He lived in Madison for 35 years, enjoyed boating on the Sound, tennis, playing guitar and banjo and cheering for UCONN women's basketball.
A Hand high school prom queen, she was a knitter whose Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy dolls won many first place prizes at the Durham Fair.
Proud of her Madison lineage going back generations, she'd be seen daily in summer riding her purple bicycle to the Madison Beach Club.
Daughter of Madison's Jeffrey Elementary School namesake J. Milton Jeffrey, she was a hairdresser and loved caring for her grandchildren.
A world traveler who hosted legendary Thanksgiving dinners, she was known as "Mrs. Feeney" to her students at Madison Country Day School.
Loving “Poppy” to 11 grandchildren and one great-grandchild, he was a volunteer coach and served as a board member for several charities.
Lily lived her Catholic faith every day of her life and believed in working with those in need one on one, all without fanfare or spotlight.
At peace now, Erik loved fishing, sports, puns, solving the daily Jumble, playing chess, his pets, and the NY Giants and Boston Red Sox.
A member of the Madison Winter Club, she worked as a personal secretary in Guilford and for the Record Journal in Meriden.
Known for his "larger than life personality and enormous heart ... his love and care for his family and friends knew no bounds."
Bonnie worked as a bridal consultant, bank teller and a paraprofessional for many years in the Milford Public School System.
A Killingworth Elementary School teachers aide, she enjoyed singing in the Madison Congregational church choir, her garden, and the beach.
An editor, researcher, historian and advocate, she was devoted to her communities and loved the CT shoreline, especially Madison’s beaches.
A coveted Madison Beach Club dance partner known to belt out tunes at cocktail parties, as an artist he was VP of the Madison Art Society.
Mary was a long-time employee of the Yale University Alumni Association and the first woman ever appointed Police Commissioner in Hamden.
Vargo, who served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, stationed in the South Pacific, worked for Sikorsky Aircraft after 40 years.
Raised on his family's Madison farm, he was a Navy veteran who previously worked for Pratt & Whitney before becoming a carpenter in Florida.
A Daniel Hand High School grad who played for the lacrosse team, he went on to play for Bridgton Academy and later taught and coached there.
Before retiring, she worked for K Mart of East Haven and was co-owner with her late husband of the former North Branford Fish & Lobster.
A Marine veteran and land surveyor, he loved his family and enjoyed long walks, the beach, playing bocce, and delivering Meals on Wheels.
Devoted to family, MJ, who enjoyed tennis, gardening, reading, traveling, and decorating, loved playing piano and holding sing-alongs.
A veteran of the Korean War, he worked for GE for decades, and was active in the Knights of Columbus and the Boy Scouts of America.
A son of immigrants who fled anti-Semitism, he became an international pioneer in child psychology, Madison civic leader and philanthropist.
Pat, who worked at Robertshaw Controls and Stop & Shop, loved time with family visiting Nantucket, the Jersey shore, and camping in Canada.
After retiring to Madison, she and her husband Joe traveled the world together for almost three decades, pursuing a new adventure each year.
She adored family and cheered her children at sporting events and concerts. The beach was a happy place; toes in the sand, wind in her hair.
She loved her family, the beach, Big Band jazz, and finance. From a Killingworth tower, she was a World War II enemy airplane-spotter.
A US Marine, businessman who owned Emerson Supply, and youth coach, he enjoyed golf and he served on the Madison Zoning Board of Appeals.
A lifelong homemaker, and church and community volunteer, she was a competitive game player and enjoyed knitting, sewing, and gardening.
She was a career woman, wife, mother, grandmother, breast cancer survivor, voracious reader and kind soul who cared deeply for her family.
An award-winning painter and dedicated volunteer, she enjoyed myriad hobbies. Betsy treasured time with family, like summers at Pearly Pond.
Committed to volunteerism and caring for others, she took great pride in her work in Hospice’s founding days in Branford in the early '70's.
Rose-Marie, a retired nurse, was a "social butterfly," and excellent baker, who enjoyed doing oil paintings, ceramics, and coloring.
A successful businessman who was devoted to New Haven, Madison and its people, he was active for decades in civic and community service.
A former longtime Madison police officer, George served honorably in the US Air Force. He enjoyed travel, cooking and time with family.
Millicent had a clear analytical mind and a fighting spirit, as evidenced by her work, social, and political activities.
There was "no one braver and more courageous as she battled to the end." A devoted mom, she was a Guilford High School paraprofessional.
In the 1970s Helen took a job at the Shoreline Times that taught her the typesetting industry, she went on to open and run her own business.
After the Navy, he earned aviation and business degrees, and worked at Pratt & Whitney for 40 years. He loved family trips and the Patriots.
Carole, a public health research associate at Yale and later a retail buyer, was very active in the Women's Guild at St. Margaret Church.