Ad
related to: brugger funeral home erie pa obituaries
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Erie people who died in 2023 were loved by many, and in some cases known by almost all. Memories will linger, and so will legacies many have left us. Erie remembers: Family, friends and neighbors ...
Trautman, who led Erie diocese for 22 years, died at 85 on Feb. 26. Diocese will hold public memorial Mass, funeral Mass for clergy, invited guests.
During Tullio’s six terms as mayor he worked to revitalize downtown Erie by pushing for construction of the Bayfront Parkway and a downtown arena. He started We Love Erie Days, now known as Celebrate Erie, and helped preserve the Warner Theatre. His home phone number was listed in the phone book so citizens could contact him. [1]
The Times Publishing Company bought out the rival Erie Dispatch Herald in 1956 and co-located the two staffs in 1957 in the Dispatch Herald's building at East 12th and French streets. On January 7, 1957, the Erie Morning News made its debut. The Times Publishing Company built a new plant, housing a Goss Metro offset press, at 205 West 12th ...
Daniel Dobbins, builder of the U.S. naval fleet for Battle of Lake Erie; Thomas B. Hagen, Chairman of Erie Insurance; William Himrod, iron industry pioneer and abolitionist; Warren Kitzmiller, Vermont state legislator; Michael Liebel, Jr., Mayor of Erie 1906–1911; Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from ...
Former NASCAR broadcaster and pit reporter Bill Weber has died, the National Motorsports Press Association announced Monday. He was 67. Weber, a New Jersey native who graduated from Butler ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The next bishop of Erie was Auxiliary Bishop John Gannon of Erie, named by Pope Benedict XV in 1920. Gannon founded Cathedral Preparatory School in Erie in 1921, St. Joseph's Home for Children in 1923 and Mercyhurst College in Erie in 1926. [14] In 1933, he established Cathedral College, a two-year institution. [14]