Arica Ann Clear Of Farnham, NY. Age 45 passed away on Saturday, February 18, 2023., Beloved wife of Gary “Iggy” Clear. Loving mother of Savanah and Lucas Clear. Daughter of Ronald (Diane) Steel and Madonna (George) Guzzetta. Sister of Sarah (Erik) Rosborough, Jessica (Greg) Stephens, Anthony Guzzetta, Brianna (Julie Curtis) Steel and Angelo Guzzetta. Also survived by many nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to Hospice Buffalo, Inc. Family will be present to receive friends Wednesday and Thursday, February 22nd & 23rd from 1-3 PM and 6-8 PM at the ADDISON FUNERAL HOME INC. 262 N. Main Street, Angola, NY. Funeral Services will be held Friday, February 24, at 10:30 AM in St. Anthony’s RC Church, 421 Commercial Street, Farnham, NY. Interment services will follow in Brant Cemetery, Brant, NY
Beloved husband of the late Barbara J. (nee Schlecht) McDonnell; loving father of Ashley M. McDonnell; dear son of Alma Jean (nee Frenzel) Bolognese and the late Roy J. McDonnell; caring brother of Mark E. (Lynne) McDonnell and Scott E. (Glory Fox) McDonnell. The family will be present on Friday from 6-8 PM at the (Tonawanda Chapel) AMIGONE FUNERAL HOME, INC., 2600 Sheridan Drive (corner of Parker Blvd), where Funeral Services will follow at 8 PM. Friends invited. If desired, donations may be made to the SPCA serving Erie County. Please share condolences at http://www.AMIGONE.com.
Sarah Elizabeth Meredith, a music teacher and accompanist who also was a successful grant writer, died Jan. 9 in her home in Buffalo after a long battle with cancer. She was 54.
Born in Urbana, Ill., she came with her family to Amherst in 1973 and displayed her talents as a girl, taking part in numerous choral groups and serving as an accompanist.
At Amherst Central High School, where she graduated in 1986, she was a member of the National Honor Society and was president and student director of Sweet Sixteens, a select girls’ singing group.
She earned a bachelor’s degree in music education from Baylor University, then received a master’s degree from Ithaca College and a doctorate in musicology from Florida State University in 2003.
Dr. Meredith taught music and served as music coordinator in the Amherst schools, was a professor at SUNY Buffalo State University for several years, then became a grants researcher for J. O’Connell and Associates.
She went on to become a grant writer for municipalities and educational institutions. In the Village of Lancaster, where she was grants manager, she helped bring more than $7 million to the community.
She also devoted herself to working with soloists and choirs.
“As an accompanist, she was a musician’s musician,” wrote Sue Fay Allen, founder of ABC Bel Canto Choir, where Dr. Meredith was an accompanist. “She worked as a partner with those of us who conducted and performed. A really fine accompanist helps to enable the soloist or the conductor of a group to achieve the phrasing, the nuances and the tempo changes that transform the many notes into a musical message for the performers and the audience. It was a gift to have Sarah as that partner.”
At Lancaster High School, she played for musicals, rehearsals, choirs and ensembles and worked with soloists. She accompanied New York State School Music Association solo performances and for many years was chosen to play for the choruses at the annual Erie County Musical Educators Association concerts. She also was a presenter and workshop leader at national conferences on music education and musicology.
She improved the quality of recitals for the Lancaster Academy for Visual and Performing Arts and provided advice and mentoring for high school choir programs in the Buffalo schools.
“She was the best music teacher,” one of her colleagues wrote in a Facebook tribute. “She taught me how good a music program could be, firing on all cylinders – band, chorus and orchestra equally. I will never forget that or her positive personality.”
A member of University Baptist Church in Amherst, she was an avid reader, with a special interest in history and genealogy. She also was a football fan and was devoted to the Baylor Bears and Buffalo Bills.
Survivors include her father, Dr. Dale Meredith; a sister, Laura Geiger; a brother, Timothy Neal; nieces, nephews and cousins.
A celebration of her life will be held at a later date.
John R. “Jack” Davis knew what it meant to give back to his community – literally and figuratively.
Trained as an engineer while completing his military service, he and a partner parlayed their industrial expertise and entrepreneurial spirit into founding a manufacturing company whose products are still used across the world.
Forty years later, he turned his attention to public service, unsuccessfully running for Congress four times in eight years to represent a district in Buffalo’s eastern suburbs that included Clarence and Newstead. And knowing how he got his own start in business, he gave back to his alma mater that launched his career, with a $5 million donation to University at Buffalo 13 years ago to fund construction of a new building.
He died Jan. 23 after a long illness. He was 89.
“He wanted to leave his legacy,” said his widow, Barbara. “He was kind and helpful to the community.”
Born in Pittsburgh to John R. and Norma Davis, he grew up in Amherst after his father’s employer, Westinghouse, moved his family to Buffalo after World War II. He graduated from Amherst Central High School in 1951.
In a biography posted on his political campaign’s old website, he recalled helping his father change piston rings on a 1935 Ford when he was 12 years old, and bolting a gas motor from a Maytag washing machine on the back of a wagon for his “first go cart” when he was 14.
He wrote that he “did fairly well in math and science,” enough to get into UB’s seven-year-old School of Engineering, where he started in mechanical engineering but switched to industrial, which “turned out to be a smart move” by preparing him for the future. He graduated in 1955, but had already spent four years as a Marine Corps reservist, having signed up while still in high school to meet the “Armed Service Requirement” for men.
He barely avoided the Korean War as his reserve battalion was activated, instead getting deferments to finish high school and then college, while getting officer training in the Marines from 1951 to 1954. “You may have heard stories about the tough training for enlisted Marines – it was tougher for officer training,” he wrote on his political bio. “They took a young boy and made him a man – tough, self-confident and a leader.”
He and a fellow engineer, Stan Matys, left Carborundum in 1964 to start their own company, called I Squared R Element Co., which makes silicon carbide and disilicide heating elements and hot surface igniters used in high-temperature electric furnaces and appliances. It’s the only U.S. manufacturer of its products.
(Barbara and Jack Davis Hall on UB’s North Campus in Amherst. | Derek Gee / Buffalo News)
The new firm, which they launched in Davis’ garage with just $20,000, competed against Carborundum and another multi-national company, but was profitable after just six months, while its two rivals were later acquired. Its first customer was Corning Glass Works, enabling it to move to a building in Tonawanda, then to Lancaster, and finally to its current site in Akron, where it employs 90 in 122,000 square feet.
“He loved his work, so it wasn’t work for him,” Barbara Davis said.
From 2004 to 2011, Mr. Davis ran for Congress for New York’s 26th Congressional District as a critic of free-trade policies – three times as a Democrat and once as an independent, including after the resignation of Chris Lee opened up the seat in 2011. He also successfully sued the Federal Election Commission, getting the “millionaires amendment” to the McCain-Feingold Act struck down as unconstitutional because it violated candidates’ First Amendment rights.
In 2010, Mr. Davis and his wife, Barbara, donated $5 million to UB’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, which named The Barbara and Jack Davis Hall in their honor. He also established an irrevocable trust to ensure that the company wouldn’t be sold and employees’ jobs were safe, and arranged for company profits to be used for scholarships to UB.
Mr. Davis is survived by his third wife of 30 years, Barbara; four sons, Jack, Bob, Al and Ace; two daughters, Jill Josephs and Star Davis; a brother, Don; a sister, Peggy Jacobs; 16 grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren.
Private services will be held at the convenience of the family.
Robert “Bob” Woods, a longtime Wellesley resident. Devoted husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather, passed away on January 17th, 2023.
Bob grew up in Snyder, NY., a suburb of Buffalo. He attended Denison University and was a proud member of the Sigma Chi fraternity. In his Junior year, he met his love of 67 years, Dolores “Dede” Duffy. Bob enlisted and served on Active and Reserve Duty in the Navy for six years during the Korean War. He earned his MBA from Harvard Business School and then began his professional career, spanning over thirty years with The First National Bank of Boston. His career included senior executive roles in both the US and Europe. Bob and Dede appreciated the opportunity to travel and experience different cultures throughout the world. Bob was an invaluable guide to all who were fortunate to know him. He was an avid gardener, but he took the most care in cultivating his human relationships.
Bob’s three daughters, Suzanne Sullivan, Kim Duckett and Lisa Guarino are grateful to have had him in their lives. His grandchildren, Caroline Trussell of Wellesley, Robert Sullivan of Gettysburg, PA., Allison Lewis of Greenwich, CT., Brennan Duckett of Washington, DC., Conor Duckett of Ashburn, VA., and Paige and Natalie Guarino of New York City will forever benefit from his exemplary character and wisdom.
There will be a family memorial service this summer. In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation in Bob’s name to Wounded Warrior Project. Please send condolences to The Woods Family, 5 Kimball Road, Hopkinton, MA. 01748.