He sounds like a great man. I am sorry for your loss. Adam is right
though, this is very eloquent and I bet it would make a great
obituary. Possibly Hatton could help you get it into the local paper?

On 2/3/08, Jim Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Got a call last Thursday that he was in the hospital (he's been in and out
> with lung problems).  We drove up (they're outside Buffalo, we're in
> Scranton).  By the time we got there he was doing much better - he had been
> dehydrated the fluids were doing him worlds of good.  We stayed for a couple
> nights but had to leave - we had left the kids with neighbors.
>
> We got a call late Sunday that he had taken a turn (his kidneys had failed)
> and before we could leave again he had died.  My brother and I headed back
> together for the services.
>
> He wasn't doing well for the past few years.  His hands were so arthritic
> that he couldn't feel them, macular degeneration (or, as my grandmother
> would say "immaculate congeneration") had made him effectively blind and he
> was, as he put it "deaf in one ear and couldn't hear out of the other" (a
> bout of shingles had burst his right eardrum).  He had leukemia and his left
> lung had collapsed several times in the past year.
>
> His father and mother ran a cook-tent for various carnivals and his father,
> Carolton had some success as a singer and songwriter.  When not in school my
> grandfather worked the shows doing whatever needed to be done.
>
> He left school in 1943 to enlist in the army and served for just under two
> years with the 256 Field Artillery Battalion.  They ended up on Omaha Beach
> on June 7th where he drove a 1/4 ton truck transporting wounded from the
> front lines to field hospitals.  Over the next two years his battalion
> reached the outskirts of Berlin and ended up in Stuttgart.
>
> When he came back he married my grandmother (they recently celebrated their
> 61st anniversary) and moved into his parents' home in Tonawanda, NY where
> they built out the attic into an apartment.  He worked as a machinist and
> raised two children in the same house.  When my parents got married we moved
> into the same attic apartment where we lived until I was 12.
>
> He was very active in the community being a member of the American Legion,
> the Masons, the Star Camping Group, Last Man's Club, Tonawanda Senior
> Center, the Salvation Army, Tonawanda Senior Travel Club and "The Barge Men"
> singing group.  He was fixture in his later years, sitting on his porch and
> waving happily to everybody that passed.
>
> He was honored with several services: the American Legion, the Masons and a
> military service.  The flag from that service will be donated to the
> Veterans Association where it will be flown over the Tonawanda Veterans
> Memorial.
>
> He was a strong, tall man and honestly giving and kind (not the "now that
> he's dead we'll make up good things" giving and kind).  He was always the
> calm at the center of my family's many ridiculous feuds and was one of the
> very few that refused to take sides.  We didn't always agree but we never
> fought.
>
> I'm going to miss him.
>
> Jim Davis
>
>
>
>
> 

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