Anne Rose O'Donnell was born in Brooklyn, NY on 12-10-1920. She spent many delightful summers at her grandmother, Hannah Byrne Coleman's house in Friendsville, Pa., where, as a teenager, she attended Square Dances and other wonderful events and met the love of her life, Eddie Moran. For many years she worked in Manhattan as a well loved and well respected manager in the Insurance Department of the Talbot Bird Company. She liked to play games, especially a King of Hearts card game with her nieces. She enjoyed movies at the Loew's Gates and RKO Bushwick with her nieces, Sharon and Mary Beth. She liked singing Irish tunes with her family, and especially liked “Galway Bay". She enjoyed Chinese food, rye and ginger, pretzel sticks, and the TV Golden Girls. She learned to drive in Friendsville and never drove again until she retired to Colonie, NY. Anne lived in Brooklyn, NY and Woodhaven, Queens before moving to Colonie, NY after she retired. She was very close to her sister, Dot, who died in 1942 at the age of 22. They were a year apart in age - Dot was born in December 1919 and Anne was born in December 1920 and Anne grieved Dot's loss always. She also had her heart broken when she lost her only brother, Joe, on October 13, 1951. The story I heard was that when Aunt Anne, 30 years of age at the time, came home from her job at Talbot Bird Insurance Company and was given the devastating news that her brother Joe had been killed in action in Korea, she sat on her mother's lap in a rocking chair as her mother held her and rocked her like a baby. Joe was 29 years old at the time of his death, and he was approximately a year and a half younger than Anne. Sadly, Anne was surrounded by the loss of her two siblings.
Anne died on October 7, 1994 at Albany Medical Center. She is buried in the Friendsville, Pennsylvania Cemetery next to her parents, Margaret Coleman O'Donnell and T.J. O'Donnell and her beloved sister, Dorothy O'Donnell.
More Remembrances of my Aunt Anne O’Donnell
Aunt Anne was a physically beautiful woman with a gorgeous, voluptuous body. Most of the Coleman and O’Donnell women were endowed with pleasing, plentiful bosoms and Anne was no exception. One famous true story or, should I say, infamous true story, involves this exceptionally attractive attribute of my pretty Aunt. Anne knelt in the white sands of Rockaway Beach in a cream colored one piece bathing suit. Honestly, she looked like a model on the cover of the swimsuit edition of Sports Illustrated. I guess the photographer, my father, Charlie Fries, Sr., must have thought so, because he made a Christmas Card using this photo and unbeknownst to Annie, sent it my Aunt’s co-workers at the Talbot Bird Insurance Company that Christmas. Nowadays, it might not have gone over so well but back in the 1940’s it was a big hit at the office. I’m not sure how my Aunt Anne felt about it! As least the photo was definitely flattering.
--
No comments:
Post a Comment