The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Marion Jane Dann

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Marion Jane Jack Dann, December 23, 1928-October 6, 2021.The spirit world received a joyful burst of loving energy with the passing of Jane Dann on October 6, 2021. “People take vitamins, vitamins take Jane Dann” Dr. Lonnie Lauer said of his employee when she worked for him in her 60’s. He wasn’t the first to experience her exuberance. Jane’s lifelong adventure of brightenin­g the paths of all she encountere­d began with her birth on December 23, 1928 in Uniontown Pa. to William F. And Marion Price Jack. Jane, or “Jackie” as she was nicknamed, enjoyed a loving household in Niagara Falls N.Y. until the death of her mother 6 years later. Three months before her mother’s death, Jackie and her sister Patty were chosen by Eleanor Roosevelt to represent all the children participat­ing in the 1935 Easter egg roll on the White House lawn. Pictures were taken, film was shot, and their images appeared in newspapers nationwide and on newsreels decked out in their finest Easter attire. Life changed dramatical­ly for Jackie when her father remarried less than two years later. Her golden locks were shorn, her clothes became drab, and she felt more like the hired help in the presence of her stepmother than a family member. Though challenged, Jackie never let that extinguish the deep goodness and sense of value she held within her. Even in her youth, she believed God has no hands on earth but ours, and that’s how she lived her life. Told at the age of 17 that she could not come home again without an invitation, Jackie left , changed her name to Jane, and in 1947 received her certificat­e from

Katherine Gibbs Secretaria­l School in Rhode Island. She excelled as a secretary working for the associate librarian at Yale University. After graduating first in her class from the Yale-New Haven Hospital Licensed Practical Nursing Program in 1950, Jane combined her talents to become the nurse secretary to the Chief of Surgery at Yale-New Haven Hospital. It was during this time that she met the love of her life, Robert Treat Dann. Less than a year later they were married, and shortly thereafter, started a family. Their union brought 4 children, 3 boys, and a girl. Jane took the love she experience­d the first six years of her life, and used it as a model for raising her own children. Nourishing each with unconditio­nal love, support, humor, faith, and-as a gifted cook-delicious and plentiful food. Over the course of their marriage, they moved well over a dozen times, covering seven states. Jane’s boundless energy, positive attitude, and ceaseless interest in others allowed her to make lifelong friends with each move. She immersed herself in each community without hesitation, volunteeri­ng wherever the needs were most, and instantly becoming an active member of the local Episcopal church. In the late 1960’s, Jane was able to raise $100,000 “placing the right people, at the right places, at the right time” to aide a school for dropouts in Chicago. Actively involved in civil rights, LGBTQ rights, and the quest for peace, Jane attended a rally with Martin Luther King Jr in the 60’s, demonstrat­ed against the war in Vietnam in the 70’s, and more recently, stood vigil every Saturday for a year with the Women in Black for peace. She was the first woman to serve on the vestry at St. Andrews Church in Marblehead Ma. She helped displaced Vietnamese families, in both Massachuse­tts and Philadelph­ia, establish homes and jobs in America. As the Friendly Town chairperso­n in Winnetka Ill., she offered her home to provide summer respite for underprivi­leged youth, and convinced others to do the same. She served on the board of the Massachuse­tt’s North Shore Homemaker Health Aids, and actively volunteere­d delivering Meals on Wheels weekly. She always made time for her children’s activities, including being both a Cub Scout and Girl Scout leader. In the late 70’s, she brushed off her secretaria­l skills and joined husband Robert working at his company Pharmatech in Fort Washington, Pa. Later, after moving to New Jersey, she became the secretary to the President, Paul Hardin, of Drew University. When they retired to Harrison, Maine, Jane worked for Dr. Lauer at Stevens Memorial Hospital, while also serving on the Lakes Environmen­tal Associatio­n board, and becoming actively involved with Christ Church, Norway. A self proclaimed “pollution nut”, Jane brought her own bags to the supermarke­t decades before it was popular, recycled everything possible, and assisted in passing a rule to ban smoking at Harrison’s Crystal Lake where the beach had become littered with cigarette butts. If not making her own pickles, pies, or preserves, any free moment was spent knitting, sewing, or creating a quilt to be enjoyed for generation­s. You didn’t have to be a close friend or family member to experience the love, sincere caring, and infectious laughter of Jane Dann. Simply being lucky enough to cross her path guaranteed you’d leave a better person with a fuller heart and a good chuckle. Predecease­d by her husband, Jane’s love radiates and lives on through her son David Dann and his partner Laurie Knoop, son and daughter-in-love Paul & Patti Dann, son and daughter-in-love Tim & Angela Dann, daughter and son-in-love Elizabeth Dann & Joe Quinn as well as 7 grandchild­ren, and 10 great grand “babies” all of whom she cherished and adored. Jane also leaves her beloved stepbrothe­r Richard Jack, and is predecease­d by her sister Patrica Jack Coyle.

Services will be held outdoors October 24, 2021 at 2pm at Grace Episcopal Church 30 Eastman St Concord, NH 03301. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to Grace Episcopal Church in Concord, NH, or Christ Episcopal Church 35 Paris St. Norway, Maine 04268 in Jane’s memory.

The Dann family would like to thank the amazing staff at Havenwood for the excellent care they took of Jane, especially during the pandemic.

Arrangemen­ts have been entrusted by Bennett Funeral Home of Concord,NH.

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