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Lea Bertani Vozar Newman

1926 - 2024

Lea Bertani Vozar Newman obituary, 1926-2024, Chicago, IL

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Lea Newman Obituary

Having bid farewell to friends and family, 98-year-old Lea Newman slipped away peacefully on the night of December 13, 2024, never having to move out of her beloved home. Her final wish was realized.

Wife, mother, teacher, scholar, author, and friend, Lea was an accomplished woman who made her own luck and leveraged her brains and her beauty to succeed at every endeavor she attempted. And she attempted many.

Lea was born in Chicago on August 3, 1926, the only child of Italian immigrants, Marino and Mary Bertani. Her grandmother Nonna Vera devoted herself to little Lea's care and loved her unconditionally. Lea wrote in her memoir that the security instilled early in her childhood made it possible for her to face life's challenges in her later years.

Lea graduated as valedictorian from Waller High School (now Lincoln Park HS) in 1943 and won a scholarship to attend Chicago Teachers College. It was there at a USO dance that she met her first husband Cam Vozar, a cadet in the Army Air Corps reserve. They married in 1947 and one year later their first child, a son, named Cam after his father, was born, followed in close succession by two daughters, Donna and Linda. All told, Lea would bear five children, including Mary Michelle, a daughter born in Louisiana in 1957, and Robert Marino, her final son born in Arkansas in 1962.

From early childhood on, Lea was an avid reader and by the time the family moved to Michigan in the early 1960s, she was ready to go back to school. She earned her M.A. at Wayne State University and began teaching English at the local junior college. In 1969, the family made its fifth and final move to Bennington, VT, and Lea enrolled in the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where she earned her Ph.D. in English in 1979.

When her husband Cam died in 1971, Lea became the family breadwinner and leveraged her degree to become eventually a full professor at North Adams State College (now Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts). She was a gifted teacher and went on to win a Fulbright lectureship in American Literature at the University of Bologna in Italy (1973 -74) and scholar in residence at the University of Urbino in1974.

In 1975, Lea met the man who would become her second husband, Meredith Weldon Newman, a retired Navy pilot known as Chick, who fell in love with her winning smile, wit, and effortless Italian charm. They wed in 1976 and lived in Bennington.

Lea retired from teaching in 1993, and turned her considerable focus to writing. She had already published two academic books about the short stories of Herman Melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Wanting to reach a wider audience, Lea penned two books of literary biography: Robert Frost: The People, Places, and Stories behind his New England Poetry (New England Press, 2000) and Emily Dickinson: Virgin Recluse and Rebel (Shires Press, 2013). But her most personal and perhaps most poignant book was a self-published autobiography chronicling her childhood and dedicated to her family: Growing Up Italian in Chicago (Bertani Books 2003).

Lea earned many accolades. She was past-president of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society and the Herman Melville Society. She has the distinction of being the only scholar who has been president of both.

As a founder and vice-president of the Friends of Robert Frost, Lea organized and hosted the "Sunday Afternoons with Robert Frost" series at the Stone House Museum. More recently Lea spoke at two literary teas as fundraisers for Oldcastle Theatre. The first was on the poetry and life of Emily Dickenson, and the following year her subject was Robert Frost. Both were sold out.

Locally, she served as president of the Bennington Branch of the American Association of University Women (1994 -98). She was a popular professor in the Osher Lifelong Learning classes that met at the Bennington Museum, covering not only Hawthorne, Melville, Dickinson, and Frost, but also Dante. For more than 20 years, Lea participated in an Italian conversation group, drawing on the first language she learned and the Dante course she took to fulfill the foreign language requirement for her doctorate.

She was also a wonderful cook, making the most remarkable Italian dishes from scratch-chicken cacciatore, lasagna, ravioli, etc. Anyone who was lucky enough to taste the rich and delicate flavors at her table learned the phrase, "Si manga bene qui!" One eats well here!

Lea is survived by four of her five children, Camille Alan Vozar, Donna Vozar Olendorf, Linda Vozar Sweet, and Mary Michelle Vozar; her step-daughter Meredith Newman Maroni; 11 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; and one great-great grandson. Her youngest child Robert Marino Vozar died in 2022.

A memorial mass will be held at Sacred Heart Saint Frances de Sales Catholic Church on March 29, 2025.

Donations in her memory can be made to the Robert Frost Stone House Museum: https://www.bennington.edu/robert-frost-stone-house-donation-page

Robert Frost Stone House Museum

c/o Institutional Advancement

Bennington College

One College Drive

Bennington VT 05201-6003

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

Published by The Bennington Banner on Dec. 21, 2024.

Memories and Condolences
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Rose Bohmann

March 15, 2025

Such an accomplished scholar! Glad she was able to live out her life in her own home. Condolences to Mary and all her extended family.

Carmine Giordano

January 5, 2025

I first met Lea in an Emily Dickinson course I was teaching at the Green Mountain Academy for Lifelong Learning from a psychoanalytic perspective. She was gathering information for a book on the poet and eager to learn different points of view on the poet. Afterwards, she expressed her appreciation and asked if I might review some chapters of her upcoming book Emily Dickinson: Virgin and Recluse and Rebel. Then followed years of email exchanges, Zoom readings of my own poetry, and summer lunch visits during which we became good friends.

Lea was always optimistic, a woman of great wisdom, humility and grace, bountiful in her appreciation of the blessings of her own amazing long life and accomplishments, her loving family and friends.

"Unable are the loved to die, for love is immortality." Emily Dickinson

Judy Reichert

December 23, 2024

Lea was the heart and soul of our Italian conversation group. Witty, with fascinating stories - and tolerant of the Italian of those of us less fluent! A perfectly wonderful woman.

Donna Vozar Olendorf

December 22, 2024

Allyn Lindsey

December 21, 2024

Lea became a special friend after I worked for her for a few years in the late 70s. She and Kathy Emmett and I went to lunch a few times, Later we meet again at senior exercise at Anytime Fitness, We talked on the phone now and them but lost contact the past few years, I was just thinking of her the other day, then saw the obituary just now. I am so sorry for your loss, she was a lovely fun person with a wonderful laugh. I only knew Bobby when he was in high school and maybe met one or two other of her children, Remember the fun time, and yes, her great cooking. Allyn

Georgene Villanueva

December 21, 2024

I met Lea in my Yoga class with Pauline as teacher. She was so much fun and so loved by every one of us. Georgene Burrington Villanueva

Donna Olendorf

December 21, 2024

We will miss you Mom

Becchi Lane Oesterle

December 21, 2024

Mrs Newman was such a wonderful lady. I first knew her as a child when her son Bobby & I attended a summer day camp together and she would often give me rides. She was also a favorite professor of my Dad´s when he attended NASC as a non traditional student. Later as an adult when my career brought me back to Bennington I joined AAUW and rekindled my fondness for Mrs. Newman (I always had a problem calling her Lea!). Such a great, meaningful life she led. Godspeed.

Single Memorial Tree

Deb Lewis

Planted Trees

Deb Lewis

December 21, 2024

Grief can be so hard, but our special memories help us cope. Remembering you and your loved one today and always.

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Funeral services provided by:

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628 Main Street, Bennington, VT 05201

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