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Eugenia C. "Gina" DeAngelus
October 16, 2006
Eugenia C. "Gina" DeAngelus, 92, of 839 Main St., died Monday at Springside of Pittsfield after a long illness.
Born in Pittsfield on July 28, 1914, a daughter of John and Richetta Casella Costello, she attended schools in Pittsfield and in 1958 moved to Pompano Beach, Fla.
While there, she was employed by Sears in the ladies' cosmetics department as an assistant manager for 13 years. She then moved to Dalton in 1971 and became an assistant director of the Nutrition Program for the Elderly, retiring in 1986.
Mrs. DeAngelus was a communicant of St. Agnes' Church and a former vice president of the Golden Agers of Dalton.
Her husband, Angelo F. DeAngelus, whom she married on August 16, 1938, died Jan. 23, 1990.
She leaves a daughter, Virginia A. Weber of Dalton; two grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren. A son, Joseph A. DeAngelus, died June 14, 2001.
FUNERAL NOTICE -- Funeral services for Mrs. Eugenia C. "Gina" DeAngelus, who died Monday Oct. 16, 2006, will take place Tuesday, Oct. 24, at 9 a.m. from FLYNN & DAGNOLI-BENCIVENGA FUNERAL HOME, 5 Elm St., Pittsfield, with a Liturgy of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. at St. Agnes Church in Dalton, MA, with the Rev. Christopher A. Malatesta, pastor, officiating.
Burial will follow in the family plot in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Pittsfield, MA. Calling hours at the funeral home will be Monday, Oct. 23, from 4 to 7 p.m.
Survivors include two grandchildren, Mark Weber and William Weber of Dalton; five great-great-grandchildren, Victoria Vincelette and Amanda, Lindsey, William R. and Zachary Weber; two great-great-grandchildren, Jacob Selva and Marc Vincelette Jr.; a son-in-law, John J. Weber; a daughter-in-law, Paula DeAngelus; and four nieces, Anna Kickery, Jean Nealon, Josephine Vincent and Rosalie Kelly.
She was predeceased by two brothers, Anthony and Joseph Costello, and by two sisters, Rosalie Riley and Richetta Costello. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Berkshire Benevolent Society for the Blind. After the death of her husband, Eugenia spent her time making thousands of rosary beads for the poor.
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