The Desert Sun (Palm Springs, Ca.)
June 3, 1988Private services are planned for Charles Harrison Noyes, 75 of Desert Hot Springs.
Mr. Noyes, a native of Pensylvania, died Momday in Idyllwild.
He worked for Dougl;as Aircraft for 20 years and was a member of the Moose Lofge of Desert Hot Springs.
Survovors include his wife, Inez; two daughters, Charlene Levandowski of Cerritos and Candyce Benbow of Oroville; two sons, Charles Noyes Jr. of Bellflower and Roger Noyes of Las Vegas; 10 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Anchorage Daily News (AK)
March 11, 2008Anchorage resident and Chief Master Sgt. Donald Jerome Kerckhoff, 77, died March 3, 2008, at Providence Alaska Medical Center surrounded by his family.
At his request, no service is planned at this time. A military service will be held this summer at Fort Richardson National Cemetary.
Don was born July 18, 1930, in Philadelphia. He joined the Air Force in 1951.
After meeting on a blind date, Don and Holly were married June 11, 1955, in Vermont and celebrated 52 wonderful years together.
Don spent 23 years in the Air Force, serving in both the Korean and Vietnam wars, working in communications. During this time he was awarded various medals of commendation.
After his retirement from the Air Force, he returned to school and earned bachelor's and master's degrees in social work.
Don was stationed at Elmendorf Air Force Base in the late 1960s and returned to Anchorage in 1984.
Aside from his love of family, Don had a passion for cooking. He was best-known for his cinnamon "sticky" buns, which were frequently requested by family, friends and co-workers. Even 20 years later, friends would ask Holly if Don is still making his famous sticky buns.
He is survived by his wife, Holly; son and daughter-in-law, Peter and Renee Kerckhoff of Raymore, Mo.; son, Phillip of Arena, Wis.; daughter and son-in-law, Kristen and Patrick Lindbergh of Mesa, Ariz.; son and daughter-in-law, Paul and Teresa Kerckhoff of Fairchild AFB, Wash.; daughter and son-in-law, Karen and Mike Wolski of Anchorage; daughter, Kimberly Kerckhoff of Anchorage; 11 grandchildren; and sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Cynthia and Everal Larkham of Wentworth, Mo.
Don was preceded in death by his two sisters, Betty Geary and Margaret Bonner.
Edwin Chapman Williams was a casualty in WW2.
Cemetery gravestone inscription: "In loving memory of our son Edwin Chapman Williams 1920-1943 who died in the service of his country."
47140. Richard Marsden Haskell
Graduate of Yale University
U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File
Name: Richard Haskell
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 3 Jul 1925
Death Date: 6 Apr 2000
Cause of Death: Natural
SSN: 208140507
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Pennsylvania, Veteran Compensation Application Files, WWII, 1950-1966
Name: Richard Kent Haskell
Birth Date: 3 Jul 1925
Birth Place: Tulsa, Ohio, USA
Residence Date: 5 May 1950
Residence Place: Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Press-Republican (Plattsburgh, NY)
July 18, 2014VALCOUR � Mary "Mimi" Haskell McDowell, 86, of Valcour, died Monday July 14, 2014, at home. She was born on April 18, 1928, in Bradford, Penn., the daughter of Richard M. and Helen (Dickson) Haskell.
She was a 1949 graduate of Connecticut College. At Connecticut College one of her classmates, Peg McDowell, arranged a blind date for Mimi with her brother Dave, a 1st classman at the U.S. Naval Academy. Their friendship renewed when Dave attended submarine school in Groton, Conn.
Mimi married David Barber McDowell of Plattsburgh on July 29, 1950. They had three sons Rob (1951), David (1953), and William (1956) and a daughter, Mary Katherine (1960).
The McDowell's moved to Plattsburgh in 1958 for Dave to join his father, Dr. Edward S. McDowell, in his medical practice and Mimi became very involved in the Plattsburgh community. Over the years she served on several charitable boards, including the CVPH Women's Auxiliary, the CVPH Foundation, the Children's Home (later the Northern New York Center), the Northern Adirondack Planned Parenthood, and the Kent Delord House Garden Club. In 1967, Mimi helped form the local chapter of the League of Women Voters and she became their inaugural president. She was active for many years in the Adirondack Lakes Pony Club, and she was the longest serving docent for the Plattsburgh State Art Museum.^
After the death of her husband in 2004, Mimi hosted New Year's Eve parties for her fellow single woman friends. These festive gatherings became the basis for the "Better Way", a broad group of women who supported one another and met every month to discuss ways to navigate the "third age". Mimi will be remembered for her resilience, her devotion to her family, her laughter, her love of books, her love of friends, her nononsense advice, her expertise in the garden, her sartorial splendor, and for driving a Norwegian fjord horse in a cart along Route 9 South.Mimi is survived by her two sons and daughtersinlaw, Rob and Jan McDowell of Beekmantown, Bill and BrittMarie McDowell of Plattsburgh; and by her daughter and soninlaw, Kate McDowell and Dave Rider of Burlington, Vt; nine grandchildren, Damian, Brooke, and Parker Stafford, David McDowell, Nina, Sam, and Olivia McDowell, and Will and Jack Rider; and several greatgrandchildren.
Ms. McDowell was predeceased by her husband David; her son David; her brother Richard Kent Haskell, and her parents.
Republican-American (Waterbury, CT)
December 16, 2022COLEBROOK - William Haskell, of Pondwood Farm, passed away recently at age 89 at his home with his loved ones at his side.
William was born and raised in Bradford, Pa., and Stamford. He attended The Kent School (Kent, Conn.) and Mercersburg Academy (Pa.). He earned his B.A. at Yale and his M.S. at the Columbia University School of Journalism. William took a leave of absence from Yale to serve three years with the Green Berets (77th Special Forces), U.S. Army Airborne.
William was a man of letters and loved reading, mostly nonfiction (he devoured The New York Times every single day and would regularly consult the Encyclopedia Brittanica). He loved words and writing and spent the majority of his journalism career writing for the Torrington Register, where he covered court proceedings and produced a popular weekly column Hill Country letter. Working at the Register allowed him to maintain a bucolic lifestyle at his large property, Pondwood Farm, in North Colebrook.
Before working at the Register, he worked for newspapers from New Zealand to Nantucket, with stints in broadcast news at WTIC in Hartford and in Manhattan for news units of CBS, NBC, ABC. He preferred print journalism and one of his favorite assignments was for Science magazine, who deployed him to Antarctica to cover a story.
His favorite pastime after retirement was cutting firewood and sitting on the terrace overlooking the pond where he could observe nature unfolding before his keen eyes.
William was a fan of wildlife and nature, and especially a fan of crows and ravens that he raised and cared for. He also enjoyed riding motorcycles, hunting, and traveling the world.
William Haskell is survived by his loving partner, Marcia Evans, and his loving children, Anne and Ben Haskell, Ben's wife Jill, and his four grandchildren Kate, Morgan, Adam and Laura.
The Wayland Town Crier
October 21, 2014Evelyn Wellington Danforth, educator and caregiver Lyn's love of life carried her through all the stages of her 75 years.
Beginning in her 1940's childhood in Weston, she was a creative and cheerful mother's helper to three younger siblings as well as companion to her grandmother and namesake Evelyn Wellington at the family's farm, Gateway
Her skill with children and confidence with language led her to her first job as an au pair in France at age 16. After receiving a degree in Early Childhood Education from Bennett College, Lyn did student teaching on a Hopi Reservation in Gallup, NM before accepting a teaching position at the Peck School in Morristown, NJ.
Later on, after marrying science journalist William Haskell at 20, and raising their two children on a farm in rural Colebrook, CT, she realized her dream of running a preschool by opening her home to neighbors with small children. Called The Living Room, the enterprise became the seed for the Winsted Area Nursery School, which she started with two other teachers in 1976. The themes of her preschools were clear: structuring the day in a thoughtful way, showing respect for each child, valuing their individual needs and interests, staying connected to nature in all seasons, and exploring joyful expression through songs, rhythms, art and words.
A very active new phase of Lyn's life began when, after her marriage ended, she moved to Nantucket to become a partner in an educational search firm, Educational Management Network. She also set up and ran a popular B&B, "Danforth House" on Main Street. Lyn became devoted to the Quaker community, served as Clerk of the Meeting and worked to restore the original 17th century meetinghouse.
She wrote this about joining the Cape and Islands Friends community: I feel I have a huge new family. Im so attracted to the simplicity, respect for each other despite differences, and the beauty that comes out when people worship together. Lyn later became a full-time caregiver to elderly residents on the island who wanted to stay at home despite challenges such as dementia. In her journal of the experience, she called the caregiving profession "very honorable". Her loving-kindness was the foremost quality in her work as caregiver, and she worked to brighten the lives of her charges, making each day enjoyable for them. With the Quakers, Lyn studied racial justice and peaceful coexistence, and she practiced at home and at work what she understood on a global scale.
When she bought her first home in a diverse neighborhood in Roslindale in 2007, she and her daughter hosted students from around the world who were studying to learn English, and always made them feel welcome.
Even after suffering an aneurysm and several strokes over the past four years, Lyn maintained courage and a cheerful outlook for her new companions and caregivers at Weston's Sunrise Senior Living house. She died there with her siblings and children around her August 15.
Lyn is the mother of Anne W. Haskell of Roslindale and Benjamin D. Cowie-Haskell and mother-in-law of Rev. Jill Cowie both of Marshfield. She dearly loved her four grandchildren Kate (21), Morgan (21), Adam (19) and Laura Cowie-Haskell (19), all now in college. She is the elder sister of Nicholas W. Danforth, Julie Hyde and Nina Danforth, all of Weston.
Wellesley Friends Meeting invites all to a Meeting for Remembrance at 2 PM Sat. October 25th at, 26 Benvenue St., Wellesley.
The Warwick Advertiser (NY)
February 21, 2014Barbara Haskell Forcier, 81, died Monday Feb. 17, 2014, at Schervier Pavilion in Warwick, N.Y. Mrs. Forcier, daughter of the late Vernon and Rebecca (Haskell) Henry, was born in Tulsa, Okla. on March 4, 1932. She has been a resident of Vernon for the past 51 years.
Mrs. Foricer was a school teacher in the Sussex-Wantage school system before her retirement.She is survived by her husband, Robert R. Forcier; children, Richard Forcier and his wife, Joanne, of Florida, N.Y., and Kathryn Zerbe and her husband, Robert, of Vernon; grandsons, John and Robert Chasmar, as well as great grandchildren, Madison, John, Kaydance and Robert.
U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010
Name: John Haskell
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 10 Dec 1911
Death Date: 14 Aug 1983
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The Philadelphia Inquirer (PA)
August 16, 1983John S. Haskell, 71, former chairman of the board of Pennbank and the Pennbank Corp., died Saturday night at his home in Titusville, Pa.
A member of a family that had helped pioneer development of the oil industry in Pennsylvania, his father, H. H. Haskell, was one of the original directors of Titusville Trust Co., predecessor of the Titusville-based Pennbank. John S. Haskell became bank director in 1938 and worked there until he retired as its chairman last year.
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U.S., Select Military Registers, 1862-1985
Name: John S Haskell
Birth Date: 1911
Military Date: 8 May 1944
Publication Date: 1 Jul 1944
Title: Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Naval and Reserve
The Philadelphia Inquirer (PA)
June 27, 1986Charlotte Haskell, 72, former U.S. Golf Association seniors champion, died Wednesday at her home in Titusville, Pa.
Mrs. Haskell became the United States Golf Association Seniors Champion in the 1960s after decades of winning women's titles at the Titusville Country Club, the Wanango Country Club of Reno, Pa., and golf clubs in the Orlando, Fla., area. She was also a former North-South Senior Champion.
She was a member of the USGA Committee from 1976 to 1982 and was an official at numerous USGA-sponsored national and international tournaments.
75203. William Stanley Haskell
U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010
Name: W . Haskell
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 4 Nov 1904
Death Date: 12 Oct 1974
SSN: 005425670
Enlistment Date 1: 15 Nov 1943
Release Date 1: 21 Apr 1945