Hope Jackson Garvan, and one granddaughter, Mrs. Patricia Garvan Grover.
1906
EDWARD BLANCHARD REDMAN, retired Hearst newspapers executive and for many years manager of the Dartmouth Club of New York City, where he was known as "Mr. Dartmouth," died at the Hanover (N.H.) Convalescent Center November 12. He had celebrated his 90th birthday November 3.
A 1906 Phi Beta Kappa graduate, Ned went to work upon his graduation for the Western Electric Co., first at Chicago and later in Minneapolis, from 1906-16. After working for a real estate firm in Los Angeles, he served as executive director of the American Red Cross in New York and Washington during 1918-23.
In 1923, he became general manager of the Baltimore News and American and remained in this position until 1935.
In that year, Ned became manager of the Dartmouth Club of New York City, which for many years later was located at 37 East 39th St. In this capacity, he became known to hundreds of Dartmouth alumni over the years and he remained manager of the Club - which eventually merged with similar clubs from Brown and Princeton - until he retired in 1957.
He was very active in alumni affairs and served for many years as secretary for the Class. He was also class agent for the Dartmouth Alumni Fund for 15 years, and class bequest chairman for ten years. In 1956 he was named Class Secretary of the Year and in 1968 he was presented a Dartmouth Alumni Award for distinguished service to the College and for distinction in his career.
The Redman devotion to Dartmouth was legendary to a long succession of College Officers and was demonstrated by his choice of a convalescent home close to his beloved college. Until this fall he had not missed a Harvard football game since his undergraduate years, and he was in the stadium the day of his final birthday to cheer at the recent victory over Yale.
At his request, Ned's body has been donated to the Medical School of the University of Vermont. In lieu of flowers, his family has requested that gifts be made to the Ned Redman Fund at Dartmouth College. Further arrangements as to services are incomplete.
Ned was married to Laura Packard in 1908 and she died in 1944. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. F. Allen Lucy, Merion, Pa.; Mrs. John Duimovich, New York City; and Mrs. Samuel Horwitt, Hillsdale, N.Y.; four grandchildren, Richard D. Lucy '67, TU '72, Post Mills, Vt.; Mrs. Ethan Signer; Cambridge, Mass., Todd Horwitt, Churabasco, N.Y.; and Joshua Horwitt, Amherst, Mass.; and five great-granddaughters.
1908
ROGER FRANK HILL passed away at his home in Royal Oak, Mich., on September 18, 1973, according to information furnished by a niece, Mrs. Clinton F. Stimpson III, of Port Huron. Mich.
Roger was boin September 8, 1887 at Northfield, N.H., and prepared for college at Tilton Academy. He was the youngest man in our class and graduated Phi Beta Kappa. His fraternity was Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He took the first year of Thayer School, transferred to a mechanical engineering course at M.I.T., and earned the degree of B.S. in 1910.
Most of Roger's career was construction work. He became an engineer for the A. J. Smith Construction Co. of Detroit and vice president in 1916. After two years service as a first lieutenant in the Ordnance Reserve Corps and four more years with A. J. Smith, he formed the Roger F. Hill Company in a partnership with Bruce Rutherford 'OB which lasted seven years. The next four years he was with the Palmer-Bee Company of Detroit and for another five years he was president of the Prebuilt Co. of Everett, Mass. From 1941 until his retirement in 1957 he was purchasing and contracting engineer for the W. E. Wood Company of Detroit.
Rog was an expert at tennis and golf and played at tournament levels.
He was married to Alta Shaw of South Weymouth, Mass., in 1912. Alta passed away in 1918, and in 1921 he married Marguerite Curtiss Ashworth of Jamestown, N.Y., who survives him. There are no children. Mrs. Hill makes her home at 4256 Olivia Ave., Royal Oak, Mich. Another of 08's devoted has left us. On behalf of the members of the Class, we extend our sympathy to Mrs. Hill.
1912
Many will miss the boyish face and engaging smile of Charlie Gately who died in Downtown Medical Center Brooklyn, New York, on September 23 following an operation for an aneurysm.
CHARLES EDWARD GATELY was bom in Providence, R.I., on December 29, 1889. He prepared for college at La Salle Academy in Providence Graduating from Dartmouth in 1912, Charlie hegan legal education at Harvard Law School and finished it at Columbia after the war in 1923.
In the meantime he had a most active war experience. He attended the first officers training campy Plattsburg, May 1917, and served in the Aviation Section, Signal Reserve Corps, from August to December He then enlisted and was made sergeant in Headquarters Company, 20th Field Artillery. This outfit went into the A.E.F. with the 5th Division and saw action in a defensive sector at St. Die and in the battles of St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne. It became part of the Army of Occupation. Charlie was discharged from the Army July 28, 1919.
After World War I Charlie entered the practice of law in New York City, from 1923 to 1929 as an associate in the firm of Hornblower, Miller and Garrison, and from 1929 to 1949 as a partner in Frueauff, Robinson and Sloan. He became counsel assistant general counsel, associate general counsel, and director in charge of the Petroleum Administration for Defense, District I, Department of the Interior During World War II he took a leave of absence from his law firm and played a leading role in the building of plants for the manufacture of butane. This was made possible by the combined efforts of the outstanding oil companies. Thus the United States was able to replace with synthetic rubber the natural rubber denied it at that time by the Japanese. For weeks and even months at a time during that period he was separated from his family, traveling constantly by airplane from one plant site to another as one of the small number of top flight personnel who planned and executed that program
In 1949 Charlie Gately retired from the practice of law, only to be recalled by the Government March 1951. He served during the Korean War and the Iranian and Suez Canal petroleum emergencies till February 1958 as representative of the Secretary of the Interior on Petroleum Industry Committees.
Charlie was a member of the American Bar Associztion, Knights of Columbus, and the Foundation mittee for the Dartmouth Medical School Campaign in 1960. A loyal member of the Class of 1912, he was present at several of its reunions including its 60th, the latter in spite of an automobile accident while en route to Hanover, and his annual support of the Dartmouth Alumni Fund was substantial.
On June 28, 1924 he married Mane collins of Brooklyn. Marie died in 1969. He is survive by two sone, one of whom is John '49, two daughters, and 20 A funeral mass was held September 27 at St. Francis de Salet Roman Catholic Church with interment in St. Charles Cemetery.
1913
ALBERT BROOKS WASHBURN, age 82, of Bethel, Vt., died suddenly October 27 at his home. Albert was born in Bethel January 24, 1891, son of Seth M. and Kate ( Brooks) Washburn. Al graduated from Whitcomb High School in 1909, entered Dartmouth and graduated with the Class in 1913.
" He was a veteran of WW II, serving in the Army Quartermaster Corps. He served as a member of the Bethel School Board for a number of years, was a member of the White River Lodge F and AM, and of Christ Church (Episcopal). In 1919 he married Gladys Livingston at Springfield, Mass. Mrs. Washburn died Last November. Albert was manager of Brook and Washburn, Inc. In 1942 he purchased the retail department store and operated it until retirement in 1965.
Al was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsion while in college. and in his later years held minor town offices, was a member of the Board Of Education, and the Republican Committee. He is survived by a son Albert Washburn Jr. '50 of Beltsville, Md„ three grandchildren, and a nephew. Funeral services were held in Christ Episcopal Church, Bethel.
1914
Our Class Treasurer, PENNELL NUTTING ABORN, passed away very suddenly on July 15 at Weston, Mass. Born on August 16, 1892 in Warren, Mass., he had resided in Weston for 20 years. Pen was a wonderful guy. a loyal alumnus of Dartmouth College, and a good worker for the College and the Class. A member of Phi Gamma Delta, he served as circulation manager of The Dartmouth and had served the Class as chairman of the executive committee, class secretary, and assistant class agent before assuming the task of class treasurer.
For many years he was associated with the Virginia Drew Educational and Vocational Guidance Center in Boston and for 25 years was on the staff of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as director of student employment before going into business for himself as a personnel consultant.
Many honors came his way such as secretary and president of the 76 Club of Boston, treasurer and member of the executive committee of the Eastern College Personnel Officers, treasurer of the greater Boston Personnel and Guidance Association, and officerships in the Newcomen Society.
In October 1919, Pen married Reinette, sister of our late classmate Dr. Ernest T. Saeger.
He is survived by his widow and a sister, Mrs. Rachele Anderson, of Vineyard Haven.
A memorial service was held on Tuesday, July 17, in the Congregational Church in Weston where the Class was represented by Vogie and Jane Stiles, Loring and Marjorie Nichols, Abe Newmark, Herb Austin, Sherm Saltmarsh, and Connie Pooler, widow of Fran Pooler.
Rear Admiral ARTHUR HERBERT DEARING M.D. died May 8, 1973.
Born in Scarboro, Me., on April 23, 1892, he graduated with a B.S. degree from Dartmouth in 1914 and went on to receive an M.D. degree from Harvard in 1917.
Aft had a remarkable career in the United States Navy where he received many honors, a few of which are recorded here; for outstanding service as Commanding Officer of Oakland Naval Hospital he received a Letter of Commendation with Ribbon. He received also the Legion of Merit, the Commendation Ribbon with bronze star and the Medal of Merit from the Government of Nicaragua, the WW I American Defense Service Medal, Fleet Clasp, The American Campaign Medal, the WW II Victory Medal, The Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal, and the Legion of Merit for Meritorious Conduct.
Other assignments included District Medical Officer Third Naval District New York, Deputy Surgeon General of the United States for the Navy, Assistant Chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery for Personnel and Professional Operation, Navy Department.
He received a Letter of Commendation with Authorization to Wear the Commendation from the Commander-in-Chief, United States Pacific Fleet for Organizing the Medical Department of the South Pacific Area during the Solomon Islands Campaign in 1942 and, during his retirement in California, he assumed the duties of Executive Director of the California Commission for the Accreditation of Nursing Homes and received commendation from the com- missioners for "an extraordinary job well done," and later became Chairman of the Advisory Committee to the Bay Area Hospital Planning Commission.
Arthur's survivors include his widow Mary, his son Arthur Herbert II, a daughter, and six grandchildren.
GEORGE PEABODY LITTLE passed away on August 5 in North Highland. Calif. He had been in ill health for some time and had been cared for by his daughter, Mrs. Marguerite Mattson. He was the son of Clarence B. Little, Class of 1881, a long-time trustee of Dartmouth College.
George was with us in Hanover only during the years of 1911 -1913 after which he was employed by the First National Bank of Bismarck, N.D. where he became assistant cashier. He also owned The Little Hatchery in Lomita. He retired in June 1946.
In 1917-1919 he served in 116 th Headquarters and Military Police, 41st division, and was 16 months in France where he received the Victory Medal. In 1943- 1946 he was with the Naval Fuel Annex in San Pedro, Calif.
GILBERT LINCOLN MCDONOUGH died on June 29, in Denver, Col., at the Mercy Hospital after a long illness.
He was born on February 12, 1892 in Denver and, after graduating from Dartmouth received the degree of B.A. in 1915 and LL.B. at Denver University in 1917. He served in the U.S. Army 355th Infantry 89th Division and was in France for six months where he participated in the St. Mihiel attack as a first lieutenant and was awarded the Purple Heart.
He practiced law in Denver as a partner of McDonough and McDonough and was a member of the Denver and of the Colorado Bar Associations, and Sigma Chi Fraternity.
Gilbert is survived by his wife Ethel; his son Gilbert of Denver; a sister, Grace McDonough of Denver; a sister Mrs. Knight C. Porter, of Glencoe, III., a brother, Lt. Col. Rogers McDonough, of Palmer Lake, Colo., and numerous nieces and nephews.
1915
BENJAMIN J. SLADE, 79, died of cancer August 31, in St. Petersburg, Fla.
He was born September 9, 1893 in Cohoes, N.Y., and entered Dartmouth from Cohoes High School. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
During World War I he enlisted in the Navy. He married Marion Holt of Fall River, Mass., who passed away in 1970.
Ben was a salesman for International Harvester and White Motor Company of Boston for years before moving to Fayetteville, N.C. After his retirement, he made his residence in St. Petersburg. He was buried at Memorial Park Cemetery there.
He was a Mason and a life member of Aleppo Temple of Boston.
He is survived by a daughter, Elizabeth Slade Dalrymple.
1917
Word has come of the passing of DR. FRANCIS MCGARVEY DONEHUE in New York City, on August 27, at the age of 78. Mike, as he was known to us in his undergraduate days, gave early indications of the success that he was to attain later in the field of medicine. Following graduation from Dartmouth he matriculated at the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University. His degree as Doctor of Medicine was conferred in 1919. His work centered at Lenox Hill Hospital, N.Y.C. where his skill and devotion were recognized first as associate in surgery, and in 1948 by a promotion to Director of Surgery in that hospital.
Other activities in his profession included Clinical Professor of Surgery, New York University Medical School; Associate Professor of Surgery, Columbia P & S; Associate Surgeon,- New York Post Graduate Hospital; and Association Surgeon, City Hospital, New York. Dr. Donehue enjoyed these honors: Past President of the Lenox Hill Hospital Alumni Association, Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, Member of the American Medical Association, Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, Honorary police surgeon of the NYC Police Department.
Amidst these activities, Mike took time out to serve in both World Wars I and 11. In the Second World War he received the rank of captain in the Naval Reserve when discharged in 1945.
He was married to the former Mabel Bulger in Brooklyn. She passed away on December 22, 1937. There were no children.
Funeral services were held at St. Margaret Mary's Church, Albany.
Mike Donehue was one of Seventeen's great men. He was unassuming in attaining recognition in his profession. As a student at Dartmouth, he will be remembered by many of us for his work in the Glee Club. His fine voice was appreciated in post-graduate years by the members of the University Club of New York. His last visit to Dartmouth was at our 50th Reunion in 1972. Unknown to us, he was in failing health from that time on. He was a loyal alumnus, and had a deep devotion to his college. We mourn his passing, and extend the sympathy of the Class to his loving relatives.
1919
JAMES WILLIAM CARTER died on March 2 in Fargo, N.D., where he lived most of his business life. Jim came to college from Grand Forks, N.D., where he was very prominent in athletics.
He is survived by his widow Frances, and three sons and a daughter.
1920
ROY LAWRENCE RUBEL succumbed to a coronary attack on September 25 in Tequesta, Fla., where he and his wife Emma had retired about two years ago.
He entered Dartmouth in the autumn of 1916 but as was the case in the careers of so many in that generation, World War I intervened and cut short his college years.
Much of his life was spent in the area of New York City where he was associated with the firm of Cresner, Woodward, o'Mara, and Ormsbe, a large newspaper advertising organization. During his long career with this organization Roy played a large part in building it up to be one of the leaders in its field. At his retirement he was its executive vice president.
In his younger days Roy devoted some time to golf. In his retirement years he loved to take long walks about the beautiful Tequesta area, a place which he so enjoyed after his busy life in New York. A classmate and friend of long standing has best described this quiet, thoughtful man in these words "He was a splendid person of high character and ideals ..."
The Class of 1920 extends to Emma, his wife, its deepest sympathy for the loss she has sustained. We, too, mourn his passing.
1923
GRAHAM WHITELAW died of a pulmonary embolism at the Day Kimball Hospital in Putnam, Conn., on August 13.
A Marine Corps veteran, Graham came to Dartmouth from Storm King School in Cornwall, N.Y. He was with us in Hanover for freshman year and then transferred to New York University School of Commerce and later attended Columbia University's School of Business. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi.
Graham was the first president of the Class of 1923. We well remember our 1919 fall meeting in Dartmouth Hall when the Class first organized and Graham took office.
In 1923 Graham went to work for the Corporation Trust Co. of New York City - now the C. T. Corporation System - and spent his entire business career with them until his retirement as assistant vice president. He and Gertrude made their principal home at Fox Hill Farm, Pomfret, Conn. 06258. For many years they have also maintained a summer home at Truro, Mass., on Cape Cod. Survivors include his widow, two sons, James G. and Robert S. both married, a daughter Susan and four grandchildren.
1925
HENRY CARL SAILER died October 2 in Riverside Hospital, Boonton Township, N.J. after a long illness. He was born November 25, 1901 in Reading, Pa., and came to college from Reading High School.
Butch was an outstanding basketball player and a leader, being captain of the team one year. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi.
Following graduation he entered upon a teaching career and continued his education, reciving Masters degree and his Ph.D. from New York University. Butch also did graduate work at Teachers' callege of Columbia University and at Rutaers
For 35 years he taught - Orange High School and was basketball coach there for 20 years. In his last year of coaching in 1948 his team won the Group IV state title.
Butch became Professor of Education at Jersey City State College in 1963 and retired in 1971. Much of his teaching activity was in connection with improving the reading ability of his pupils, and he operate a newspaper in his classroom program as an aid to teaching "thinking and reading." He was a member the New Jersey Education Association.
He is survived by his wife LeNora of Whippany, N.J.. their home for many years, and also by a brother and a sister.
1928
In the passing of WILLIAM GEORGE HEEP in the Lawrence Hospital, Bronxville, N.Y., on October 21 our class has lost a beloved member. Bill was vice president of Lord & Taylor and managing director of their Westchester store in Scarsdale, from the time it opened in 1948. In June 1972 Bill had an abdomimal operation for cancer, but returned to his position two months later.
His arrival in Hanover from Yonkers (N.Y.) High School marked the beginning of a long love affair with Dartmouth College. As an undergraduate he played three years of varsity basketball and was elected captain his senior year. He was a member of Green Key Palaeopitus, Sphinx, and Delta Tau Delta. From his earliest days he was active in class affairs as an assistant class agent and chairman of class outings. He ard Gertrude sent their son to Dartmouth (William H. Heep '67, and he has followed his father and is now buyer of Lord & Taylor's Boys' Shops), and happily saw their elder daughter, Mary, married to Dick Van Riper '57, the son of Lawson Van Riper '28.
Two weeks after graduation Bill joined Lord & Taylor and a few years later became a buyer. He was with the firm 45 years attaining the position of vice president. Always a dynamic merchant, he carried the same enthusiasm into his private life and served 18 years in Community Fund drives, was a trustee of the Hudson River Museum and a member of the advisory board of the Hudson River Museum and a member of the advisory board of the Lighthouse. He and Gertrude were active members of the St. Andrews Golf Club
Attending the funeral in Bronxville from our class were Lawson and Ruth Van Riper, Bill Treanor. Don Norris, Warren and Hazel Burding, Hammie and Gracia Hammesfahr, John and Ruth Weser, plus Ed and Ollie Raisbeck '27, Charley McAllister '31 and other Dartmouth friends.
Surviving are his widow Gertrude, a son, two daughters, a sister, and five grandchildren.
1929
RAYMOND BURTON TALBOTT, of Venice, Fla., died on September 18 at Monadnock Community Hospital in Peterborough, N.H. He was 66. He had been visiting his son's family when he was hospitalized for an illness resulting from heart trouble. Nonetheless, his death was sudden and unexpected, as he was to be released from the hospital the following day.
Ray always considered himself fortunate to be a Dartmouth man; he worked hard at his education, developed a strong interest in business, went on to graduate from Tuck School, and entered the working world as an accountant. He later joined the Stamford (Conn.) Federal Savings and Loan Association in its early years, helped build it into a prosperous business, and retired in 1969 as president and chairman of the board, retaining a directorship until late last year.
He was a fond husband and proud father who gave absolute priority to his family's happiness. Those who knew him as a friend or as a businessman knew a quietly good-natured, sensible, generous, steadfastly reliable man. He was able to make the most of nearly situation __ as an optimist rather than an opportunist - and this outlook helped see him through a severely Fimiting heart condition of nearly 20 years. He had marked weaknesses for bridge, gin rummy, brain teasers, good jokes, the White Sox. New England, the Gulf Coast of Florida - and of course, Dartmouth. Ray assisted the Admissions Department as a local teriewer rejoiced (and occasionally suffered) through hundreds - of athletic seasons, and took strong interest growth and many changes of the College in the 40-odd years since his graduation.
He leaves his wife, Katherine Irene Talbott, of 513 W. Venice Ave, Venice, who meant everything to him (he died just two hours before their 37th anniversary); a daughter, Nancy McGroty, of Ludlow, Mass; a son, john D. Talbott '67, of Peterborough; and two grandchildren, who gave great happiness to the last two years of his life.
1930
CARLOS WALDO NESTLER died on September I in St. Paul. Minn., following a long illness. Prior to his retirement and move to Tucson, Ariz., in 1966 Carl had been in advertising and operated his own photographic business in Minneapolis. He served as a captain in the Air Corps in WW II and after service was an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota for five years teaching photography.
Carl was a Mason and a Shriner, a member of the American Legion, National Rifle Association, Rod and Gun and Big Game clubs, Minneapolis Athletic Club. Tucson and Alexandria (Minn.) Country Clubs, and had been a trustee of Shattuck Military Academy.
The Class extends its sympathy to his widow Midred. daughters Marilyn and Audra, son Carlos Jr., and nine grandchildren. Memorials, if so desired may sent to the Shriners Crippled Children's Hospital in Tucson.
HFRBERT WALTER MANDEVILLE died on July 14 in Hemet. Calif. Mandy had retired in 1961 due to poor health. A member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, he received his degree in civil engineering from Thayer School in 1931. From 1936 to 46 he was an engineer with the city of cape Town, Republic of South Africa. Returning in 1946 he held the same position with the city of Miami, Fla., until his retirement. The sympathy of the Class is extended to his widow Eileen.
1932
STANLEY MARION LEACH died in Bettendorf, lowa, on September 25. Stan was born in Adel, Iowa, on June 30, 1910, and attended the Lawrenceville School. At Dartmouth he majored in sociology and was a member of Sigma Nu. Following graduation he ned the Bottled Gas Corporation in Bettendorf. He became vice president in 1939 and served that company the time of his death. He served in the U.S. Army from '943 to 1945, and on the local executive committee of the Third Century Fund.
Stan married Barbara Sue Frank in Davenport in 1947. In addition to his widow he is survived by his son Stanley Jr. and his daughter Melinda. The Class extends its deeP sympathy to his family.
1933
JAMES PHILIP O'BRIEN died unexpectedly March 18 at his home in Framingham, Mass. 0'Brien and born in Framingham, a son of Dr. James B. resident, and Lillie (Brooks) O'Brien, and was a lifelong
Educated at Huntington Preparatory School and Dartmouth (1929-1932), he graduated from Boston University Law School in 1937! He served with the FBI from 1943 to 1962 in Seattle, Wash., Hawaii, and for nine years as legal attache at the American Embassy in London.
Since leaving government service, he had been engaged in the private practice of law at 25 Union Street, Boston, Mass.
He leaves a brother, Robert R. O'Brien '4O, of Tunbridge, Vt., two sisters, Mrs. Frank D. (Helen) Williams of Georgetown Drive, Framingham, and Mrs. Esther J. O'Brien of Nelson Street, and several nieces and nephews.
1936
We have been advised of the death of LEWIS EDMUND FRANCKLE on September 22 in Shaker Heights, Ohio. Lew was only at Dartmouth until the fall of sophomore year and subsequently attended Temple and Northwestern as well as the University of Florida. He served in the Army Medical Corps from 1942 to 1944. He returned from the Army to the Society National Bank of Cleveland where he remained until his death. He was a senior vice president of Society National Bank, senior vice president of Society Corporation, and a director of the Western Reserve Bank of Lake County.
He had been a trustee and vice president of the Hiram House Camp, and a trustee and treasurer of the N.E. Ohio Chapter of the Arthritis Foundation. He married Peg Schowe in 1940 and she and a daughter Ann survive him. The Class extends its sympathy to his family in their loss.
1949
Sad news was received recently about the loss of another classmate who died in the North Country at the age of 49. DAVIS SPAULDING HAMMOND, a true New Englander, passed away at the Veterans Hospital in White River Junction on September 30, after suffering from the agonies of cancer. Dave, a native of Claremont, N.H., attended schools in Windsor, Vt., before moving slightly north to attend college at the Big Green.
After a stint with the Marine Corps in the South Pacific he returned to live where the air was pure and the evenings sharp and clear. Davis' many offspring, with the exception of one daughter who resides in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, have continued in their father's image, placing roots throughout Vermont and New Hampshire. His memory will be well preserved by them and those of us in the Class of 1949.
Robert Jackson '00
Edward Blanchard Redman '06
Charles Edward Gately '12