CHARLES-ANGELL-Obituary

CHARLES F. ANGELL

Bridgewater, Massachusetts

About

LOCATION
Bridgewater, Massachusetts

Obituaries

Send Flowers

ANGELL, Charles F. Professor emeritus at Bridgewater State University, died June 13, 2012, at home in the loving company of his family after a ten-year battle with cancer. He was the son of the late Charles Francis Angell & Margaret Carlyle Angell of Kingston. Dr. Angell grew up in Plympton...

Read More

Guest Book

Not sure what to say?

How sad I am to hear of the passing of young Charlie Angell, as we called him in Plympton years ago. My thoughts and prayers are with his family. Janet Day Rouvales

How sad I am to hear of the passing of young Charlie Angell, as we called him in Plympton years ago. My thoughts and prayers are with his family.
Janet Day Rouvales

To the Angell family---
I was a classmate of Charles all through high school at Silver Lake in Kingston. In fact, we were in the same homeroom for all those years. He was a wonderful friend. We lost touch after college, but I always read his reviews in the Bridgewater publications that I still receive as a graduate from there in 1964. Please know that you are in my thoughts and prayers at this very difficult time.
Rena (Anti) Almeida Class of 1960 SLRHS

Franklin, I am so sorry to hear of the loss of your father.

Leslie, our thoughts and prayers are with you. -- Helen and Chang Son

Dear Leslie and Franklin and Family, George and I are thinking of you at this difficult time. Wish we wern't so far away at time like this.

My deepest sympathy to Leslie and family at the loss of Charlie. He was my advisor when I first began classes at BSC and then became a colleague and friend during the years teaching here. I will miss the times when we read placement exams and he would pick out all the quirky misspellings of some particular word of the day. He was a courageous man with a good heart and BSU will not be the same without him.

In 1989 when I started my teaching career at Bridgewater State, Charlie was the Chair of the English Department. He hired me and was very supportive during my years of teaching. What I recall most vividly was the support and kindheartedness that he offered when doing his classroom visitations and evaluations. On one occasion, he stayed beyond the usual ten or so minutes and for a moment I wondered what I had done wrong, but I was confident that if I had “messed up,” Charlie would be...

My deepest sympathies to Leslie, Franklin, and the rest of the Angell family. Charlie was one of my most beloved professors and, in the last two years, colleagues. He was always willing to help me navigate being a student and then an instructor. I will miss his witty banter and political chats most.