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Francis Lynch Obituary

LYNCH, Francis Bradley "Brad" 81, of Centerville, Massachusetts, died peacefully at home Tuesday, September 16, 2008, after a brief battle with lung cancer. Mr. Lynch was born in Boston on August 6, 1927, a son of the late William S. and Katharine Brady Lynch, and raised in Cambridge, New York City and Bronxville, New York. He was a veteran of Army Service at the end of World War II and a graduate of Bronxville High School and Williams College, class of 1949. He started his career in the early 1950's as a reporter on the Fall River, Massachusetts, Herald News. After two years, he joined the public relations department of The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company in Fall River and then Akron, Ohio. Subsequently, as president of Rumrill-Hoyt Public Relations in Rochester, New York and New York City, he provided public relations counseling and service for 15 years to national corporations and non-profit associations. Later he became vice president for corporate communications of the N W Ayer Inc. Advertising Agency in New York. In 1965, Mr. Lynch was in the first group of executives to be elected to accredited membership in the Public Relations Society of America. He was a director of the National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers and the New York Council on Alcoholism, as well as public relations chairman of the American Association of Advertising Agencies. He and his family lived in Rowayton and Westport, Connecticut, for most of the 35 years he worked in New York. Following his retirement from N W Ayer in 1990, Mr. Lynch was hired as director of public relations for The Advertising Council in New York. The Ad Council is the organization that, with advertising agencies and media companies, coordinates public service campaigns to gain support for messages that meet health, safety, education, and other human needs. He was a long-standing member of the Williams Club of New York. After commuting to Cape Cod from Manhattan year round on weekends over 20 years, he retired from the Ad Council in 1994 and became a full-time resident on the Cape, a freelance reporter for the weekly Barnstable Patriot in Hyannis, Massachusetts, and an avid amateur artist. Mr. Lynch was married June 7, 1952, to Charlotte Andrews of Fall River. He is survived by his wife and children: Sarah Katharine Lynch Faldetta and her husband Thomas J. Faldetta, MD, of Sherborn, Massachusetts; Richard Andrews Lynch and Stephen Brady Lynch, both of Los Angeles; William Alan Lynch of Derby, Connecticut; two grandchildren, Ross Andrew Faldetta and Kimberly Frances Faldetta of Sherborn; a brother James Brady Lynch of Little Compton, Rhode Island, and a sister, Emily Cunneen Barrett of Harwich Port, Massachusetts, as well as many nieces and nephews. A funeral mass will be held Friday, September 26, at 11:00 AM at Our Lady of Victory Church, 230 South Main St. Centerville, Massachusetts. Burial at a later date will be at St. Patrick's Cemetery, Fall River. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to The Visiting Nurse Association of Cape Cod-Hospice and Palliative Care, 434 Route 134, Suite G1, South Dennis, MA 02660 and/or The Fall River Historical Society, 451 Rock St. Fall River, MA 02720. Arrangements are in the care of the Waring-Sullivan Homes of Memorial Tribute, Fall River.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Boston Globe on Sep. 19, 2008.

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5 Entries

Meg Wolf

October 2, 2008

I was fortunate to work with Brad at N W Ayer in New York. He was a gentleman, sweet and kind. He shared his favorite mystery writers with me, and I'm forever grateful. I'm sure he is with writer colleagues and having a grand time. Meg Wolf

LESLYN THORNE

September 24, 2008

I AM USING THIS MEDIUM AS I HAVE A BROKEN RIGHT ARM AND ILLEGIBLE LEFT HAND WRITING.I CAN NOT BE WITH YOU FRIDAY DUE TO A DOCTOR APPOINTMENT, BUT YOU WILL BE IN MY THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS.
BRAD WAS A SWEET, DEAR MAN, AND DID MUCH TO PROMOTE GOOD WORKS IN THE BARNSTABLE AREA. HIS PRESENCE AND HIS PRINTED WORDS WILL BE MISSED. FONDLY, LESLYN

Rona Ackerman-Beer

September 21, 2008

The Lynch Family,
I have only fond memories of "Mr Lynch" (as I knew him in the 1960s) when the Lynch family lived in Rowayton. May your memories bolster your strength during this difficult time.

Mike Casey

September 19, 2008

Mr. Lynch,
Sir, I would just like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice for our Country when you served in the U.S. Army during WW II and for being a member of the Greatest Generation. And to your family and loved ones, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.

Elizabeth Butler

September 19, 2008

Brad was a great writer, a voracious reader and a lovely man. Those of us at Centerville Library will miss him.

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