As I have gone through my records, I have found a few more remembrances of my dad.
I found a note from Vicki Vibbert where she says:
From the online Guest book I found:
Guest Book forFrank Hess
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A compilation of our genealogy and life stories
As I have gone through my records, I have found a few more remembrances of my dad.
I found a note from Vicki Vibbert where she says:
From the online Guest book I found:
Guest Book forFrank Hess
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The attached pictures are of an ID card that my grandmother had when she worked for Bell Labs in New York City. She went to Tappan Zee High School in Piermont NY but then went to a business school in NYC to finish-up. This was probably her first job since the date on the back was 10/1/18 and she was only 18 years old.
Bell Labs was the research arm of the Bell Telephone Companies. What was known as AT&T (American Telephone and Telegraph). Bell Labs is still a part of AT&T today. Verizon was a Baby Bell that was broken off in the 1980’s.
In the late 1970’s my dad worked for Rodger Pellegrini and his wife. They had bought a large factory and converted it into several apartments. Their apartment was the main floor with 30 foot ceilings. I helped him with some of the work including replacing the hot tar roof. For the most part they went with an open floor plan. My dad built a loft on one end for the bathroom and several bedrooms. For beams he used rough hewn lumber some of which was at least 10 X 10.
He was then contacted by Rodger’s parents, Bruno and Frances Pellegrini to re-do their kitchen. They were photographers and were doing this for a magazine spread. I know I worked with him at there house, but I think it was at the beginning of this project. The pictures below show his cabinets, shelves and range hood. If you look carefully at the young girl in the picture you may recognize Erica Raab. They told dad that they didn’t include people in the photos they took for magazines, but this picture with Erica and the cat was a classic. The information in the center column includes a credit for the work of Frank Hess of Sparkill, NY.
The chart below shows the first seven generations of ancestors we know about for my mother. Some of these lines go back another six or seven generations. What this doesn’t show are the siblings of our direct line ancestors and their families.
One interesting this to note is that in the last generation shown, Barbara Luz and Michael Luz are brother and sister and their children were married. In addition Joseph Teufel (Barbara Luz’s husband) and Catharina Teufel are brother and sister and their grandchildren were married (second cousins).
This is the area of our genealogy that needs the most work. From the file below you can see that we have only a couple of generations on this line and I think some of these names may be incorrect. I need to review my data and compare with what my cousins have and see if we can get it straight.
I found this picture while I was looking for the picture we have of Marie Kuba and I just felt like I should share it. On the back it says:
Sept. 1, 2002
Special Friends
Laurie, Nicole, Andrea, Mindy
This was a picture Sister Polly Roucek shared with us taken at her and Joe’s 40th Anniversary party at Hickories Park in Owego, NY.
I was on Ancestry.com a week or so ago and came across a Family Tree that was published by Judith Firenze, my cousin Louis’ wife. Attached to the information on Marie Kuba was the following comment:
Marie Kuba as remembered by Freda Hess Firenze, daughter
Judith1559 added this to Ancestry.com on 11 Nov 2010
Marie was born in Dolni, Cerekev which was Bohemia and after WWI became Czechoslovakia. She was a very good student and went to school to the eighth grade. They had four classrooms, two to a room. She learned to speak three languages. When she was 18, she left home and went to Prague where she learned to cook. There she met three friends. One came to America and wrote to them telling them the streets were lined with gold. She came with their friends, Fanny and Gusty. They took the ship before the Titanic. When her parents heard the Titanic went down they didn’t expect her to come to America, but she was already here. It has been told that Marie actually had tickets for the Titanic but took the earlier boat. They landed on Ellis Island, on Easter Sunday so they had to stay an extra day. Her friend Mrs. Salitimier met them. She got her first job as in cook in Sheepshead Bay. Her eyesight was very poor. When she got her first pair of glasses, she said she didn’t realize how green the grass was! Her parents were the first cousins and she seemed to think that was why her eyesight was so poor. How she met her husband, Frank Hess, is unknown. They were married at City Hall in New York City. They moved to Old Tappan, NJ and lived in a little cottage. Five children were born there. Anna and Marie couldn’t speak a word of English when they went to school. It was through them, however, that Marie leaned English. She didn’t want to speak German at home. When Freda and Ida were still babies, they moved by horse and buggy to a little home on Old Tappan Road which at one time was used for the hired help. At the first home they didn’t have electricity, so light was by kerosene lamp. The second house didn’t have electric when they moved in. Then Public Service came along and started to put poles in for electric. They got as far as the Engle farm. Mr. Engle refused to have them put the poles in. Supposedly, he jumped in the hole. Then later Rockland cam through and they had electricity. They had a hand pump in the kitchen. Also a cistern outside where water was collected to wash clothes. They own 3 1/2 acres of land. They raised chickens and had a cow and sold the milk for 12 cents a quart to the neighbors. They also had a horse. It was in this house that Frank was born. Bill was born in Englewood Hospital. They later raised strawberries and it was then that they made enough money to pay off the mortgage. Until that point they only paid the interest. During WWII, Freda’s husband, Carmine would take his leave from the Coast Guard at strawberry picking time. He would help pick and deliver the berries to an ice cream parlor in Park Ridge, NJ, or to fancy fruit and vegetable stores in Englewood, NJ. They had the biggest and the best strawberries!! When Marie became sick, Freda and her family went to live there. Marie was just a baby. If Freda and Carmine wanted to go out, Marie would sleep between Grandma and Grandpa. It was little Marie that one day noticed smoke upstairs and after insisting she was right, Freda took a look and she was right! The house was on fire. Marie was mischievous. One day she locked Grandpa in the chicken coop. She also would let the chickens out and would go to the basement and break the eggs. When Marie Hess passed away she was laid out in the living room. When little Marie saw all the flowers and candles and when lifted to see grandma, she sang Happy Birthday to her.
Memories recorded by Freda Firenze, daughter of Marie and Frank Hess.
I have been looking for the picture we have of Marie Kuba but I haven’t found it yet. Here is a picture of my Aunt Frieda (white sweater), my Aunt Frances (peach sweatshirt) and my cousin Marie Firenzie who is the little Marie in the above stories. This picture was taken at my parent’s 50th wedding anniversary party in July 1998.
The following are words that I shared at my fathers funeral.
Dad was born 31 March 1925 in Englewood New Jersey to Frank and Marie Kuba Hess, the first son after five daughters. He was also the first to be born in a hospital. Two years later his younger brother was born. He went through 8th grade in the Old Tappan Grammar School and then apprenticed as a skilled carpenter. He had a great love for nature, and spent much of his younger life farming. On 10 October 1948 he married Jeanne Post. They then moved to Florida where they had a farm. A year later, on 28 November 1949, their first daughter was born, Elizabeth or Betty. They continued farming for several years in both Florida in the winters and near Hudson New York in the summers. When the time came for their second child to be born they decided to return to Sparkill New York, and on 26 October 1953 their second daughter, Karen was born. At that time dad left farming and went into carpentry. Most of us only remember him as a carpenter. Three years later their only son John (Me) was born on 14 Oct 1956, and then four years later their last child, a daughter, Jayne was born on 24 Sept 1960.
Personally, I don’t remember much of what happened before this time. Around the time of Jayne’s birth, my parents bought their first home. It was on Kings Highway in Sparkill. I remember both of my parents working hard to get the house ready for us to live there.
Although my father quit farming, he could never give it up. He always had as large of a garden as he could, in the space he had. He would spend as much time as he could in his garden. In the summers, he would wake up at daybreak and go out to the garden and work for an hour before breakfast and the heat of the day. He would then go to work for the day and come home only to return to the garden before dinner and then again after dinner until dark.
I remember that for many years he worked five days a week for Al Turk & Son as a roofer. On Saturdays, he worked other jobs on his own or with his friend Jerry Guarino. Eventually, he just started working completely on his own.
One of Dad’s customers was Russell & Dorothy Hogg. Dad did a lot of work on their home in Nyack and also their summer home in Rhode Island. They indicated how special they felt Dad was. Dorothy said “Frank would remind me that we only wanted him to change 2 windows, and we kept coming up with more and more for him to do. It was like he was our personal carpenter.”
Cousin Frank also benefited from dad’s labors in the same way. Dad worked for him for several years every Saturday. They worked from room to room in first one house and then another. Both Dad and cousin Frank enjoyed the time they spent together.
Betty reminded me that when we were young and had a bad dream, dad would come in to our rooms and comfort us and help us get back to sleep. He had a quiet way of reassuring us and helping us to settle down.
In elementary school, when we had problems with homework we would usually go to mom, but if it was math, dad was the one we went to. He was amazing with fractions and the addition and multiplication tables.
When I was in about fourth grade I realized I had about as much formal education as my dad had. Little did I realize until years later when I was working side by side with him, how much knowledge he had of construction, and other practical matters. I had great respect of his quiet way of teaching us.
Dad was amazing, he was the only person I know who could snore through a whole television program, and then be able to tell you the whole plot.
When I was 16 I started to work with dad. Not only did I learn a lot about carpentry, I learned about dad. He was a quiet person who didn’t want any of the attention. He worked hard his whole life, and was honest in his dealings. He was generous with what he had. When we asked him what he wanted for Christmas or his birthday he would always answer “just be good” or “I don’t need anything”.
He loved my mother’s mother – Nana to our kids. He would help her in any way he could without a complaining word or second thought. There were also other widows and single senior women that he helped. I remember going and changing screens and storm windows or delivering firewood with him to “Aunt” Emma, “Aunt” Kathleen “Aunt” Marion & others.
Our cousin Scott said “If you could get Uncle Frank to talk, he was really a funny guy.” He really did like to tease. I think that is a trait he passed on.
Dads’ favorite color was green. He was really happy with his green trucks. When the first one died in 1974 he went to pick out a new one, and they just happened to have a green one on the lot. I think they knew he was going to need a new truck and ordered one for him. He used the same green color to mark his tools so he knew which ones were his. Really, I think his love of green was tied to his love for growing things.
When mom and dad finally retired and they found the land in Lounsberry he was so happy to finally get his farm. He decided he needed several garden plots, an orchard and berry bushes. He was so happy when he planted those teeny little fruit trees and the pine trees down the driveway, we thought he was crazy. But as full grown trees, they brought him lots of pleasure. He loved to see things grow. He was excited when he could use one of the pine trees as a Christmas tree for all to see the lights from the highway.
He always fed the birds. He made sure they were taken care of in the winter. He made houses for them for the summers. In his later years when he didn’t have the stamina to work a full day, or when the weather was bad, he would spend much of his breaks sitting in the family room where he had a view of the bird feeders. He had his bird book next to him and really worried when the birds didn’t have food in the feeder.
He had a great love for nature. As a gardener, he had one nemesis, woodchucks. He tried many ways to get rid of them. The first was the “Hav-a-heart” traps he used in Sparkill. Unfortunately, I think he caught more skunks than woodchucks. He would take the skunks for a ride to a mountainous state land and let them go. I think for several years he caught 17 or more. The woodchucks weren’t always so lucky.
He loved his grandkids. You can see that in the pictures on these boards. When he was with kids he was smiling. Tyler said “I only remember PopPop being mad once. And that was when I used the garage remote to put the door down when he was putting the car in the garage (it came down on top of the car). And then he was mad for only a few seconds.”
I received a card yesterday which has a verse which is how I feel about my dad.
Our Father’s depart,
But never their love and never the lessons they’ve taught us.
Never their guidance,
Never their blessings,
Never the joys they’ve brought us.
In Corinthians it reads,
The Father of compassion…comforts us in all our troubles.
Though we try to prepare, we are never prepared enough,
But there is a compassionate God in heaven
Who sees, Who cares, Who comforts.
May we feel His presence as we grieve the loss of our father, our grandfather, our husband, our friend.