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  • At 100, man has bounty of fond memories

    The Journal News.com, NY
    Dec 19 2004

    At 100, man has bounty of fond memories
    By BOB BAIRD
    THE JOURNAL NEWS
    (Original publication: December 19, 2004)

    With about 160 residents, birthdays come frequently at the Nyack
    Manor Nursing Home in Valley Cottage.

    While each is a celebration of longevity, some like one the other
    afternoon for Sam Frattarelli, take on special meaning.

    Frattarelli, joined by about two dozen relatives and friends and
    almost 100 other residents, was celebrating his 100th birthday, which
    actually comes tomorrow.

    Making the event, coordinated by activities director Melly
    Resurreccion, all the more special is the fact that Frattarelli was
    surrounded by five other centenarians who live at Nyack Manor.

    Like Frattarelli, who worked long enough to have several careers, the
    other centenarians have had fulfilling lives, with careers, family
    and enriching involvement in their communities.

    Frattarelli, whose first name is actually Severino, was born near
    Rome on Dec. 20, 1904, and came to the United States when he was 18.
    He worked in construction and then for a railroad. By the time he
    retired after a career with Con Edison, he and his wife, Sylvia, had
    opened a diner in the Bronx and built it into a restaurant and
    catering business.

    Now married for 75 years, Frattarelli met Sylvia when he was a border
    with her extended family. They married when she was just 15. Together
    they had three children who have given them seven grandchildren, 18
    great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren. Their
    great-granddaughter, Bethea Davis, watched with her son, Joshua
    Davis, 6, as her other son, Christopher Torres, just seven months
    old, bounced on Frattarelli's knee.

    There were many family celebrations over the years at Sylvia's, the
    restaurant in the Bronx, and at the 220-acre property they owned in
    upstate Livingston Manor. But in 2001, Sam moved to Nyack Manor and
    Sylvia to the Pearl River home of their daughter, Margaret Ferrusi.

    While a Livingston Manor resident, Frattarelli was active in local
    politics, which also is a passion for Mary Grace Devlin. When I first
    interviewed her in December 1999, she was 100 and still living on her
    own in West Haverstraw. She said then that she believed a lack of
    faith and respect was at the root of society's problems and blamed
    liberal politicians from Fiorello LaGuardia right up into the 1960s
    for what she saw as New York City's decline. Five years later,
    remembering our earlier conversation, she announced, "I'm still very
    political." A bit after we spoke that first time, she lived for a
    couple of years with her daughter, Jerry Reynolds of Haverstraw,
    before moving to Nyack Manor.

    Anthony Cavallo and Sarah Tancer both turned 100 earlier this year.
    He retired a half-century ago as a driver for the New York City
    Department of Sanitation. He and his wife of more than 70 years,
    Rose, raised two sons, Ernie and Gerry. Together, they traveled to
    Europe, Puerto Rico and Bermuda. Tancer was born and raised in
    Brooklyn and lived there until a move to Florida about 30 years ago.
    She lived there on her own until about two years ago, when she came
    to Nyack Manor. She had two children, seven grandchildren, two
    great-grandchildren and a great-great-granddaughter, Angelica
    Pagnozzi of Nanuet. She was visiting along with her grandmother,
    Berna Maloney of Nanuet, who drops in on Tancer two or three times a
    week.

    Mary Tukdarian, 103, lived in the Bronx and then New City. She raised
    two sons with her husband, Haig, who had fought in World War I. He
    also had been a member of the Armenian Legion of the French Foreign
    Legion and at the time of his death in 1992, was believed to have
    been the group's last living member.

    Alice Haagensen, 104, has spent much of her adult life studying and
    writing the history of Palisades and Snedens Landing. As recently as
    2002, Haagensen combined with mystery writer Dorothy Salisbury Davis
    on "Historic Houses of the Palisades," published by the Palisades
    Historical Committee and the Palisades Free Library. A year earlier,
    Haagensen was honored with the Margaret B. and John R. Zehner Award
    for information she provided when Palisades was designated
    Orangetown's second historic district in 1967.

    According to Rosita Manzano, director of nursing at Nyack Manor, part
    of the Northwoods Rehabilitation and Extended Care Facilities,
    longevity of residents is steadily going up and changing the nature
    of nursing homes.

    It's brought more aggressive patient management, she says, with a
    veteran staff responding more vigorously to any change in a
    resident's health.

    Except for some hearing difficulty, Frattarelli is in good shape — a
    testament to years of hard work in Livingston Manor, where he
    renovated the house, barns and garage and built a greenhouse. He grew
    his own vegetables and fished trout from his own pond.

    Holding his great-great-grandson, Frattarelli looks like he could
    live out what Margaret Ferrusi says has always been her father's
    motto: "Another 50 years."

    --Boundary_(ID_s+1B8Lc8I8GGSmC6Org3nA)--
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