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Maine Obituary and Death Notice Archive

Maine Obituary and Death Notice Archive - Page 331

Posted By: Genlookups.com
Date: Wednesday, 12 August 2015, at 9:42 p.m.

Pearl Leslie Kimball
February 16, 2005
Kennebunk

Pearl Leslie Kimball, age 80, formerly of Kennebunk, passed away peacefully on February 16, at the Greenwood Center in Sanford, following a long illness.

She was born in Kennebunk on September 20, 1924, the daughter of Elmer and Eva Redlon, and was educated in Kennebunk schools.

Pearl served in the Women Army Corps. During World War II. She was employed as a caregiver more than 30 years in area nursing facilities and on her time off would often take residents from work on day trips.

She was predeceased by husbands, Forrest Leslie, Sr. and Robert Kimball; brothers, Raymond Redlon, Kenneth Redlon, and Ernest Redlon.

Surviving are sons, Forrest Leslie, Jr. and his wife, Nancy of Acton, and Wayne Leslie of North Augusta, SC; a brother Maynard Redlon of Wells, a sister Alice Bernier of Kennebunk; three grandchildren, Lee Talevi of Wells, Christian Leslie of Kittery, and Kisten Leslie of Denver, CO.; two great grandchildren and many nieces and nephews.

Calling hours will be from 2 to 4 pm Sunday at Bibber Memorial Chapel, Chapel Road, Wells.

A graveside service and Interment will be held at the Maine Veteran’s Memorial cemetery in Augusta in the spring.

Donations in her memory can be made to York Hospice, 16 Hospital Drive, York, ME 03909.

Ralph E Webster
January 24, 2005
Kennebunk

Ralph E. Webster Jr. passed away in Kennebunk on Jan. 24, 2005 after a long illness.

Born and raised in Woodsville, NH, he graduated from Woodsville High School and the Practical Art School in Boston.

Ralph was a commercial artist for Breck, Balfour Jewelry, Nickerson Theatre, and Nickerson Manufacturing Company. He also did extensive freelance work.

Ralph was a member of the Azure Lodge.

He is survived by his loving wife, Carol Bates-Webster of Kennebunk; a son, David and his wife Allison of Orlando, Fla.; a daughter, Lynne and her husband Steve of Rhode Island; a daughter, Jennifer of Boston; a stepdaughter, Nancy Kingsbury and her husband George; a stepson, David and his wife Lynne of Minnesota; and seven devoted grandchildren.

A memorial service to honor Ralph Webster's life will be held Saturday, Jan. 29, at 2 p.m. at Messiah Christian Church, (Rte. 1) 2700 Post Road, Wells.

Instead of flowers, please send donations in Ralph's memory to:

Recreation Outreach Center
2700 Post Rd.
Wells, Maine 04090

As reported in the Portland Press Herald on January 26, 2005.

Ralph F. Marsh
January 08, 2005
Kennebunk

Ralph F. Marsh, 81, of Storer Street, Kennebunk died unexpectedly Saturday, January 8, 2005 at his residence.

Ralph was born in West Kennebunk on March 21, 1923 a son of William S. and Louise C. (Kimball) Marsh. He attended Kennebunk Schools and later served in the U.S. Army during WWII.

After the War he worked at Saco Lowell as a machinist. He then went on to own a TV sales and service business. Ralph joined the family business Dresser- Marsh in the mid 1950’s where he worked until his retirement. Ralph was a Master Plumber and a Master Electrician.

Ralph enjoyed snowmobiling, boating and his camp during his younger years. After retirement he enjoyed ham radio and his pet cats.

He is predeceased by his wife Candide “Sue” (Raymond) Marsh.

Ralph is survived by a sister Shirley Krause of Reisterstown, MD, a brother-in-law Lawrence Raymond of Madawaska, ME. and two nephews Peter M. Krause of Reisterstown, MD and Thomas W. Krause of Yarmouth, ME.

Friends may call from 6 to 8 PM on Thursday, January 13 at Bibber Memorial Chapel, 67 Summer Street, Kennebunk, ME. A Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Friday, January 14 at 11 AM at St. Martha’s Church in Kennebunk. Burial will follow in the Spring in Pine Grove cemetery in West Kennebunk.

Should friends desire, memorial donations may be made to:
Kennebunk Animal Shelter
P. O. Box 43
West Kennebunk, ME 04094
Or
Maine Cancer Research
P. O. Box 553
Portland, ME 04102

Rene S. Rivard
February 14, 2005
Kennebunk

Rene S. Rivard, age 71 of Kennebunk, died on Monday, February 14, 2005 at Southern Maine Medical Center after a long battle with cancer.

Mr. Rivard was born in St. Lambert, P.Q., Canada on Aug. 19, 1933, the son of Kathleen and Leon Rivard.

He was a 1952 graduate of Manchester High School, Manchester, CT.

He was a resident of Kennebunk for 36 years. He served in the the U.S. Air Force and N.H. Air National Guard for 31 years. He was very proud of the awards he received from his service in Korea and after Operation Desert Storm. He also worked for the United States Postal Service for 32 years and retired in 1989. He was a member of the American Legion Post #74. Mr. Rivard very much enjoyed spending time with his family and friends.

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He is survived by his wife, Eunice, of 49 years; 4 children, Linda Rivard of Cumberland, Tim Rivard of Alfred, David Rivard of Kennebunk and Sharon Nickerson of Arundel; a sister, Elaine Ziebarth of Pembroke Pines, Florida and a brother, Michael, of South Beach, Florida. Mr. Rivard also leaves behind 7grandchildren who brought him much joy.

Visiting hours will be held on Wed., Feb. 16, at Bibber Memorial Chapel, 67 Summer St., Kennebunk, from 6-8 pm. The funeral service will be at St. Martha's Catholic Church, Rte. 1 Kennebunk, on Thursday, Feb. 17, at 10:00 AM.

Internment will be at Hope cemetery in the spring.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the American Cancer Society, One Main Street, Suite 300, Topsham, ME 04086-1246.

Frances M. Rooney
April 11, 2003
Wells

WELLS – Frances M. Rooney, 64, of Chicks Crossing Road in Wells, died on Friday, April 11, 2003 at Maine Medical Center in Portland.

Mrs. Rooney was born on December 28, 1938 in Brookline, MA, a daughter of Ralph and Mary Smith Gunther. She attended Brookline Schools and was a graduate of Brookline High School.

She was a homemaker who was an avid bridge player, and could often be found volunteering at local schools. She was a communicant of St. Mary’s Church in Wells, and ran the food pantry there.

Mrs. Rooney is survived by her husband Thomas F. Rooney, Sr. of Wells; two sons, Joseph L. Rooney of Salem, NH and Thomas F. Rooney, Jr. of California; two daughters, Patricia A. Ziehler of Litchfield, NH and Maryann R. Fink of Sanford, ME; a brother Ralph Gunther of Florida; and six grandchildren, Jessica, Krista, Patrick, Katelyn, Rachel and Lauren.

A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 AM on Monday, April 14, 2003 at St. Mary’s Church, 236 Eldridge Road, Wells, ME. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the St. Mary’s Food Pantry, 236 Eldridge Road, Wells, ME 04090. Arrangements by Bibber Memorial Chapel, 111 Chapel Road, Wells, ME.

Theresa Marie Noble
February 15, 2005
Acton, ME

Acton, Maine – Theresa Marie Noble, age 76 of Sanborn Road, died Tuesday, February 15, 2005 at her residence.
She was born in Westville, N.H. on October 3, 1928, a daughter of Arthur and Cecilia Demaris Gaudette.
She attended local schools and worked in Nursing Care for most of her life. She had worked for Parkview Lodge in the Sanford area for many years.
Theresa enjoyed baking and crocheting.
She married Keith Noble on October 1, 1972.
She is predeceased by a daughter, Tina Moulton who died in January of 2005, and a brother, Joseph Gaudette.
Surviving are her husband, Keith of Acton; five sons, Bill Gonyer of Oregon, Leon Moulton and his wife, Vicki of West Charleston, VT; Dwayne Moulton and his wife Joanne of Acton, Richard Moulton and his wife Terri Lynn of Acton and Keith Noble of Biddeford; four daughters, Rita Hunt and her husband Robert of Haverill, MA, Sheila Palermo and her husband, Peter of Epping, NH, Diane Batchelder and her husband, Daniel of Suffolk, VA, and Dawn Noble and her husband Jay of Kennebunk; a sister, Gloria Corson and her husband Ronald, of Rochester, NH; 23 Grandchildren and 12 Great Grandchildren.
Visiting hours will be from 3-5p.m. Saturday, February 19, 2005 at Bibber Memorial Chapel, 67 Summer Street, Kennebunk. A private graveside service will be held in the spring. If desired, donations can be made to the American Cancer Society of New England, 1 Main Street, Suite#300, Topsham, ME 04086.

Stephen H. Emmons
January 28, 2005
Kennebunkport

One of Kennebunkport’s most well known and admired citizens passed away on January 28th the result of an ongoing battle with cancer.

Steve Emmons was born in Lexington, Massachusetts to Albert and Helen Wentworth Emmons. The family moved to Kennebunk, Maine when he was young. There he attended area schools, graduating from Kennebunk High School in 1948. After a post grad year at Kimball Union Academy, he attended the University of Maine where he played football, became president of SAE fraternity and graduated with a degree in English. An enlistment in the Army took him to Korea, where he devoted much of his free time toward teaching English to area children.

Upon his return home, he purchased a lobster boat and began a career at sea. In 1958, he married Natalie Richards and the young couple moved to the Gravelly Brook Road in Kennebunkport.

Steve lobstered and trawled for many years, studied the tides, learned the ways of the winds and the sea, and introduced his two sons to all that his hard work and keen observations had taught him. The sea was a constant source of pleasure to him and even as he moved to new jobs he retained his links to the ocean. He built his own schooner, creating and varnishing the hull, hewing the spars, and spending countless hours in the family living room hand sewing the sails. Several other boats followed, one named after his granddaughter Amy, another after his wife, the Natalie June. He sailed many races with his son-in-law Lee. Steve was always at the helm, knowing intuitively where the winds would take him.

Steve’s sense of learning and curiosity was equally focused on the land. He marveled at nature’s wonders and considered his farm a working laboratory. He protected the deer yards, fed the birds, roped off the locations of giant ant hills and bought and read nature books by the hundreds. No creature was too large or too small for his consideration. In the 1980’s, in the midst of the development boom, when many of his contemporaries were selling their holdings for considerable sums, Steve and Natalie pledged their 108 acres, house and barn, to the Kennebunkport Conservation Trust. He would devote his eventual retirement, he decided, to showing children the discoveries he had made under the microscope and in the forest. Nothing made him happier than to lead a class fieldtrip into the woods. “Nature is our life support system; too often children are involved in just human activities. It is important for children to realize the value of nature.” he said.

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Steve worked for the Kennebunkport Police Department and later served on the police commission. He worked at the Keuffel & Esser factory and then for the KK & WWD, the Kennebunk’s water district. His involvement with the Kennebunkport Conservation Trust increased after his wife Natalie’s death. He became a land steward and took up nature photography, capturing on film the tiny miracles of nature. His naturally artistic eye led him to dewdrops on an emerging bud, or a spider’s web, the ice crystals on a branch or the wings of a bird, those things which so often escape the notice of most. His photographs were enlarged or made into greeting cards, with the funds going to the Trust. When it came time for that organization to construct a headquarters, Steve facilitated the action by donating his land, resources and energy, and took great pride in the resulting structure and what it represented.

He is survived by sons Etienne “Spike” of South Portland and Foxwell of New York City, a step-daughter, Linda Rossnagle Guite and her husband Lee of East Boothbay, four grandchildren, five great grandchildren and a brother, David, of Hobe Sound, Florida.

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Steve Emmons left this world in the manner in which he had lived, at his own pace in his own time, remaining in the home that he loved until the very end. He knew better than most that, “to everything there is a season”. A fine, ethical, generous man, he left all who knew him, and the world in which he lived, better by the experience. His legacy will live on and be perpetuated by the nature preserve and its library which bears his name, the Emmons Preserve” and those organizations through which his philosophies will endure.

An open house time of remembrance honoring his life will be held at the Emmons Preserve on Sunday, February 27th from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.

Memorial donations in his name can be sent to:

The Kennebunkport Conservation Trust, P.O. Box 7004, Cape Porpoise, Me. 04014

OR:

Bigelow Lab for Ocean Sciences, P.O. Box 475, West Boothbay Harbor, Me. 04575

Sidney C. Crawford, JR
January 27, 2005
Wells

Wells, ME- Sidney C. Crawford, Jr. 73 years died January 27, 2005 at Southern Maine Medical Center in Biddeford.

Sidney was born in Worcester, MA on March 10, 1931 the son of Sidney and Doris McCoslin Crawford.

Sidney was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, Worcester Commandry # 5 Knight Templars.

Sidney was predeceased by his wife Donna in 2004.

He is survived by his three sons Jeffery Crawford of Newport, RI, Christopher and his wife Karen Crawford of Worcester, MA, and Jay Crawford of Kennebunk; brother Bruce Crawford of Laconia, NH; and four grandchildren.

Services will be held at a future date at the family’s convenience.

Shirley P. Aumand
January 19, 2005
Kennebunk

Shirley P. Aumand, 68, a resident of Kennebunk, died at her home Wednesday surrounded by her loving family after a courageous 17-year battle with cancer.

She was the granddaughter of Polish immigrants and was born in Manchester, NH to the late Senator Norman A. Packard and his wife Estelle Dziura Packard.

She graduated from Central High in 1954. After raising her family, she returned to school and received her BA from Notre Dame and her Masters of Liberal Arts from Harvard University.

She was an avid reader with an insatiable thirst for knowledge. One of her greatest loves was teaching. She inspired numerous young students at several colleges in both Maine and New Hampshire. She specialized in the fields of world history, international relations and Latin American Studies.

Another of her great loves was traveling. She and her husband visited all seven continents and over one hundred and sixty countries throughout their lives together.

Shirley is survived by her husband of nearly 50 years, Jerry, four daughters; Atty. Darla of NYC, Natalie Ahern of Hingham, MA, Larissa of San Diego, CA and Alicia Pantaleo of Hopewell Jct., NY. She was also the beloved 'Nana' of five grandchildren; Patrick, Katie, Molly and Rory Ahern, and Hayden Pantaleo who was born in December.

She is predeceased by two brothers; Norman and Randall Packard and survived by two sisters; Melody Wood of Brownsville, NJ and Verdy Michaud of Bedford, NH, and a brother; Sherman Packard of Londonderry, NH plus several nieces and nephews.

Shirley will be remembered by friends and family as a woman of strong convictions and outstanding charisma. Her warmth, energy, humor and determination were captivating. She was known for her feisty determination and willingness to speak out about injustice regardless of the situation or the consequences. She touched many lives through her strength of character, kind heart and generous nature and will be deeply missed by all who knew her.

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A private family service will be held at a later date.

Should friends desire, memorial donations may be made to New England Medical Center's Floating Hospital for Children. Please specify the children's cancer fund. Donations may be made online, or sent to The Floating Hospital for Children, Development Office, 750 Washington St. Box 231, Boston, MA 02111.

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lobster,

marine crustaceancrustacean
, primarily aquatic arthropod of the subphylum Crustacea. Most of the 44,000 crustacean species are marine, but there are many freshwater forms. The few groups that inhabit terrestrial areas have not been particularly successful in an evolutionary sense; most require
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with five pairs of jointed legs, the first bearing large pincerlike claws of unequal size adapted to crushing the shells of its prey. The segmented body of the lobster consists of a large cephalothorax (made up of 14 segments) and a moveable, muscular abdomen (composed of 7 segments). It is covered with a chitinous exoskeleton that is typically dark green with some orange and red in the living animal and bright red when cooked. As the lobster grows, the exoskeleton is periodically molted and a new, larger one is formed in its place.

Lobsters have 20 pairs of gills attached to the bases of the legs and to the sides of the body; the gills are protected by the carapace, the large area of the exoskeleton covering the back and sides of the cephalothorax. In addition to the legs, the appendages consist of 2 paired antennae, 6 pairs of mouth parts, and the small swimmerets attached to the abdominal segments. In the female the eggs remain attached to the swimmerets for 10 or 11 months until they hatch into free-swimming larvae.

The larvae swim for about a year, molting between 14 and 17 times before they settle to the bottom and begin to take on adult characteristics. Lobsters crawl briskly over the ocean floor and swim backward with great speed by scooping motions of the muscular abdomen and tail, but are clumsy on land. They are scavengers but also prey on shellfish and may even attack live fish and large gastropodsgastropod,
member of the class Gastropoda, the largest and most successful class of mollusks (phylum Mollusca), containing over 35,000 living species and 15,000 fossil forms.
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. Over a period of five years they grow to an average weight of 3 lb (1.4 kg).

There are more than 100 varieties of lobster. The common American lobster, Homarus americanus, is found inshore in summer and in deeper waters in winter from Labrador to North Carolina, but especially along the New England coast, where the chief lobster fisheries are located. Lobsters are caught in slatted wooden traps, or 'pots,' baited with dead fish. Although protected by law and raised by several hatcheries on the New England coast, they are still in danger of extinction. In Europe a species of Homarus similar to the American is found, but the smaller, less closely related Norway lobster or Dublin prawn, Nephrops norvegicus, is more important commercially.

The spiny, or rock, lobsters, found in warm seas of both hemispheres, are actually marine crayfishcrayfish
or crawfish,
freshwater crustacean smaller than but structurally very similar to its marine relative the lobster, and found in ponds and streams in most parts of the world except Africa. Crayfish grow some 3 to 4 in. (7.6–10.
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(genus Panulirus); they lack claws but have sharp spines on the carapace. The stout-bodied, sometimes brightly colored squat lobsters are close relatives of the hermit crabhermit crab,
a crustacean distinguished from true crabs by its long, soft, spirally coiled abdomen terminating in an asymmetrically hooked tail. Most hermit crabs protect this vulnerable portion of their bodies by occupying the empty shells of periwinkles, whelks, and other
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; their broad abdomens are usually tucked under their bodies, as in crabs, but can be extended and used for backward swimming, as in the true lobsters. True lobsters are classified in the phylum ArthropodaArthropoda
[Gr.,=jointed feet], largest and most diverse animal phylum. The arthropods include crustaceans, insects, centipedes, millipedes, spiders, scorpions, and the extinct trilobites.
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, subphylum Crustacea, order Decapoda, family Nephropidae or Homaridae.

Bibliography

See J. V. Dueland, Book of the Lobster (1973); F. H. Herrick, Natural History of the American Lobster (1977); J. R. Factor, ed., Biology of the Lobster (1995); R. D. Martin, Tale of the Lobster (2002); R. J. King, Lobster (2011); E. Townsend, Lobster: A Global History (2011).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia™ Copyright © 2013, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Lobster

any one marine decapod of the genera Homarus and Nephrops. The former genus comprises three species: the European lobster (H. vulgaris), the American lobster (H. americanus), and the cape lobster (H. capensis). The genus Nephrops includes 13 tropical and warm-water species, as well as the Norway lobster (N. norvegicus).

In structure, lobsters are similar to crayfish: the cephalothorax has a sharp frontal outgrowth, the abdomen is elongated and muscular, the front pair of appendages end in claws, and the next two pairs of appendages have smaller pincers. All lobsters carry their eggs on the abdominal appendages for seven to 11 months. The larvae emerge in the spring or summer and then float under the surface, where they reach sexual maturity in five or six years. A lobster has a life-span of approximately 20 years. Lobsters hide during the day in burrows and among rocks and emerge at night in search of various invertebrates.

The European lobster is up to 50 cm long and weighs up to 11 kg. It is found along the European coasts, at depths of 35 m during the summer and 65 to 80 m during the winter. Fecundity is up to 32,000 eggs. Reserves of this species have been depleted as a result of commercial fishing.

The American lobster, which is up to 60 cm long and weighs up to 15 kg, is found at depths to 100 m along the coast of North America from Labrador to Virginia. Fecundity is up to 80,000 eggs. Nets are used to catch the American lobster, and the annual catch is approximately 30,000 tons.

The Norway lobster reaches a length of 32 cm and a weight of 7 kg. It is distributed from the Lofoten Islands and Iceland to the coast of Morocco and the Adriatic Sea. It is found at depths of 10 to 800 m. Fecundity is up to 6,000 eggs. The lobster is caught by trawls, with the annual catch totaling up to 20,000 tons.

Lobsters are eaten fresh, or they may be frozen or canned.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

What does it mean when you dream about a lobster?

A crustacean can symbolize someone with a hard exterior and a soft interior. A lobster is also a creature of the depths, thus representing something from the unconscious mind. Or perhaps dreaming about a lobster is just a dream about an expensive meal.

The Dream Encyclopedia, Second Edition © 2009 Visible Ink Press®. All rights reserved.

lobster

[′läb·stər]

Red Lobster Edmonton West

(invertebrate zoology)

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The common name for several bottom-dwelling decapod crustaceans making up the family Homaridae which are commercially important as a food item.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

lobster

1. any of several large marine decapod crustaceans of the genus Homarus, esp H. vulgaris, occurring on rocky shores and having the first pair of limbs modified as large pincers
2. any of several similar crustaceans, esp the spiny lobster
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

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