Posted on

Veteran of the Month – Walter B. Rice

Walter B. Rice was born on July 19, 1942 in Frankford Hospital and was raised in the Tacony section of Philadelphia.  Ricey, as he was known, attended Hamilton Disston Elementary School and Lincoln High School. Ricey joined the Army National Guard and worked at different jobs such as Myerstone Basin Company, Nesbitt and worked at Frankford Hospital for over 20 years and retired.

Ricey, while serving in the National Guard, served on disaster duty in many places and and some of the island countries.   During his service, he received his paratrooper wings while at Fort Bragg jump school.

Ricey loved his job at Frankford Hospital and was well liked.  He knew just as much about hospital problems, you would think he was a doctor.  Ricey passed away on October of 2018 and will be missed very much.

Walter B. Rice – Thank you for your service!!!

Posted on

Veteran of the Month for July: Jon Clodfelter

Jon Clodfelter proudly proclaims himself a son of the Ozark Mountains in Missouri and an adopted son of Frankford. He enlisted in the Army in March of 1976 when he was 21 years old because of a belief that every citizen in our country has a responsibility to the greater good. He saw the Army as a way of doing that.

His Army career  as an Intelligence Analyst took him to a wide range of assignments at various command levels in Germany, Italy, Turkey, and at several different posts in the United States, such as Ft. Knox, KY, Ft. Bragg, NC, Ft. Huachuca, AZ, Presidio of Monterey, CA, the Pentagon,  and Bolling Air Force Base, DC.

During those years of service in the Army he used the timeto  self-educate for his undergraduate degree. All his credits came while studying part time at a half dozen different institutions as he traveled around in the military. His military career included:

  • Recognition for social and cultural awareness along with language skills.
  • Deployment several times with the 7th Special Forces Group, the 1st Infantry Division, and the Southern European Task Force.
  • Decoration several times, though he is most proud of being the recipient of the National Défense Medal because his career was highlighted primarily by Cold War Intelligence service.

In May of 1992 he took a post-Gulf War early retirement from the Army and chose a new path and received his master’s degree of Divinity from Virginia Theological Seminary in Washington, DC.  He later served as chaplain at Thompson children’s home serving all the state of North Carolina focused primarily on helping sexual abuse victims.

In 2002, he  joined St. Mark’s Church in Frankford as the 11th Rector.  I first met Jon at an event in 2011 for a Frankford Gazette story.  I walked in from Frankford Avenue along the walkway on the north side and as I got up to the door of the church, bumped into smiling guy, wearing overalls, I think and carrying a hammer.  I thought he had to be the maintenance guy.  That was Jon.

A guy with a hammer is not too far off the mark with Jon Clodfelter. He tries to be a fixer whenever possible, a listener all the time and a healer when it is called for.

He continues to serve the community of Frankford and a wider collection of folks linked to St. Marks in the same way that he served his county in the Army.

He and his wife Alice, have four adult children, and three grandchildren.  Jon enjoys making his home life interesting.

Jon Clodfelter, Thank you for your service!!!

Posted on

Marge Tartaglione

State Senator, Tina Tartaglione, released the following press release today:

“It is with immeasurable sadness and despair that I announce the passing of my beloved mother, Margaret Tartaglione. Throughout her recent illness, she was surrounded by family and friends, and was provided with the very best medical care. Thank you all for bringing her joy and comfort. My mother was a very strong yet compassionate woman. She cared deeply about her family, her community, and her city. She was a pioneer in the political realm – the first women elected to a citywide office in Philadelphia’s history. At a time when women were rarely afforded a seat at the table, she not only earned a seat, she became an enduring leader and icon who will always be revered and remembered fondly.”

Marge Tartaglione became Chairwoman of the Philadelphia City Commissioners  during the Rizzo era and served nine, four year terms. I remember her a tough cookie but she had to be.  She was a woman who broke the glass ceiling before anybody knew it could be broken.  She was a true trail blazer and will be more than a footnote in Philadelphia history.

Marge Tartaglione meeting Pope John Paul II

The Gazette sends our sincere condolences to Senator Tartaglione and her family.

Posted on

Memorial Day 2019

Memorial Day is the official day that we as a nation recognize those who have died in service to our country.

In 2015, I began documenting the burials in St. Joachim cemetery and came across several grave stones of military veterans and did some research to find that several of them had died in service.  That started me off on a quest to document all of those who were from Frankford who died in service.  I never thought that I would eventually be able to document over 140 names of soldiers who have died in service since the Civil War and up through Vietnam.

Each of them has his own story but every one started with saying goodbye to family and friends in Frankford  and walking out the door to go to war.  They did not know what the future would bring.  They just went to serve.  Each of them paid the ultimate price for their service with his life.  It is for this reason that we honor them.

There will be a Memorial Day observance on Monday, May 27th at 10 AM in St. Joachim Cemetery.  All are invited.

The list of the names follows below.

 

Civil War

John Gibson Jr.
Albert Dungan
Sewell Randall
William Batt
David Chipman
Robert Smith
John Stott
John W. Castor
Joseph D. Williams
William Baxendine
William Williams
William Wilkinson
James Crocket
William Blackburn
George Lever
Lewis B. Evans
David Potts
Richard Standing
George Gregson
John Johnson
Charles H. Wonderly
Thomas Pilling
William C. Wilson
William McMullen
Charles Layton
Henry Castor
Joseph Batt
James Harmstead
James Ferry
Robert Kay
George A. Vanhart
James Bolton
John Hart
James H. Burk
Almon Smith
William A. Vannatter
Elijah R. Hunt
John F. Gilberson
Thomas Kirkwood
James K. P. Bryan
Charles T. Mahan
David Feaster Edgar
Thomas D. G. Chapman
William H. Wright
William Fairhurst
Joseph Johnson
Peter McNally
Robert Ray
James D. Butcher
Robert Lesher
Samuel C. Rodgers
Adam Hafer
William Allen
James Donnelly
Wallace Shaw
Lewis Lesher
Rudolph Price
Samuel Deardon
William Martin
Isaac Hilt
James Pierce
Lewis C. Hong
William T. Hope
Rupert Carney
Alfred Clymer
David P. Allen Jr.
George Baxendine
George Lawrence Bragg
John Taylor
James Hilton
Thomas Stone Jr.
Michael Shuster
William E. Reynolds
Charles Henry Cooper
Thomas C. Stott
George Frederick Putt
Charles Howard Wilson
Nicholas J. Carty

World War I

Charles Harold Redman
Charles Francis Elliott
Warren John Decker, Jr.
William Charles Peel
Jesse Vandergrift
William Johnson
Thomas William Astbury Jr.
Benneville Wellington Bertolet
Amos Raymond Taylor
Howard B. Cantelly
Joseph T. McClurg
Elmer J. Needham
Horace Givens
William Wilkenson Neumann Jr.
Leon R. Foster
Joseph Alexander Coyle
Louis Redding
George H. Cassels
Edward Nelis
Charles J. Coyle
Walter Carroll Brinton
Alfred T. Ashton
Admiral Johnson

World War II

William Michael Fairhurst
Walter Billyk
George Charles Burrough
Eugene Paul Shipley
Frank Tiano
George Russell Woosley
John Russo
Eugene L. Hegh Jr.
William J. Ferry
William R. Sorensen
Francis Keeley
Eugene David Harpel Jr.
Joseph Herbert Clark
Charles Henry Blittersdorf Jr.
Andrew Krull
John A. Bissinger
Raymond D. McAteer
Walter Bryan Gossling Jr.
George Edward Frey
Charles H. Schwartz
Francis J. Schultz
Thomas Edward Biddle Jr.

Korean War

James Bartholomew Crane
Joseph George Wilusz
John Leszczynski Jr
Donald Stainthorpe Sirman

Cold War

John Wesley Harvey

Vietnam War

Lloyd Calveria Wilson
Frederick George Lynch Jr.
Stephen Paul Blanchett
Theodore Lauer Fischer
Matthew Higgins, Jr.
Charles William Daut
Charles J. Gibilterra, Jr.
Thomas Joseph Dowd
Daniel Joseph Savage
Thomas John Laughlin
David Wayne Comber
Dennis George Donovan
Francis William Lamon, Jr.
Lawrence S. Martin