More Obituaries
August 29, 2024 at 2:09 a.m.
Rosalie Patricia Groot, 88, died Aug. 18, 2024 at her home in Beacon, N.Y.
She was born Sept. 11, 1935, the daughter of Anthony and Fannie (Siclari) Matero, and attended Port Chester public schools.
Rosalie was a loving and supportive mother who gave her all to her children and everyone she knew, her family said; her door was always open to anyone, and she made sure her children had whatever they needed.
As she used to say, “Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the number that take your breath away.”
She will be remembered as a loving, caring and bighearted person to all she touched, and a mother who loved her children to the moon and back.
Rosalie is survived by her children: Patricia Guinee, Gregory Guinee, Alfred Guinee and George Groot; her siblings, Donald Matero (Vanda), Michael Matero (Mary) and MaryLou Sirignano; seven grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
Her brother, Tony Matero, died earlier.
Calling hours will be held at McHoul Funeral Home, 895 Route 82, Hopewell Junction, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sat., Sept. 7, followed by a service at 2 p.m.
To consistently run obituaries of Port Chester and Rye Brook residents of which we learn, we are using the following abbreviated format. We will be glad to run FREE OF CHARGE full obituaries of anyone whose family member requests it and provides the information to us.
Theodore "Ted" J. Marcucilli, Jr., 91, of Ocean View, Del., died peacefully at his home July 28, 2024 surrounded by his loving family.
He was born at United Hospital in Port Chester, the fourth son of Theodore Marcucilli and Rose Giannitelli Marcucilli who predeceased him.
His brothers Armand, Alfred, and Herbert, whom he deeply loved, all preceded him in death.
He attended Port Chester High School where he was an excellent student, was class president both his junior and senior years and was voted the most popular student.
Following his high school graduation in 1950, he attended NYU, earning a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering in 1954.
Mr. Marcucilli relocated to the Washington, D.C. area where he was immediately employed by the Department of the Navy (Bureau of Ships/Naval Sea Systems Command) as a Marine Engineer designing naval combat ships.
During his employment with the Department of the Navy, he was a member of the Senior Executive Services (SES), the highest ranking a civilian can earn.
In 1980 he retired from the Department of the Navy to work in the private sector doing the same things he did for the Navy.
For the next 15 years he worked for Presearch Inc., Resource Consultants Inc., ANADAC and Graph-Tech where he was a Senior Vice President at each firm.
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