Thursday, March 31, 2022

PATTI DeMARY EVANS CHOOSES GRANDDAUGHTER OVER MONONGAH ALUMNI BANQUET

 


Patti DeMary Evans, Class of 1972, will be attending the high school graduation of her oldest granddaughter, Joshlynn Boone at Fairmont West, and NOT appearing at the 99th Monongah High Alumni Banquet on the 50th anniversary of her graduation because they both happen Saturday, May 28. 

Patti had to choose. She picked family. So would I.

And echoes of the past are rumbling through her brain when Patti and her father, Frankie DeMary, Class of 1947, did a father-daughter speeches at Monongah High’s 1972 graduation!

Joshlynn was named after both her parents. Her father is Josh, her mother is Brianna Lynn. Cool, huh?

 

Patti is married to Brian Evans, also a Monongah High graduate, who retired after 37 years as a coal miner, including at Consol’s Loveridge Mine.

 

I went back to Patti and asked for her favorite of her years with Josslynn. I’m repeating it here verbatim because there’s no way I could improve what Patti wrote:

 

”My favorite memory with Joshlynn has to be the time Brian and I took her on an RV trip in 2007 to Assateaque Island Beach. (Assateaque is in both Maryland and Virginia.)  She loved the wild horses that walked right up to us in the parking lot.

 

“She still remembers the trip, which makes it special to me, that it will be a forever memory of a special time spent with her.

 

“As I told Linda Gandy, I find it rather amazing that I will have the honor of watching my first grandchild graduate from high school on May 28, 7:30, the same time as my 50th class reunion.

 

“So I won’t be attending the Alumni, yet I am blessed by God to be able to share her very special night, making yet another priceless forever memory.

 

“Wishing all the Monongah Alumni a happy celebration of our priceless memories of MHS! God bless!”

 

Patti is doing EXACTLY what I would do, put family above everything else. As for Assateague I’ve been there several times.  The barrier island is 37 miles long, starting in Maryland and ending in Virginia. Marguerite Henry’s children’s book, “Misty of Chincoteague,” the name of the Virginia side of the island, made the wild horses famous.

 

More than 300 wild horses roam the 2-state island. It’s an awesome site to view them almost everyone tourists travel up and down those 37 miles of shoreline, which once was one solid piece of land till nature’s wrath split a hole to separate with water that man did shored up to have a canal to get out of both states and into the Atlantic Ocean.

 

You’re allowed to look all you want but you cannot touch the horses. “Let wild horses be wild” is the dictum. If you haven’t been there, plan a trip to the 2-state barrier island. You will gawk in awe, as I did. About the only place in America you can do that, despite modern encroachments everywhere else.

 

Patti and Josslynn’s memory stirred up MY memories of those enchanting wild horses.

While Patti will pass on her 50th anniversary reunion with her Class of 1972 (Class of 1962 also is an honor class) I will be there at 6:30 p.m. for 99th annual Monongah High Alumni Banquet, the longest-running high school reunion in West Virginia history.

If you want to attend, too, then print and fill out the form on this blog and mail it in with your check for $30 per person to Donna Davis. The address is on the form. I hope to see you there. 

Patti’s late mother is a bit of a legend, too. That would be Tina Virginia “Peaches” Aldridge DeMary, Class of 1945, who married Frank DeMary, Jr., Class of 1947, and together they owned and ran a grocery story at the end of Bridge Street in Monongah before they moved to Rivesville. Earlier, Peaches and Frank owned a grocery story in Pennsylvania. Peaches’ niece, Jennifer Aldridge Payton, once described Peaches as “The sweetest lady I’ve ever met.”

 

Grocery stores and DeMarys go together like bread and butter. he late John June DeMary, Class of 1937, DeMarys’ Market in Rivesville, just as you cross the railroad tracks off Rt. 19 and the West Fork River. John June’s cousins include Ann DeMary Eates, Class of 1945, widow of Joe Eates, also Class of 1945. Ann and Joe are the godparents of my son, John Larry.

 

Patti and Brian live in Fairmont and vacationed on Carrabelle Beach in Florida’s northwest panhandle, on the Gulf of Mexico coastline southwest of Tallahassee. Patti is a retired nurse (1987-2006) and graduate of MHS and Fairmont State.

 

Frank, Jr.’s parents were Frank Joseph DeMary, who passed away in 1972, and Lena Duva DeMary, who passed away in 1986. His siblings are Louise DeMary Lusi of Clearwater, Florida and Rose Ann DeMary Flore, Class of 1943, married to Robert and living in Princeton, Rhode Island.

 

Frank, Jr.’s brother, Joseph A. DeMary of Rivesville, passed away in 2007. Joe’s children are Kimberly Jo DeMary Clowers, married to Earl Clowers and living in Rossville, Georgia; Sgt. 1st Class Joanne Mary DeMary of Fort Meade, Maryland; another Joseph Allen DeMary, living in Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee with wife Yvonne; and Julie Ann DeMary, also of Soddy.

 

This isn’t the first time that Patti has been involved in a cross-generation event. I’ll let her tell you, as she did me:

 

When MHS was still alive and well, the alumni committee would ask a member of the 25th honor class to give a welcome speech to the graduating senior class. So in 1972 they asked my dad, Frankie DeMary, Class of 1947, to give welcome speech, and I gave the acceptance speech.

 

“Thankfully my Senior English teacher, Rose Matthews Ilich, helped both my dad and me to accomplish this, lol. It was still at the Fairmont Hotel and it was quite an event with way more people in the audience than either of us had ever experienced. It was daunting, to say the least, but we did it!

 

“Now, my daughter’s daughter, my first grandchild, and my parents’ first great-grandchild, will be graduating from Fairmont Senior on May 28th, the same time as my 50th class reunion. So we will be attending her milestone event and I am sure my mom and dad will be smiling down on all of us and our circle of life.”

 

What goes around DOES come around, huh? Wouldn’t it be a great idea for North Marion to do what Patti and Frankie did, have a 25th anniversary graduate of North Marion give the welcoming speech to the 2022 graduating class and then have a child of the welcoming speaker give the acceptance speech! What a great tradition that would be!

 

CATCHING UP WITH BOB COTTRILL, CLASS OF 1949

 


Bob Cottrill, Class of 1949, is enjoying his second marriage to Thelma after his first wife, super nurse Barbara Jean Henderson Cottrill, passed away in 2007. Bob and Thelma live in Pine Creek, which is about 70 miles south of Melbourne and 28 miles directly west of Fort Pierce with its Atlantic Ocean beach.

 

Perhaps the toughest ballcarrier in Monongah High football history (just ask the dozens of tacklers he laid out) has a soft spot for “great” Thelma who is “a good person.”

 

Bob owned Cottrill’s Mountain, 120 acres near Burnsville, West Virginia that he turned over to his two grandchildren.

 

Bob jitterbugged his way out of playing golf a few years ago. It seems his shoes and the dance floor didn’t get along and the flop during energetic dancing broke his thigh.

 

Bob knew Thelma for 22 years because she was a good friend of Bob’s wife, Barbara. Between wives he dated children’s book author Kathy for 4 years before his 2011 wedding to Thelma. Bob will be attending Kathy’s funeral services this week. She passed away last week.

 

Bob’s golfing partners the Bennetts, from Winston-Salem, North Carolina like Thelma, helped bring Bob and Thelma back into each other’s lives.

 

Bob’s grandson, Chris Barnes, is a Kent high school and University of Akron graduate with a title insurance business in Medina County, which borders the Summit County where I live in Tallmadge, Ohio. Chris’ mother is Bob’s daughter, Rhonda. He works for Fidelity Mortgage and Title. Bob also has sons Rob in Atlanta and Randy in Tampa.

Paula JoAnn Cottrill, Bob’s half-sister (same father, different mothers), passed away after a 2016 auto accident.

 

Bob keeps in touch with fellow Lions not named John Olesky, too. Arlene Marteney Edgell, Class of 1951, married to Okey Edgell, Class of 1944; Duane Harbert, Class of 1951; and, till she passed away, Frances Wimer Miller, who moved to Tulsa from West Virginia.

 


Wednesday, March 30, 2022

McCOMBS, WALKER, JOHNSON & BOOKS AT MONONGAH MARKETPLACE

 


Author avalanche at Monongah Marketplace

Authors familiar to Monongah residents Lisa Myers McCombs, Diana Pishner Walker and Diana Johnson will be at the Monongah Marketplace Spring Open House at 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, April 2 and at noon-4 p.m. Sunday, April 3.

Monongah Marketplace is next to the Dairy Kone across from my former U.S. 19 (Camden Avenue) childhood “baseball field,” although the official address is 652 Pike Street, which spills onto U.S. 19.

Lisa’s young adult books include “Abby,” “Raspberry Beret” and “Opening Pandora’s Box” and her current “The Church of Go” series of tomes.  She was a teacher for 32 years till multiple schlerosis hit her. She also wrote a book about her experience, “I Have MS.” All of which brought her Mom’s Choice Award, Gold Readers’ Favorite International Book Award, Gold Literary Classics Award and a Next Generation Indie Book Award.

 

Clarksburg native and Clarksburg Notre Dame High graduate Diana was an East Dale Elementary computer aide and visits schools, libraries and speaks to groups across America in her role with Headline Kids School Show Program.

Fairmont native and Bridgeport resident Diana also is a Headline Kids participant, speaking throughout America. Her books include her “Hopping to America” series that includes subtitles of “A Rabbit’s Tale of Immigration,” “LaBafana” and “A Rabbit’s Tale of a Wedding.”  


Saturday, March 26, 2022

TIME TO BE THINKING ABOUT GETTING YOUR MONONGAH HIGH BANQUET RESERVATION IN

 


CHRISTINE KNICELEY SOKOLSKY PASSED AWAY IN FEBRUARY

 Christine Kniceley Sokolsky passed away in February

Linda Cassesse, daughter of the late Agnes Jean Larry DiLaura, in my Class of 1950, tells me:

“Sadly, Christine Kniceley Sokolsky passed away about 2 months ago. She and my Mom were the best of friends. What an angel she was.”

Christine passed away February 5, 2002. She grew up in Carolina as a daughter of Henry and Sylvia Kniceley but moved to Idamay where she passed away. She was the widow of Mike Sokolosky, Sr. Her siblings, all deceased: Junior Kniceley, Charlotte Grebowski, Frankie Martin and Jane Hulderman (who passed away in 2014).

Christine’s obituary:

Christine Virginia Sokolosky, 90, of Idamay, passed away on February 5, 2022 at Fairmont Health and Rehab Center. She was born on August 20, 1931 in Carolina to the late Henry and Sylvia Kniceley.

She is survived by her four children: Michell and Ed Buckner, Fairmont, Michael Jr. and Debby Sokolosky, Charleston, Mitchell and Lisa Sokolosky, Winston-Salem, NC, and Marty and Randi Sokolosky, Marathon, FL; grandchildren: Bobby and Tammy Buckner, David Buckner and Eliza Moore, Christina Buckner-Drainer, Katie Sokolosky and David Knauer, Betsy Sokolosky, Emily Sokolosky, Tommy Sokolosky, Stephen Sokolosky, Sophia Sokolosky and Taylor Sokolosky; and great grandchildren: Jason Beck, Gracie Buckner, Nya Buckner, Jasmine Buckner and Claire Drainer; and several nieces and nephews.

In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her husband of 64 years, Michael Sokolosky, Sr.; a brother, Junior Kniceley; sisters: Charlotte Grebowski, Frankie Martin, and Jane Hulderman; and several nieces and nephews.


Christine loved the Lord and had a smile for everyone she met. She especially loved her grandchildren, and lit up when they were around. She was a member of the Calvary Temple Assembly of God Church at Swisher Hill.


The family would like to thank the staff at Fairmont Health and Rehab Center for their loving care during her final days, especially Vivian, Megan, Josh, Adam, and Paige.


In accordance with her wishes, there will be no public visitation or funeral. A private service will be held at the Hutson Funeral Home in Farmington for the immediate family. Condolences may be accessed at
www.hutsonfuneralhomes.com .

Friday, March 25, 2022

Jeannette Anderson Brown Weaver passed away

 


Jeannette Anderson Brown Weaver, Class of 1967, passed away Wednesday, March 23.

Jeannette was a majorette with the Monongah High marching band, a Fairmont State graduate, a nurse working at Fairmont General, Clarksburg’s United Hospital, Charleston Area Medical Center and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina Grand Strand Regional Medical Center.

Jeannette co-owned and operated Beach Buns (play on beach bums), a sandwick, pepperoni roll (of course, being the official food of West Virginia) and ice cream shop in Myrtle Beach with her best friend, Susan Millione.

Jeannette was born in Carolina to Thomas Harold “Jocko” Anderson, Sr. and Edith Iolene Shuttlesworth Anderson. She married Delmas Cleveland Brown, killed in a 1985 automobile accident. Her current husband of 32 years, Harry David Weaver, lives in Coons Run in Marion County.

Jeannette’s obituary:

After a long and valiant struggle with several various diseases and afflictions, which had plagued her for the past two decades, Jeannette L. Anderson Brown Weaver quietly passed into the loving arms of her Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, on March 23rd, 2022. The daughter of the late Thomas Harold “Jocko” Anderson Sr. and Edith Iolene Shuttlesworth Anderson, she was born into this world on August 13th, 1949. She was born and raised in Carolina, West Virginia in Marion County and was a proud West Virginian who enjoyed living in her beloved mountain state.

“Lelee”, as she was affectionately known to many, was a loving, nurturing and caring mother and a proud and doting grandmother. Her kids and grandkids were her greatest treasures.

An amazingly strong woman of God, her faith was founded and formed in the old Assembly of God Church on Main Street in Carolina. She was a member of the Calvary Temple Assembly of God church on Swisher Hill after the Carolina Church was relocated there in the 1970’s. She often taught teen Sunday school classes and adult Bible classes and was sought after as a teacher by other AG and Pentecostal churches in WV and VA. In later years, it pained her greatly that her body would not allow her to attend the church and services she so dearly loved; but her faith never wavered.

Jeannette was a 1967 graduate of Monongah HS where, among other things, she was a majorette with the Lions marching band. She later graduated from Fairmont State College, with a nursing degree, after raising her two sons, Mike and Eric, into their teens. She was a Registered Nurse who worked ICU and CCU at Fairmont General, United Hospital Center in Clarksburg, Charleston Area Medical Center in Charleston, WV and at Grand Strand Regional Medical Center in Myrtle Beach, SC.

She also co-owned and operated Beach Buns Inc, a small sandwich, pepperoni roll and ice-cream shop in Myrtle Beach, with her best friend and nursing colleague, Susan Millione.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her first husband, Delmas Cleveland Brown, who was killed in an automobile accident on 15 April, 1985. They were married in Winchester, VA on Oct 17th, 1966. She was also preceded in death by two brothers; Thomas Harold “Jocko” Anderson Jr in 2003 and Jock Allen “Tiny” Anderson in 2020. She was also preceded in death by one daughter in law, Martha Marie Mayfield Brown in 2011, and one great-grand daughter, Evelyn Rose Brooks in 2021.

She is survived by her husband of 32 years, Harry David Weaver of Coons Run Community in Marion County. She is also survived by her two sons, whom she had with her first husband Delmas Brown, and one step-son by her surviving husband David Weaver. They are Mikael Yaron (formerly Wm M Brown) and his wife Adi Yaron of Elizabeth, Eric Charles Brown and his wife Susan Kubiet Brown of Pleasant Valley and David Allen Weaver of Fairmont. She will be greatly missed by her 3 grandchildren as well: Lauren MacKenzie Brown, Tamar Anderson-Brown Yaron and Shiloh Avishai Yaron. Additionally, she is also survived by four brothers and a sister: Charles E Anderson and his wife Trudy Domico Anderson of Fairmont, Deloris J Anderson Hardesty and her husband James “Huley” Hardesty of Worthington, Thomas Yokum and his wife Karen Mathews Yokum of Monongah, Terry N Anderson and his wife Debbie Hess Anderson of Helens Run, and John D Anderson of Davenport, Iowa. Also surviving her are numerous loving nieces and nephews, and grand-nieces and grand-nephews.

Domico Funeral Home, 414 Gaston Ave. in Fairmont, is in charge of the arrangements. A public viewing will be held at Calvary Temple Church from 2pm – 8pm on Monday March, 28th. The pre-interment service will be on Tuesday, March 29th at Calvary Temple Church at 10:00 a.m. and will be immediately followed by a graveside service at Parrish Run Cemetery in Teverbaugh near Worthington. Rev. Timothy L. Shuttlesworth, cousin of the deceased, will be officiating the services. Online condolences may be sent to the family at www.domicofh.com.

Per Jeannette’s wishes, in lieu of flowers, if one wishes, donations can be made to “The Foundation for the Welfare of Holocaust Victims” at www.k-shoa.org


HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO THIS PRIDE OF LIONS!!!

 


Today is a doubleheader birthday for a pride of Lions.

Sandy Weils Shaffer Cook, Class of 1959, is one of my favorite Lions. She lives in Fort Myers Beach, Florida with husband Bob Cook. I’ve had Lions reunions with them at the home of Bill Meredith, Class of 19??, in Sarasota, Florida. Sandy’s first husband, the late Michael Shaver, Class of 1957, was a pitcher on Monongah High’s state champion baseball team that included the incredible Frank DeMoss.

David Edwards is Class of 1976. He served his country in the Air Force. He attended the 2005 annual Monongah High Alumni Banquet, the longest running high school reunion in West Virginia history that will have its 99th banquet Saturday, May 28 in Fairmont. But despite HOURS of searching I wasn’t able to find a photo of David Edwards. If you have one, send it to me on my Facebook page and I’ll add it.

March 25 also was the birthday of Richard Fitzwater, Class of 1956, who passed away in 2019.

Josephine Popovich Jones, Class of 1952, has a birthday March 28. Everyone knows her as Joey Jones. If she’s still alive then she has been married to Sherwood Jones for 67 years as of July 31. Happy Hutchinson honeys, they are. Their children are Ron Jones, who also graduated from Monongah High, and Vanessa Jones Rodriguez, who graduated from North Marion. Joey and Sherwood have 4 grandchildren: Erik Jones, Kylie Jones and Cory Jones, all North Marion graduates, and  Aubrey Rodriguez, a 5-year-old who is Vanessa’s daughter. Joey has worked at the Tygart Center as Personal Clothing Laundry Aide and at the Wishing Well.

Let me know if anyone this 12 months Lions birthday list is deceased and I’ll remove them. If you’re not on the list and want to me, give me your birthday and your graduation year.

 

April

 

4 – Charlotte Walker Cahill, Class of 1954

5 – Bernie Fullen, Class of 1963

9 – Paula “P.J.” Hickman, North Marion 1983

11 – Leo Kubiet, Class of 1942

12 – Linda Sawyer Duckworth, Class of 1966

14 – Lyla Cosner Howell, Class of 1958

15 – Judy Stewart Monell Razook, Class of 1959

16 – Becky Shelosky Carvillano, Class of 1961 

18 – Aaron Justice, Jr., Class of 1972

30 – Shirley Knight Ritterhouse, Class of 1954

 

May

4 – Freddie Jane Colosino Villers, Class of 1964

5 – Frank Franze, Class of 1950

5 – Louis Poluck, Class of 1973

6 – Jerry Loss, Class of 1956

12 – Arlene Kitchin, wife of Joe Martin, Class of 1957

14 – Donna Post Swiger, Class of 1953

14 – Mike Jurasko, Class of 1957

14 – Virginia Belle Littleton Curtis, Class of 1957

17 – Colette Stanley Melton, Class of 1970

17 – Lorraine Hulderman, Class of 1968

20 – Linda Tomlinson Stevenski, Class of 1955

21 – June Paxton Rogers, Class of 1948

22 – Toni Pflock Hennis, Class of 1955

27 – Ed Graffius, Class of 1971

28 – Terri Orsini Saye, Class of 1972

29 – John Woods, Class of 1957

29 – Scott Rogers, Class of 1973

30 – Dave Westfall, Class of 1948  

 

June

1 – Parma Kay Fetty, Class of 1973

3 – Jim Birdsell, North Marion grad from Monongah; married to Angela

5 – Ann “Peaches” DeMary

8 – John Koloskie, Jr., Class of 1944

8 – Pat Slovekosky Morris, Class of 1970

13 – John Melton, Class of 1975

13 – C.L. “Roy” Parker II, North Marion Class of 1982

13 – Rick Morrison, son of Kitty Ahouse Morrison, Class of 1968 

14 – Pamela Morrison Bombardiere, Class of 1967

14 – Regina Levelle Humphrey, Class of 1973

14 – Regina McCoy Murphy, Class of 1973

17 – Delmas Gene Hartley, Class of 1979

20 – Shirley Ann Woods Merchant, Class of 1953

22 – Prudence Deane Tetrick Funk, Class of 1960.

23 – Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949

23 – Kathryn Manuel Marshall, Class of 1960

23 – Ron Manzo, Class of 1969

23 – Frankie Vandetta, North Marion grad

 

July

1 – Roger Fisher, Monongah High grad

3 – Susan Ahouse Schrader, Class of 1971

5 – David Gowers, Class of 1971

5 – Bill Meredith, Class of 1957

7 – Alex Fazio Huff, North Marion 2005 grad

10 – Mary Fleming Toothman, Class of 1960

14 – Ted Nagel, Class of 1954

14 – Bentley Evans, Class of 1978

16 -- Debbie Moore O'Dell, Class of 1969 

18 – Larry Zickefoose, Class of 1968

19 – Arlene Martha Edwards Costelac, Class of 1958

20 – Catherine Reckart Boyce, Class of 1973

21 – Robin Huffman Satterfield, Class of 1973  

16 – Jean Nagel Viglianco, Class of 1949

29 – Pete Basagic, Class of 1972

 

August

1 – Kim DeMary Clowers, Class of 1979

5 – Robert Tennant, Class of 1971

6 – Wauneda Evans, Patty DeMary Evans’ mother-in-law

7 – Dorie Mike Whetsell, Monongah graduate

8 – Sandra Ashcraft, Class of 1964

9 – Paula Kerns Fazio, Class of 1979

15 – David Kelly, 1980 North Marion grad after 11 years at Thoburn & Monongah High

16 – Debby Morrison Harden, Class of 1966

17 – Twins Earnest Hayes & Chester Hayes, both Class of 1965

18 – Jim McDaniel, Class of 1960

18 – John Fazio, Class of 1970

19 – Barbra Eller-Hanning, Monongah grad

20 – Irene Fazio Preolitti, Class of 1966

20 – Connie Warash, Class of 1975

21 – Robert Howard Edwards, Class of 1959

24 – Sean Patrick Fazio, 2015 North Marion grad

29– Pat Meredith Wills, Class of 1950

30 – Beth Pritchard Brooks, Class of 1978

30 – David Harbert of Idamay, Farmington grad

 

September

 

1 – Claude Domico, Jr., Class of 1959

3 – Debra June Knight, Class of 1973

6 – Dave Domico of Monongah, Fairmont West grad married to Andrea Justice Domico

7 – Phillis Tarley, North Marion grad from Idamay living in Fairmont

8 – Fred Moorehead, Class of 1964 

8 – Jackie Olesky Straight, Class of 1955

13 – Karen Manzo Tennant, Class of 1974

14 – Jim Shaver, Class of 1954

15 – Bettie Hensley Lowther, Class of 1948

17 – Patti DeMary Evans, Class of 1972

20 – Greg Patrick, Class of 1970

23 – Sally Wood Tarley, Class of 1959

24 – Joe Fazio, Class of 1974

25 – Marylee Hertzog Gwinn, Class of 1948

25 – Jim Davis, Class of 1964

26 – Nathaleen Cameon Oliverio, Class of 1948

27 -- Bonita Lavencheck Waybright, Class of 1968

29 – Doris Jean Menear Basnett, Class of 1938

29 – Dietta Harden Goush, Class of 1959

29 – Pamm Yanero Bragg, Class of 1969

 

October

 

1 – Janet Sowers Rinehart, Class of 1964

2 – Stanley H. Vance, Class of 1964

7 – Sherry McIntire, Class of 1975

8 – Susan Staron Sanders, Class of 1971

8 – Valerie Vandetta Aldridge, Class of 1973

11 – Jay Holman, Class of 1971

12 – Brenda Manzo, wife of Danny Manzo, Class of 1957

14 – John Prunty, Class of 1949

18 – Kim Glover Ice, Class of 1975

19 – Ronda Colisino, Class of 1978

20 – Leona “Duckles” Davis Schooley, Class of 1953

20 – Richard Edwards, Class of 1978

21 – Ken Slovekosky, Gilmer County High Class of 1976.

22 – Mike Uram, 1981 North Marion graduate

 

 

25 -- Rachel Vivian Stalnaker Sloan, Class of 1962.

26 – Lori Hawkins Ice, Fairmont East graduate living in Carolina

29 – Robert Boydoh, Class of 1956

31 – Patty Steele McCombs, Fairmont East graduate who lives in Monongah

31 – Helen McDougal Mudry, Monongah High grad


Thursday, March 24, 2022

WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR? GET YOUR MONONGAH HIGH BANQUET RESERVATION IN!!!!

 

PRINT THE FORM, FILL IT OUT, MAKE OUT YOUR CHECK AND MAIL IT TO DONNA DAVIS!




Get your reservations in NOW for the 99th Monongah High Alumni Banquet, the longest-running high school in West Virginia history!

Honor classes this year are Class of 1962 and Class of 1972. I will be there and I’m Class of 1950 so there’s NO excuse for 1962 and 1972 graduates still alive to NOT show up. I’m 89 and I’ll be there. Stop by my table to say “Hey!” to me and tell me about YOUR favorite Monongah High experiences.

The Banquet will be at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, May 28 at the Knights of Columbus, 1529 Mary Lou Retton Drive in Fairmont, as it has been for years. Don’t miss it and then groan when you see photos of Lions having so much fun at the banquet later.

Class of 1962 graduates are Mora Jean Arnette Smart, Ollie May Brown, Dolores Jean Clayton Downey, Rebecca Marlene Davis Christopher, Linda Virginia Efaw Bonfantino, Patricia Ann Fleming Satterfield, Jo Ann Garrett Bowen, Karen Sue Goush Sloboda, Lois Carol Harbert Moore, Christine Hawkins, Edna Mae Haynes Teixeira, Ina June Kincaid Fullen, Sandra Sue Lipinski Hawkins, Joan Lupinsky Same, Constance Jean Martin Abruzzino, Mary Katherine Mikez Loy, Helen Louise Minear, Shirley Ann Minor Long, Carol Jean Satterfield, Carol Morgan Shupp Tetrick, Rachel Vivian Stalnaker Sloan, Sara Elizabeth Sturm Blaydes (who lives in Tallmadge, Ohio, as I do), Donna Lou Watkins, Lenore Jean Wright Moore. Those at the chicks.

The 1962 guys are Joseph Anthony Amalett, Dennis Basnett, the late Michael Batiste, Gary Wayne Blare, William Andrew Brown, Denver Duane Browning, Edgar Ray Burley, Robert Thomas Danko, Donald Fleming, John Fleming, Daniel Lee Fullen, Benjamin Gandy, Edwing Hardaway, Roy Jackson, George Koski, Joseph McCullough, William McKinney, Robert Owen Mick, Christy Clyde Morgan, the late Gary William Moyer, Roger Lee Nesselrette, Donald Frederick Pitman, Paul Shamrock, the late David Shears, Harley Dean Swiger, Jr., Charles Thomas, David Lee Van Meter, the late Edmund Ray Vozniak, Jyrld Eugene Whaley, Theodore Williams and Gerald Woods.

The Class of 1972 guys and gals, to quote Damon Runyon, are June Ann Blair Megna, Rosemarie Chucci Buffkin, Debbie Conley Boliner, Diana Conner, Brenda Cunningham Moore, Patti DeMary Evans, Diane Dickens Pethel, Judy Duckworth Campbell, the late Cheryl Esultante, Pearl Greynolds Eddy, Marlene Hamilton Conner, Sharon Hines Link, Debra Holbrook Shumate, Marriet Hunter, Bertha Jones Wilson, the late Brenda Knight Stover, Thea Beth Madden Pierce, Beatrice Murphy Henderson, Ruth Mike (any relation to the legendary Mike brothers barbers of Monongah?), Susan Mikulski Morgan, Linda Mills Levelle, Marsha Minnear Christopher, Jane Moore Alasky, Donna Morgan Snyder, Terri Orsini Saye, the late Debra Rowand Swiger, Nan Sabo Hansen, Greg Aldridge, Pete Basagic, Robert Batiste, Danny Bissett, Donald Chapman, James Colanero, Bruce Coleman, John Domico, John Efaw, James “Jack”? Fullen, Terry Freeman, Steven Garrett (any relation to the late Richard Garrett in my Class of 1950?), Aaron Justice, Mark Kuhns, Steven Lantz, Kevin McCombs, Curtis Mayo, Thimothy Miller, Franklin Raddish, Roger Raines, Paul Riggs, Sidney Riggs, Billy Sailor, Rick Shaver (any connection to 40-year Monongah High secretary Ida Shaver?), Terry Shilley, John Starr, Kim Thompson, David Westfall (who Harley motorcycles through life with Marcia Michalski Westfall) and Paul Wood.

I don’t have THAT great a memory. I just copied off the list that Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949, Monongah High’s de facto historian, gave me years ago.

If Kathern Loss Herndon, Class of 1942, is there on May 28 and YOU are not, shame on you. Kathern is the oldest to show up, year after year, and I get my hug from her every time, much to MY delight, and hopefully to Katern’s. My mother’s sister, Gezala Futten Loss, married Frank Loss and they had a 100-acre farm in Mill Fall that had 4 homes on it, not just the one I visited as a kid, when I visited Suzanne Barr Loss, Class of 1948, before Suzanne, daughter of the famous Dr. Barr in Worthington who delivered darn near every baby in Worthington, passed away.

Hell, Ron Pearse was there in 2021 in his wheelchair so your excuse for not showing up will seem puny. So was Tom Dean, Class of 1949, which means he’s older than me. Not many above ground can make that statement. Show up or be square and be unhappy that you missed the fun when you see all the photos!

In 2023 the annual Monongah High Alumni Banquet will be celebrating big-time its ONE HUNDREDTH REUNION!

So, get your reservation in, $30 per person, check made out to

Monongah High Alumni Association

And mailed to

MHS Alumni Association

c/o Donna L. Davis

858 Park Avenue

Monongah, WV 26554-1143

Everyone should join me in giving a loud, exuberant “THANK YOU!” shout to Donna, the Alumni treasurer who has been doing this yeoman work not too long after Grant took Richmond. Every Lion in the world owes Donna a debt taller than Mount Everest. These things don’t work unless someone does a lot of work to make it happen.

John Olesky, Class of 1950, who lives in Tallmadge, Ohio, which shares a border with Akron, Ohio.


Saturday, March 19, 2022

ROMANCES IN HALLS OF MONONGAH HIGH THAT LED TO LONG, HAPPY MARRIAGES

 























From Greta Martin Mike, Class of 1922, who founded the Monongah Alumni Association in 1922 and came up with the first Monongah High Alumni Reunion that became the longest continuous high school reunion in West Virginia history to Linda Lopez Gandy, Class of 1965, current president of the Monongah High Alumni Association who will oversee the 99th annual MHS Banquet Saturday, May 28 in Fairmont, the hallways of Monongah High have been a petri dish for romances that flourished and blossomed into decades of marriages.

There were a few stops before we wound up with the Monongah High School building that we knew from 1933 to 1979.

It began in 1769 when Elizabeth Ford Cochran and her husband erected a tent 700 yards from where West Monongah High would be built. Settlers continued teaching children in their homes till 1799 when a log house near Helen’s Run became a school building with a paid teacher who was rotated among the pupils’ families for her “residents.”

In 1812 a new schoolhouse was built near Worthington. A log house was built a mile west of Monongah and another school near Number 63 mine. In 1855 the farmers build a small frame high school, The Willow (for the tree on the Cocran property) which lasted till 1908 and later became the Monongah Middle building. In 1891 a two-room schoolhouse went up on the site of old Thoburn School In 1908 an 8-room brick building went up and was occupied till 1979. Thoburn’s first high school was in one room of Thoburn Grade School building with N.G. Matthews as principal and only teacher with 19 pupils. In 1915 the school was in 2 rooms over H.D. Martin’s store with 27 students. In 1918 the school was in a large house overlooking the West Fork River with 60 students. In 1921 the new high school building went up and the named changed from Thoburn High to West Monongah High with 100 students. Harland Hartman became Monongah High’s first band director in 1942 and wrote the music for the “Alma Mater” and the “Fight Song.” 

Besides romance and marriage, the 3,143 Monongah High alumni are state legislators, engineers, doctors, nurses, lawyers, school superintendents, judges, educators, business leaders, served in the military and, like me became newspaper editors and reporters. Although Monongah High ceased to exist after 1979, merging in North Marion High with Mannington, Farmington, Barrackville and Fairview.

But Lions’ members of MHS will never die and decades of marriages are a testimony to the bonding that went on during and after our Monongah High days. I will NEVER be able to repay the debt that I owe to Monongah High and teacher Mary Turkovich.

Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949, de facto Monongah High history, summarizes the history:

Thoburn High School 1914-1921

West Monongah High School 1921-1933

Monongah High School 1933 -1979

I didn’t find Jimmy Mike’s name in the Monongah High graduation lists that Roamona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949, provided for every year from 1918 through 1979 (which was started by Greta Martin Mike and inherited by Ramona) so I’m assuming there was no high school romance. Same with Linda Lopez Gandy who married Jim Gandy, Class of 1964.

Linda explained it:

“John, Jim and I liked each other when I was going into eighth grade and him into high school but we were not high school sweethearts. We hardly spoke to each other. We didn’t get together till I was out of beauty school and we ran into each other at Billy’s Meadowbrook (in West Chester just outside Fairmont). Then the romance began.”

And how! Into a wow!

As Linda once explained it to me, “On October 11, 1968 I boarded a plane in Pittsburgh. My first time on a plane and the first of my many adventures. Flew to Canada, took a plan to Preswick, Scotland where I met Jim. Took a taxi from the airport to the train station, another taxi to the boat dock, rode the boat across the Firth of Clyde, took a taxi to our apartment in Dunoon, Scotland. My first of many adventures with my husband.”

Today, with Linda a MHS Alumni Association president, Jim sits alongside her on the MHS Banquet dais as a member of the Alumni Association Board of Directors. Their romance sort of began BEFORE Monongah High, then sat on the back burn till after both were graduates. Worked just like the MHS hallways romances, though.

 

Greta married Jimmy Mike, one of the three legendary Mike brothers who were barbers in Monongah, and cut my hair when I was a child. Dominic Mike and Jimmy had a barber shop under the Monongah Bank and catty-corner across the street from the Monongah Town Hall. Brother Mutt Mike’s barber shop was near the A&P on Bridge Street.

It was Greta, who taught 3rd and 4th grades in Worthington, who began compiling Monongah High graduation lists that I use today in putting together information on this Monongah High Alumni blog. It also was Greta who began the practice of finding out where former Lions lived and putting in their post-Monongah High addresses and marital information. Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949, who lives in Monongah, took over the task after Greta passed away.

 

Nancy Shupp Rogers and James Rogers, both Class of 1960, really took the plunge into a Monongah High romance that came up for air and a 58-year marriage with their 59th wedding anniversary coming up July 27. They dived into their first kiss. Underwater at Mill Dam in Booth Creek. Sounds like a Monongah Mermaid to me.

 

Nancy and Jimmy had their first date in February 1957 at a Monongah High Valentine Sweetheart Dance. They were married July 27, 1963 in the Monongah Baptist Church.

 

Their favorite marital memory was their first trip together to Nags Head, North Carolina.

 

Their children are James “Zeke” Rogers II and Tammy Jo Rogers Lewis, who tipped me off about this remarkable Lions romance.

 

Grandchildren for the modern day reincarnation of Hans Christian Andersen’s 1837 fairy tale, “The Littlest Mermaid,” and her Prince are Dr. Jessica Ann Rogers of Langhorne, Pennsylvania, John James Rogers of Bunner’s Ridge and Andrew William Lewis of Monongah, Tammy Jo’s son.

 

But Monongah’s Mermaid, thankfully, didn’t dissolve into foam the way that Andersen’s Mermaid did. The kiss expanded into a romance that has lasted for 65 years, starting with the Valentine’s Day first date.

 

Jimmy’s second cousin, Scott Rogers, Class of 1973, married Doris Carpenter Rogers, Class of 1971, on July 26, 1975. So Jimmy and Scott celebrate their wedding anniversaries ONE DAY APART!

 

Scott and Doris’ daughter, Mandi Jo Rogers Craig, told me that Doris and Scott began dating in 1971 and married in 1975. Their 47th wedding anniversary is coming up July 26.

 

Their first date was a movie in the Fairmont Theater, which got the films about 2 years before they showed up in Monongah’s theater. Joe Craig and Beverly Debaslki Craig, both Class of 1971, made it a double date.

 

Doris and Scott have two granddaughters, Audra Rogers and Amelia Craig, Mandi’s daughter.

 

Doris and Scott live in Charleston. Her Facebook photos include a sweatshirt that says “A beach is my happy place” and there are other photos of Doris and Mandi on the beach with the ocean in the background.

 

Doris also gets in travel fun with the Ahouse sisters, Kitty Morrison, Class of 1968, and Sue Schrader, Class of 1971. So did Bertha Wilson, Class of 1971, particularly in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, before Bertha Marie Kennedy Wilson passed away in 2021.

 

 

Ann DeMary Eates and Joe Eates, both Class of 1945, purred like lovey-dovey Lions in the hallways of Monongah High. By 1950, they were married.

Joe passed away in 2020 at the age of 94. No matter how hard God tried he couldn’t make a better couple than Joe and Ann. Joe was an angel before he left this earth. So is Ann.

 

In 2010 Joe and Ann were named Monongahfest Citizens of the Year.  They were on the Monongah Heroine Committee which, with a major financial boost from the government of Italy for the $75,000 project, put up a Heroines statue honoring the wives of the 362 miners killed in the 1907 mines explosions in Monongah. It’s near the Town Hall. It was one of Father Briggs’ projects, along with St. Barbara’s Nursing Home near Willowdale Drive south of Monongah.

 

Joe served his country in the Army as a Tech Sergeant and was a Fairmont Supply Company retiree, in the United Mine Workers Band in Monongah and mowed fairways and greens at Fairmont Field Club, where I caddied for 10 years to help pay my way through West Virginia University School of Journalism.

 

Ann and Joe, whose lived at the bottom of Bridge Street hill, are the godparents of my son John Larry.

 

Joe's brother, Tony Eates, Class of 1950, lives in Fairmont with wife Lucy Cann Eates. Other siblings, all deceased, are Nick Eates, Class of 1935; Dominick Eates, Class of 1946, a former Monongah High football punter who married the late Mary Larry Eates from Carolina; Mike Eates; Mary Eates; and Angeline Eates.

 

Mike, who passed away in 2008, was married to the late Clarksburg Washington Irving High graduate Jeannie Eates. Nick Eates, who passed away in 1999, repeatedly complemented my parents on their garden in our Church Street home in Monongah when he went for a walk on the sidewalk along U.S. 19/Camden Avenue. Mary passed away in 1997.  Dominic passed away in 2000. Dominic and Mary’s son, Larry Dan Eates, Class of 1970, married Frances Victor Eates, a 1971 Farmington High grad. Angeline passed away in 2005.

 

When Joe once was asked what adjectives he wanted to describe him he replied: “Trustworthy, sincere, friendly.” Everyone who ever met Joe, including me, can tell you that is a PERFECT way to describe Joe. St. Peter never had a better occupant in Heaven.

 

Here’s another Monongah High romance that included serving our country by the spouse. Sheila K. Mobley McCutcheon and Dorsey A. McCutcheon, Jr., both Class of 1974, were in the SAME home room from 7th grade until they graduated. They married December 6, 1974, two days before Dorsey left for the Air Force.

I’ll let Sheila tell the rest of the fairy tale: “After boot camp he was allowed to come get me and we lived in Wichita Falls, Texas for 3 months during his tech school. He was assigned to England Air Force Base in Alexandria, Louisiana. We stayed there the rest of his enlistment. Both our boys were born there, John Dorsey in 1975 and James Allen in 1978.

“We settled in Cheat Lake after his discharged from serving 4 years in the Air Force and lived there 29 years. Dorsey worked as a mechanic in the PRT. I worked as a manager at Montgomery Ward, then at Mylan Pharmaceuticals. All 8 grandchildren live in the Suncrest area of Morgantown.”

Sheila has a great memory of Marcia Michalski Westfall, the Motorcyle Mamma who also is in this article with her Harley ElectroGluide husband Dave Westfall:

“Marcia and Dave came to Alexandria to visit us. We shot bottle rockets out the back of our van as we were doing down a highway! Laughing all the way. Great friends, great times.”

Sheila added: “When Dorsey passed away in 2019 he had full military honors at Grafton’s National Cemetery.” As well he should have for his service to our country.

 

Elaine Hewitt Monell, Class of 1949, and Raymond “Soak” Monell, Class of 1945, are another heart-warming purring Lions roaming the halls of Monongah High who married and roared with laughter and love. Soak, a Monongah High basketball player, passed away. Elaine lives in Riverside, a Dayton, Ohio suburb. Last time I checked Elaine and Soak had 4 children, 13 grandchildren and, like me, 6 great-grandchildren. They were married for 64 years. Soak passed away in 2012. 

The Elaine and Soak love story began not inside MHS hallways but at the PNA Tavern operated in Monongah by the Brzuzy family where Elaine, Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949, and Madonna Haggerty frequented to get a look at John "Duke" Manzo, Frank Ross and Soak. A first date at the Strand Theater led on May 12, 1951, to the altar at Our Lady of Pompeii Church with Father John Reardon handling the wedding ceremony and Joe Faber’s band providing the music at the Union Hall reception.

Madonna Haggerty, Class of 1949, became Mrs. Albert Snider. Ramona, Class of 1949, became Mrs. Frank Michalski. Frank, who left Monongah High after his final 1948 football season there, is deceased.

Soak’s sister, Julie Monell Koloskie, passed away in 2013. Her husband of 66 years, Junior Koloskie, Class of 1944, passed awazy years later; their children are Jerry Koloskie, Class of 1975, and Lydia Monell.

 

Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949, and Frank Michalski, who started with Class of 1950 with me but left without graduating after playing the 1948 football season at Monongah High became Lions whose home with a swimming pool was the meeting place for anyone who visited Monongah, including me. Tom Dean, also Class of 1949, NEVER appeared in Marion County without stopping by to see his beloved Monie.

Whenever I don’t know the connections of former Lions I’m writing about, I call Ramona, whose memory is excellent. When I visited her home with my children and grandchildren in a tour of my life’s memory landmarks, every room was filled with Monongah High memorabilia, down to the MHS Lion with water spitting out of its mouth.

Ramona and Frank had six children. Marcia Michalski Westfall, Class of 1974, married Dave Westfall, Class of 1972; Mike Michalski (wife Jan); Jay Michalski (wife Debbie), Carol Michalski Drake (husband Bob), another Ramona Michalski and the late Mary Frances Michalski Gapen, Class of 1968, who married Rick Gapen.

 

Marcia followed in her parents’ footsteps with her own Monongah High romance that developed into a long, happy marriage, to David Westfall, Class of 1972. So amazing that in 2015 they were named the Fairmont Times’ Family of the Year.

Marcia recalls “We started dating in the spring of 1972” only a few months before Dave graduated. “We married in July of 1974,” a couple of months after Marcia graduated. “We were children,” Marcia said. And, now, happy grownups.

Their children are Brandie HaneyAmy Westfall Raines and David Westfall. “The children all live within a half-mile of us in Kilarm or Koons Run.” Marcia and Dave have 8 grandchildren.

 

Dave worked for the Department of Highways in DOH in Marion County and Marcia was a schoolteacher in Marion County. Both retired in 2019.

Their travels are pretty much contained to motorcycling all over America.  “We’ve traveled across the country twice,” Marcia posted, “and especially like the Gulf Coast of Florida.” Marcia and Dave whisked their way to Florida and California on their Harley motorcycle. 

 

They did make it to Canada together and Dave to Mexico without Marcia.

 

If you haven’t noticed by now most of the male Lions married younger female lions. Like Linda Lou Nottingham Willis, Class of 1964, who married Dave L. Willis, Class of 1961.

Linda’s note to me: “I see where someone entered me and my husband’s names for Monongah High romances. We are proud of that fact. We were married May 15, 1965. We have two sons, Shawn and Kevin. Shawn has two sons, Bryson and Camdon. Sorry to say his wife, Melissa, passed away. Kevin and wife Chrissy have a son, Kyler.

“We are fortunate that they all live near us in Idamay. We still live in Worthington,” which is where Linda and Dave grew up. I know all about the value of family remaining nearby even after they leave their parents’ home. My 3 children, 5 of my 7 grandchildren and 4 of my 6 great-grandchildren live within 20 miles of my Tallmadge, Ohio home. Family visits are frequent and full of fun and frivolity.

 

Danny Fullen, Class of 1961, and Ina Kincaid Fullen, Class of 1962, “were high school sweethearts who got married right out of school,” Danny tells me.

Being Lions was a family thing, Ina added. “All four of my siblings and I graduated from Mononongah High. My brother Jack Kincaid is Class of 1965. My sisters are Pam Kincaid West, Class of 1968, and Mary Kincaid Tennant, Class of 1970.” Their father is George Kincaid.

 

Lorraine Snider Hulderman and Raymond “Bugs” Hulderman, Class of 1966, were “high school sweethearts who dated for two years while going to Monongah High School,” Lorraine recalls. They were married 55 years as of March 11, 2022. Bugs retired after 43 years as a coal miner. They have 2 sons, 7 grandchildren (6 boys and 1 girl) and 3 great-grandchildren. Lorraine’s brother, Jerry Snider, and her sisters Prudy Snider Kozik and Linda Snider Bragg and Bugs’ siblings Don Pitman, Tom Hulderman (a great Monongah High athlete and long-time friend of Alabama coach Nick Saban, quarterback of the 1968 MHS team that won a state title, 1 of 5 by the Lions over the years) and Sylvia Hulderman Edwards that ALL graduated from Monongah High. Lions everywhere in THAT family!

Lorraine and Bugs live on Swisher HHHill.

Bugs and Tom Hulderman’s brother, Don Pitman, Class of 1962, has been married for 57 years, but to Fairmont West graduate Joan Pethel Pitman.

 

Donna McGinnis Suppa-Fullen, Class of 1963, tells me about her Monongah High romance with Jackie Suppa that included the senior prom: “Jackie and I both were in the Class of 1963. We were in English class together and decided to go to the senior prom together. After that we were inseparable. We married August 13, 1965 – Friday the 13th.

“Jackie flew in from Germany to get married while he was in the Army. We were married a few months shy of 46 years when he sadly passed away in June 2011 (while vacationing in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. We had a happy life together. We have two daughters, Melisa and Christina, who both live in Taylor County (Grafton area).”

Ah, but there’s a second romantic chapter here. I’ll let Donna tell it:

“In 2015 after he lost his wife Anne after more than 40 years together Bernie Fullen and I connected on Facebook. At that time he was living in Canton, Ohio. He decided to return to West Virginia. We were married in July 2016. Bernie has a daughter living in Indiana along with her husband and two grandchildren and several great-granchildren. Bernie and I both graduated together in 1963 and Bernie and Jack were best friends. We are leading a happy life together and believe the Lord had a big part in it.”

Bernie’s sister, Geraldine Fullen Ross, Class of 1950, also passed away in 2017 in Michigan.

Donna and Jackie had two daughters, Melissa Dawn Knotts and Christina Renee Tucker, and five grandchildren. Jackie’s siblings were Tony Suppa, Edith Renick and Shelby Lowther and the late Thomas Suppa.

 

Tammy Brooks relays this heart-warming and heart-breaking story about her parents, Joann Shumate Chipps, Class of 1971, and Tom Chipps, Class of 1969:

Their first date was August 5, 1970 to the Mannington Fair (John Olesky: It was a big deal when I was a child in Monongah). Joann was in the summer between her junior and senior year. They knew each other when dad was still in Monongah High but didn’t date. They were married April 14, 1972.

 

“They started their marriage living just off Manley Chapel Road, then spent 30ish years in White Hall where they reared their 2 daughters. They moved back to Manley Chapel, building a house on dad’s family farm land. Dad built the house himself with the help of his brother and son-in-law Kevin and several other friends and family.  

 

“Their daughters Tracy Estel married Kevin Estel and have 1 child and Tammy Brooks Moore married Richard Moore amd they have 4 children. The grandchildren are Ben Estel (15), Nathan Brooks (18), Hallie Brooks (17), Jesse Moore (20) and Samantha Moore (16). 

 

“I remember them taking me and Tracy to Sea World and Storybook Forest. Summers on the farm with the children helping plant vegetables or running through cornfields. Working on the 1969 Mustang that he rebuilt that my sister wrecked when she was in college.

“Just the two of them traveled to Texas to see old classmates and friends. As they got older they enjoyed going out to eat together. 

 

“Mom had a heart transplant in 2004 due to a congenital defect and did very well. She had a hemorrhagic stroke in October 2018 and passed away on November 26, 2018.”

 

Ina June Kincaid Fullen, Class of 1962, and Daniel L. Fullen, Class of 1961, were a typical couple that romanced and danced in the hallways of Monongah High and, as Ina recalls, “got married right out of school” after “we were high school sweethearts.”

 

Their son, Daniel L. Fullen, Jr., had to settle for being a 1985 North Marion graduate because Monongah High ceased to exist in 1979.

 

 

 

And there’s my cousin, Mary Chris Fazio Ramsey and husband Tom Ramsey, both Class of 1969. Mary Chris, as in Merry Christmas because she was born close to or on that day, had the most fantastic father, golfer and, for me, uncle ever! Renzy Fazio, who ran the Fazio Grocery at the bottom of Jackson Street hill with wife Frances Olesky Fazio, sister of my father, John W. Olesky, Sr., shot a 30 !! on the White Day Golf Course with me as his golf companion. When he got back to Aunt Frances he bragged about MY golf game! That was Uncle Renzy. Unassuming, but talented as hell in so many ways.

 

Renzy and Frances’ other children are Dave Fazio, Class of 1968, who married 1973 Farmington High grad Cora Fazio who owns and operates Fazio ElderCare on Stoney Lonesome Road just south of Monongah on U.S. 19; Irene Fazio Preolitti, Class of 1966, who lives in Traction Park with husband Mike Preolitti, Class of 1962; and Steve Fazio, Class of 1975, widower of Nancy Fazio. Both Dave and Cora are Fairmont State graduates.

 

Renzy and Frances are both Class of 1937 but it was the 1940s before they married.

 

·         Joanne Davis Ash, Class of 1954, married Maxwell Ash, Class of 1953. She recalls: My husband and I went to Monongah High. We were married 64½ years. He passed away 2 years ago.” Joanne grew up in Four States and lives in Marshfield, Missouri.

 

 

Although I didn’t romance and marry a Monongah High girl (my fault; I was such a 99-pound dork who was invisible to the girls and I don’t blame them) but I did have a Cinderella, I’ll add my story to end this epic article.

 

After my graduation from West Virginia University School of Journalism, and no luck with females in my first 20 years, I met Monia Elizabeth Turkette, who was living in the Cinderella, West Virginia coal mining camp adjacent to Williamson when I was sports editor of the Williamson Daily News with 43 years of journalism ahead of me. I heard her before I saw her. She was in the stands at a baseball league that I organized, the first integrated such sports program in Williamson and Mingo County history (1954, remember, before the Supreme Court slapped racists into the face with Roe v. Wade), when I heard her yell: “I suppose you call THAT a hard single.”

 

The back story: As Sports Editor, when Monia’s brother, Larry, hit a baseball into the outfield that went through the legs and under the glove of the outfielder I wrote the next day about Larry hitting “a hard single.” Didn’t want to call it an error on the fielder and didn’t want to diminish what Larry had gone. So that led to what I call today My Mona Lisa and a love that lasted for 50 years (2 years of courtship and 48 of marriage before she passed away in 2004).

 

I turned to a coach next me and third base and said, “I know how to shut her up.” So I took her to a date at the Belfry Drive-In with a half-dozen 12-and-under baseball players as our chaperones. Never shut her up. Never wanted to. Just listened to someone WAY smarter than me. We were married in 1955, had 3 children in 4 years, then 7 grandchildren and 6 great-grandchildren.

 

See, instead of getting angry you turn it into a half-century of love, devotion and running home from work every day because you can’t stand to be away from her for another minute. We named one daughter, Monnie Ann, after her. Monnie Ann named her daughter, MonnieLynn, after her. And her other daughter, Beth, after the back part of her middle name of Elizabeth. My grandchildren include Eliza, the front part of Elizabeth.

 

As I tell everyone when I pass away I’ll be the happiest man in Northlawn Memorial Gardens in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio because I’ll be with My Mona Lisa, as our double grave marker says, “J L M 4 E + 1D.” John loves Monnie for Eternity plus 1 day.

 

After My Mona Lisa passed away I was so distraught for 7 months, curled in a ball of pain day after day and week after week. Then along came Paula, my reporter when I was assistant State Desk editor at the Akron Beacon Journal, who lifted the veil of agony and replaced it with 17 years of joy and pleasure.

 

So I am a coal miner’s son who married a coal miner’s daughter and then lucked into a clinical psychologist, which a woman needs to understand why I do what I do. I will NEVER understand how I got so lucky in life. I’m 89, play golf 50 to 100 rounds a year with Paula’s brother, Tom, in two seniors leagues (we won the 2020 title in one), traveled to 56 countries, 44 states and took more than 30 winters in Florida of up to 4 months at a time to escape the Arctic weather than torments Northeast Ohio every winter.

 

But, then, everyone in this article has done as well or better than me with their romances, which began in Monongah High. Fate doesn’t choose your mate. Your mate chooses you. You can never repay them the debt you owe them. I never will be able to pay my debt to My Mona Lisa, my 3 children, my 7 grandchildren and my 6 great-grandchildren.

 

Ain’t life grand when you have grands in your family?