Seattle Obituaries

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Larry Edwin Spiegelberg

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David M. FITZGERALD

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Irvine H. Lange

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Alice Lucienne Moore

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Milton Robert Knight

Milton Robert Knight passed away peacefully Wednesday, November 19th, in Kirkland after a courageous battle against cancer.  Bob was born in Seattle and graduated from Queen Anne High School.  He served two years in the Army Signal Corp. near Anchorage, AK.  He graduated from Whitworth College in Spokane with a degree in Physics and Engineering.  He worked for 39 years as a design engineer and supervisor for United Control/Sundstrand Data Control in Redmond. 

Upon retirement, Bob organized and volunteered with the Kirkland Amateur Radio Emergency Service.  He also was a volunteer for the Puget Sound Blood Center.  He was an ordained deacon and elder in several Presbyterian churches in the area. 

Bob will be dearly missed by many, especially by his wife Anna Lou, sons David (Sandee) and Douglas (Marci), brother William (Dorothy) and sister Marilyn, granddaughters Arianne (Josh), Ashley, and Ariel, and two great grandsons, Michael and Alex.

Tuesday, November 25th, a memorial service will be held at 3:00 pm at Lake Forest Park Presbyterian Church, 17440 Brookside Blvd. NE in Lake Forest Park.

In lieu of flowers, memorials maybe sent to Summer Camp Fund of Children’s Hospital and Medical Center.

Nell “Penny” Mary Green – November 8, 2008

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Hymin Shapiro

Hymin Shapiro died on November 1 in Seattle, where he lived for 8 years. He was a long-time employee of Ethyl Corporation.

 

He was born in Detroit on April 8, 1915 to Fannie Zuckerman Shapiro and Bernard Samuel Shapiro. He started school in the second grade and graduated from Northern High School in Detroit at the age of 15. He went on to Detroit’s Wayne State University, receiving a B. S. in Chemistry in 1934. He then took off a year to work as a painter for his father’s construction business before going onto the University of Michigan, where he earned a Masters degree in chemistry in 1936. He was refused entry into a Ph. D. program at the University because its “Jewish quota” was filled.

 

After sending some 200 letters to potential employers, Hy accepted an offer from what was to become his sole employer over his adult life. He was hired as chemist in the Ethyl company’s Detroit research laboratory, at the then high salary of $160 per month. He went on to become Assistant Director of Chemistry Research for the company. In 1957 he was transferred from Detroit to the company’s major facility in Baton Rouge, LA, where he served as Senior Research Advisor until his retirement in 1985.

 

Hy generated 110 patents during his career, mostly in the fields of organometallic chemistry. Perhaps the most significant of these is a patent on new organomanganese compounds, which became the basis of a commercial anti-knock compound for gasoline. In 1968 he co-authored The Organic Compounds of Lead with Frederick Frey.

 

Hy’s marriage to  Bernice Bassichis in 1939 ended after 15 years. He is survived by two children, Gary and Galia, from the marriage. He married Betty Moss in 1956. They had a wonderful and long marriage until Betty’s death in 2006. Hy’s early retirement years were marked by travel with Betty to Africa, Asia, and the American tropics. In 2000, Hy and Betty moved to the Seattle area to be near Betty’s son and daughter-in-law, Bob and Sue Moss. Hy is survived by his sister Stacia, as well as his children and stepson.

Arthur Johannes Jacobsen

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Delores Irene Prain

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Arthur Jacobsen – October 28, 2008

             

            Arthur Johanus Jacobsen, 94, of Bothell, WA, passed away peacefully on October 28, 2008 after a courageous battle with lung cancer.

            He was born on September 1, 1914 in East Chain, Minnesota, the third of four children, to Martin K. and Christine Jacobsen who were poor farmers and newly arrived from Denmark.  In a unique twist of fate, he was born on the same day as his father and on the same day as his father’s father. 

            In the early 1920s, when he was about 7 years old, the family moved back to Denmark because Christine was homesick.  Six years later, they returned to the U.S. and, after a banker absconded with their savings, they were forced to eke out a living on a farm.  Art quit school to work.  In 1933, after his favorite sister, Laura, died of TB, he followed his older brother, Chris, to Seattle where there was a promise of a good job.  He was nineteen then.  In Seattle he lived and worked on the dairy farm which belonged to Harold Virkelyst in what is now the Crown Hill area just south of Carkeek Park.  He met and married Betty Jane Moore in Seattle on September 2, 1940.  They had four children together: 

            Art was a very hard worker with an innate sense of business.  He provided a good life for his family.  The man with only an 8th grade education owned the largest milk delivery route in Seattle.  When he began his business, he worked for 12 years without taking a single day off.  He was a milk deliveryman for 40 years. 

            Art was a good father to his children and a faithful and loving husband to Betty for more than 68 years.  His devotion to Betty was legendary and their marriage an inspiration to all.  The tragic loss of their first-born child, Sandy, early in their marriage, only served to strengthen their bond. 

            Art will be remembered most for his love of hunting, camping, and fishing which he passed on to his sons.  He taught his sons conservation, respect for living things, and a love of the outdoors decades before the word “ecology” ever entered the American vocabulary. 

            Arthur is survived by his wife, Betty, his two sons, Gary (Diane) of Lake Havasu City AZ, and Chris (Heidi) of Seattle, and by his two grandchildren Michael Neal Jacobsen of Lacey and Corey Todd Jacobsen (Justine) of Cheyenne, WY, two great-grandsons, Deryk and Ryan Jacobsen, loving nieces, Marjolaine Schmitt of Sioux Falls SD, Judi Weiser of Seattle, Lollie Jacobsen of Mendocino CA., nephew Don Jacobsen of Seattle, and many grand nieces and grand nephews.

            Art was preceded in death by his mother and father, his brother Chris, his sisters Laura and Catherine, his daughter Sandy, and his son Michael.

            A celebration of his life will be held at 1:00 pm on Saturday, November 15 in the upstairs Ballroom of the South County Senior Center, 220 Railroad Avenue, Edmonds, Washington.  Everyone who knew him and loved him is invited.  Please come and bring your favorite story for this celebration of Art’s life.  In lieu of flowers, please contribute to the charity of your choice.

 

             

 

             

 

 

 

 

 

Raymond Elmer Fogg October 10, 2008

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Raymond Elmer Fogg – October 10, 2008

 

RAYMOND ELMER FOGG

Raymond Elmer Fogg, age 88, of Bellevue, Washington passed away peacefully on Friday, October 10, 2008 at Overlake Medical Hospital Center in Bellevue.  He was born in Harrison, Maine on June 2, 1920 as the first of ten children to Mary H. Lewis and Elmer W. Fogg.  His early childhood years on his parents’ farm were hard but bonding times with his family through the Great Depression years.  He graduated with honors from Bridgton High School.  Ray attended a trade school in Dexter, Maine to become an accomplished machinist. 

Ray was very proud of his military service to our country during World War II.   He initially served in the United States Army, then in the Army Air Corp (US Air Force) as an expert navigator from November 1943 until his honorable discharge as a Second Lieutenant in December 1945.  Ray returned to Naples, Maine after his military service. 

In Ray’s civilian life he worked for the Flagg Lumber Mill in Naples, Maine, Lovell Lumber Mill in Lovell, Maine, SPX Corporation (Dielectric) and then Mega Industries in Raymond, Maine.  He retired in September 1988 and moved to Bellevue, Washington to enjoy his retirement with his second wife, Clementine.

Ray’s retirement years brought about many travels including driving cross-country each year until 1998 to spend summers in Maine with his family and back to Washington State with his new western family, with many stops along the way.  He took in the Craters of the Moon in Idaho, the mighty Tetons in Wyoming, and the breathtaking Grand Canyon in Arizona.  Ray also experienced the Mexican Riviera, Scotland, Ireland, Whales, England, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand.   While Ray always took great pleasure in every journey and new experience, standing next to and underneath the magnificent giant General Sherman Tree in Sequoia National Park in northern California was the most spectacular and humbling to him.   

Ray had a way of making every card game exciting and competitive.  He knew all the rules and had no mercy when it came to the cribbage board.  He enjoyed crossword puzzles and reading.  Ray was an avid golfer, playing three times a week until November 2007.  Ray achieved every golfer’s dream – not just one hole-in-one, but two, at the Naples Golf Course in Maine and also at Bellevue Municipal in Bellevue, Washington.   

Ray is survived by his second wife of over 20 years, Clementine Dingley Jester-Fogg of Bellevue, Washington (formerly of Casco, Maine); his two sons Randy Fogg and Raymond “Babe” (Becky) Fogg of Naples, Maine; his daughter Deborah (Bob) Mitchell of Kingfield, Maine; two step-daughters Jayne (Paul)Tuohig of Alexandria, Virginia and Ann (Gary) Buechler of Kirkland, Washington; his sisters Evelyn Clouse of North Syracuse, New York, Barbara Merrill of Harrison, Maine, Marjorie Gadway of Berriennes Springs, Michigan and Madelyn Miles of Hagerstown, Maryland; his brother Richard Fogg of Naples, Maine; 6 grandchildren; 3 step-grandchildren; 5 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Ray was preceded in death by his parents Elmer W. and Mary H. Lewis Fogg; his first wife of 41 years, Gertrude York Fogg; his sisters Dorothy Leland, Rilla Allen, Virginia Merrill; and his brother, David Fogg.

Ray was a quiet conversationalist; a loving husband, father, grandfather, brother and uncle.  He will be greatly missed but will always remain in the hearts of his family.  The family extends our sincere thanks to the owners and staff at Buycus Elderly Care Adult Family Home in Bellevue for the attentive and loving care given to Ray during these past seven months. 

At Ray’s request, no memorial services were held.   Burial will be at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent, Washington with military honors on Friday, November 7, 2008. 

Louis John Colantonio

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Janet Casson Crist – September 27, 2008

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Gwendolyn Grace Zeigler – September 30, 2008

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