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3 Entries
Andrea Zingsheim
January 7, 2011
My fondest memory of Auntie Anne was when she called me when I turned 40 and she started telling me about her childhood and the siblings she and my dad never got to know. Tony loved his sister but wasn't much for displaying those emotions-although he was always happy when Robert sent me pictures of Aunt Anne that I would share with him. Although she will be dearly missed by her family, I am happy that she is with her siblings and parents.
1985 Fort Huachuca, AZ
Antoinette Smart
December 31, 2010
I remember my Auntie Anne as being a kind and loving woman - and boy did she love to talk - she could talk for hours on the phone with my Mom/her sister-in-law, Gerry. It always made my Mom so happy to hear from her. I added a letter to this Memory Book that she wrote to my Dad/her brother in 2003 - she had the most beautiful handwriting and could always make the seemingly mundane aspects of life seem interesting. Auntie Anne and Uncle Vernon visited me, Scott and my Mom while I was stationed at Fort Huachuca, AZ. It was wonderful that they took the time and the trouble to visit and I remember us having a great time. Later, Jon, Scott and I visited Auntie Anne before we left for Germany - I am still trying to find the picture of all of us standing in front of a big tree in Fullerton. Auntie Anne was always a kind and gracious hostess. I drank pomegranate juice that she freshly squeezed from pomegranates grown in her yard before drinking this juice was fashionable.
I now have the letters that my Dad wrote to Auntie Anne during the 4 years that he was in the Pacific theater in WW II - I was amazed to find that she had saved them and I am so appreciative that she valued the sentiment and importance of correspondence shared with family.
I will miss my Auntie greatly - my deepest condolences to Bob and Judy.
Letter from Anne Vogel to her brother, Anthony, 2003
Antoinette Smart
December 31, 2010
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