Michelina A. "Lee" (Famiglietti) Colabello attended Watertown High School and worked in the defense industry at Wheeler Wire during World War II.
The family will receive visitors on Sunday, March 4, at the Lynn residence.
Michael R. Chester III enjoyed boating with his wife and family and spending time with his cherished grandchildren.
Jane Campbell Coler was an avid swimmer. She is the mother of Richard F. Coler of Woodbury.
Mary S. (Mastroianni) Colella was employed at Timex Corp. for 14 years.
The funeral service will take place at 9 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 21.
Sharon "Pooky" Kim Blakeman Schoeller was a Nonnewaug High School graduate. She enjoyed crafting, scrapbooking, Johnny Cash and UConn men and women's basketball.
Bruce Earley enjoyed skiing, hiking and boating and was a World War II history buff.
Reginald G. Lewis, Sr. grew up in Southbury and retired from Church Hill Builders in Woodbury. He worked with his brother Elmer in Bethel.
Mary Theresa Bilancia worked at Timex Corporation in Middlebury for 28 years.
Anne Thomas and her husband were proprietors of the Middlebury Store for years.
Anne C. D'Ambrisi, mother of Woodbury resident Janice Kolesnik, worked as an executive secretary at the Howland Hughes Department Store for years.
Farm life was a great joy in Michael Kiyak's life. He enjoyed fishing and growing fruit trees.
Lorraine S. Nurnberger was an artist who painted landscapes and still life pictures well into her 80s. She was employed by Regional School District 14 for 17 years.
Alfred F. D'Alfonso Sr. was employed at Eastern Color Printing Company for more than 40 years. His son, Edward William D’Alfonso, lives in Middlebury.
Mahlon A. Lynn grew up in Bethlehem, worked at the family service station on 'Lynn’s Corner' in Woodbury. He was a member of King Solomon’s Lodge #7 A.F. & A.M. and the American Legion Bradley Burton Post #155.
Patrick Sugrue, Jr. was a truck driver who enjoyed watching car races and old western movies.
Donald E. Peterson served in the U.S. Air Force and enjoyed skiing and driving his John Deere tractor.
Arthur Volta was an avid gardener. His son and daughter-in-law, Simone and Gina Volta, live in Middlebury.
Victoria Rinaldi was awarded the Palmer Method of Business Writing Certificate in 1938 for her degree in excellence in muscular movement business writing. Her daughter, Diana Guiliano, lives in Middlebury.
Catherine Tirpak's daugher, Barbara Fox, lives in Middlebury. Tirpak was a volunteer with the Red Cross and the American Cancer Society for years.
Beekeeping, music, gardening and cooking were some of the activities Martha Jane Mahoney Heyniger enjoyed.
Vincent Minutillo was a U.S. veteran and was an accomplished joke teller who loved opera.
Marie DeFerrari Goodson was president of the Happy Timers Singing Group. The service is today - Sunday, Jan. 22.
Donald W. Terrell was a beekeeper and enjoyed woodworking, gardening and working on tractors.
Martha "Mops" Burke Bertolette was a great lover of books. She worked at Rosenbach’s, a rare bookseller in New York City, and volunteered for the Woodbury Public Library.
Leona Nodine was an avid reader, was an assembler and inspector at TImex Corp. and a longtime volunteer at Waterbury Hospital.
Henry P. Capozzi Jr. was an avid fisherman and foreman for Johnson and Johnson.
Josephine Zorn was employed at U.S. Time in Middlebury for 10 years, later known as Timex. Her hobbies included playing the mandolin, crossword puzzles, and arts and crafts.
In the early 1940s, Rebecca Thacher (Clarke) Evans enlisted in the Navy as a WAVE, or Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service. After that, she joined the CIA.
After some time in the insurance business, John Viets Makepeace followed his dreams and became a stockbroker and investment counselor at age 43. He retired at the age of 89.
Benjamin M. DeAngelis graduated from New York University. After graduation, he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army and served in the Philippines during World War II.
Casey Uszakiewicz was a self employed builder and was a carpenter for the Naugatuck Board of Education.He proudly served his country in the United States Navy during World War II and the Korean Conflict on various ships and carriers.
Ursula Schuler enjoyed gardening and knitting.
Carol McCorkle was accomplished in sewing and needle crafts, loved to cook and had an unending love for the tidal marshes and the bay and ocean surrounding Cape Cod.
Edgar Joseph Westcott walked into Ford as an enthusiastic 20-year-old with a sketchbook of car designs and was immediately hired into the Mercury Styling Studio.
Stubbs was an at-home mother and an active participant at the Woodbury Senior Center.
Joyce A. Sanderson was an advocate for animal welfare.
Melanie Legendre is a former Naugatuck resident.
Laurel Sears worked at the Southbury Training School for many years as a nurse’s aide.