A
Tribute to Joseph Phillip Palmisano
Greetings
family, friends, and admirers of Joe Palmisano.
We gather here to pay tribute to a man who for 80 years relished life, a
man who lived a good life, who shared his knowledge, his energy, and his wealth
with us. We remember a man whose impact
will reverberate among and within us long after this memorial has ended. Joe’s family is especially grateful to see
his friends and fellow Knights in this gathering.
I first met
Joe in June of 1980, and in August of 1981 Joe became my father-in-law. During our courtship and afterwards, Joe
frequently found onerous chores for me around his house on Ironwood Drive. I helped him dig up his septic tank, cleaned
out his gutters, painted his house, moved his lumber, stripped paint off
bleacher seats from a demolished stadium on Fort Bragg from which he created
end-tables for our first apartment. I
glued and sanded many pieces of wood in his workshop. Early on, my nickname for him became “the
Boss.” The reason should be
obvious.
One evening
within the first month of dating Tia, the Boss was multitasking as usual. He was simultaneously watching TV, doing some
accounting on his home computer, and keeping an eye on me as Tia
and I sat in the den. I innocently
picked up a brazil nut from the dish on the end table and put it in my mouth to
crack the shell. He saw me do this and
yelled at me “Don’t do that! You’ll
break your damn teeth.” It took me by
surprise. I knew he could be gruff but I didn’t expect him to yell at me. My feelings were hurt. Tia explained later that it was a good sign, that he wouldn’t have yelled at me if he didn’t care
about me and my damn teeth. So if anyone here has been yelled at by Joseph Palmisano,
let’s agree that it’s probably because he cared deeply about you and what you
were doing.
Despite the
sweat and sawdust and sewage, I’ve cherished The Boss for 27 years in sickness
and in health and so my wife Tia and my sister-in-law Theresa have asked me to
say a few words about their father.
Since they are both excellent cooks and I am often hungry, I have agreed
to honor their request. The Boss loved
to eat too. And he loved to sit in the
kitchen where his favorite women were preparing food, laughing and joking and
sampling the goodies. At Christmas and Thanksgiving he’d take his rightful place at the head of the
long table with his family gathered round and we’d sit for hours, eating and
sipping wine, and telling stories. No
one used more butter than Joseph Palmisano and no one tells funnier stories
about clinic patients than daughter Theresa.
One time she told us about a man who….
Wait a minute! I’m getting
sidetracked. I’m supposed to be talking
about the Boss.
Joseph
Phillip Palmisano was born August 3rd, 1927
in Urbana Illinois to parents who trace their ancestry to the island of
Sicily. He attended Catholic school
where according to his own telling, the Sisters
responsible for his education realized how much effort would necessarily be
expended on this mischievous boy. He was
able to behave for periods up to one hour while serving as an altar boy. Joe could recall the names of the nuns who
found it so often necessary to discipline him with corporal punishment which
was routine in those days. Apparently these devout disciplinarians developed short
tempers and strong arms in dealing with young Joseph. As a teenager, Joe was fascinated with
machinery and told me of his trips to the train yards where he worked for a time
before enlisting in the Army shortly after his eighteenth birthday. That was November 1945.
According to
some accounts, Velcro was invented for Joe Palmisano who early in his military
career had a tendency to earn stripes only to have
them removed and then later re-earned.
He fell in love with and married Nola Nell Roberts from Tennessee and
together they raised 5 children: Danny, Bobby, Tia, Theresa, and Vincent. Joe provided love, security and stability for
Nola and the children and Nola was a devout mother and
wife. During this period, Joe developed
skills as a bookkeeper and moonlighted as tax preparer and accountant,
and maintained his Palmisano Accounting Service until fairly
recently. Beginning in his thirties, Joe read avidly of woodworking and
expanded his workshop from the back of his small garage to a two-story workshop
he constructed in the backyard of the Ironwood Drive home. After retiring from the Army in 1966 and beginning a second career as a Civil Servant on
Fort Bragg, Joe spent countless hours on woodworking projects starting from
rough sawmill lumber and creating cedar-lined oak chests and hand-crafted solid
oak desks. Always willing to assist neighbors with cabinetry work, Joe
developed yet more expertise as he accumulated a shop full of woodworking
tools, some of which he claimed jumped into the back of his truck while driving
home from Fort Bragg where he rose to the level of Budget Officer at
Engineers.
Meanwhile
the children were growing up and his daughters were becoming young women. The story goes that once when Tia, then about
12, was playing tag football with kids from the neighborhood, a boy
intentionally tagged Tia on her blossoming bosoms. When Joe saw this, he chased the young
villain away with a 2x4 and thus Tia was preserved unspoilt for me. Joe was more tolerant of the numerous dogs
with names like Hamburger, Gaily, Thunder, and Fluffy that Nola or Theresa
brought home. In those years, a 40 hour work week was just a dream as Joe continued his
accounting service and pursued his woodworking hobby.
Except for dogs with silly names, life was very good for Joseph until Nola was diagnosed with cancer in 1978. Nola passed away within months and Joe was profoundly shaken by this loss. This was two years before I met Tia and 3 years before I became a son-in-law so I never knew my first mother-in-law. From all accounts Joseph and Nola were a happy couple who enjoyed listening to big-band music and sipping cocktails to escape the toils of work and parenting. Joe confided to me and Tia on several occasions that he regretted not having spent more time vacationing with his first wife and he strongly encouraged his children to take advantage of whatever opportunities arise to travel and see the world with each other. That, we have found, is very good advice, and in part accounts for the scheduling of this graveside service more than a week after his passing. With his blessing and encouragement, I was working in Zimbabwe last week so I am particularly grateful that this ceremony was delayed so that I can express my appreciation for the Boss.
After the
death of his first wife, Joe became a very eligible bachelor. Women sought him for his great sense of
humor, his vitality, his generosity, his sharp mind and his strong work ethic. Incidentally, these are the same
characteristics that prompted Tia to pursue me and Theresa to pursue Tom.
Marlene
Hiner recognized a good thing when she saw it and so did Joe Palmisano. Marlene and Joe were married in 1982 and
Joe’s family instantly expanded to include Marvin and Renee. Joe continued to work diligently at Fort
Bragg and retired in 1987. Marlene
retired the following year. With the
children mostly grown, Joe and Marlene were able to travel extensively, joining
Joe and Lucille Rebello on a memorable motorhome trip to the northeast. Joe and Marlene also visited the Badlands
during a trip out west to South Dakota.
Marlene and Joe visited me and Tia and our three kids in 1992 when we
lived in Columbia Missouri. Joe didn’t
have a very good time because we didn’t have cable TV, which to The Boss was as
essential as electricity and indoor plumbing.
He and Marlene gave us a year’s subscription to the local cable company
when they left, convinced that the grandchildren would otherwise grow up out of
touch with the real world as depicted on Sesame Street. Back at home North
Carolina, Joe could be found at his computer or in his workshop, always busy
with one project or another. In
retirement Joe generously gave his expertise and energy to the Knights of
Columbus Cardinal Gibbons Council 2838 where he was a 4th degree
Knight, was elected as Grand Knight, and until his death served with
distinction as Financial Secretary and publisher of the council’s
newsletter. Operation Lamb was one of
his favorite projects in part because Tootsie Rolls were one of his greatest
weaknesses. His devotion to his family,
to Marlene and the Knights of Columbus was surpassed
only by his devotion to Alex Trebec and Pat Sajak, the hosts of Jeopardy and
Wheel of Fortune. If you knew Joe well,
you knew not to call when these shows were on.
Otherwise, you’d end up talking to yourself.
Theresa’s
husband Tom Grosso was aware of the issue of timing when he took a knee in
front of the gathered family including the Boss to propose marriage to
Theresa. Tom carefully avoided a time
conflict with Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune.
The Boss believed in following protocol and tradition and was very
pleased that Tom proposed in this romantic way.
Unfortunately, I didn’t ask him for Tia’s hand in marriage because I
wasn’t particularly interested in her hands at the time.
Though Joe
gave up cigarettes after smoking for
30 years, he continued to work in his woodshop year round
creating heirlooms for his friends, children, and grandchildren. He inadvertently inhaled sawdust and mineral
spirits and paint thinners and polyurethanes, all of which lead
to emphysema which was first diagnosed in 1996 the
year he went on oxygen. Gradually the
Boss became winded by even the mildest exertion and with great sadness had to
abandon his woodworking. Joe experienced
congestive heart failure and developed diabetes. Even though his body deteriorated rapidly, we
all know that his mind remained sharp.
He read incessantly, propping his novels and documentaries on a wooden
stand that he designed and had me build for him. He stayed current with advances in computer
technology and tax accounting software.
He solved crossword puzzles and number puzzles every day,
and looked forward to the call from John Shelton who often needed help
with a clue or two. As his mobility was
diminished, he and Marlene relocated to their home on Village Drive where Joe
could have access to all parts of the house.
Joe’s long-time friend Carol Beard oversaw the construction of the
handicap ramp which gave Joe access to the outside world. John Cox was a regular visitor there and
together he and Joe seemed to have answers for all the world’s problems. When he wasn’t reading or working on the
computer, Joe spent untold hours watching cable TV, avoiding football and
Nascar races and instead tearing up while watching a Lifetime TV special or a
sappy Hallmark Channel movie. Beneath
that jovial and sometimes gruff exterior, there was always a tender man with a
soft heart.
Tethered to
supplemental oxygen for the last 11 years, Joe nevertheless maintained a zest
for life and ventured out weather-permitting with Marlene at the wheel of his handicap-equipped van.
He relished going out for breakfast after the early Sunday Mass to JK’s
or K&W Cafeteria or to Cracker Barrel where he’d feast on his favorite: sausage gravy over
biscuits. As much as the food, he
enjoyed the company of Joe and Lucille Rebello, Dean and Margaret Brown and
Courtney and Mary Lou Fox. Indeed, part
of Joe’s legacy would be the extravagant parties he hosted over many years,
with his house full of people enjoying food and fluids accompanied by loud
conversations and laughter late into the night.
Over time, the parties became less frequent and life a little less rowdy
for Joe. For the last year, he enjoyed
playing with the latest addition to his family, granddaughter Rebekka (with
Two- K’s.)
With his
keen mind, Joe was aware of his declining health and his increasing dependence
upon Marlene for the basic necessities of life. One of his greatest fears was becoming so
disabled that he would have to be placed in a nursing home. This he was able to avoid due in large part
to the care he received from Marlene and more recently from Lavonda Pate. Indeed, Joe’s life would likely have ended
much earlier had Marlene not taken such good care of him and we must
acknowledge her sacrificial contribution to prolonging the life and health of
her husband and our dear friend for as long as she possibly could. Marlene, on behalf of Joe and all his
friends, we thank you for all that you have done to keep this man in our lives
as long as possible.
And so the time has come to say farewell to a husband, a father,
a father-in-law, a grandfather, a brother Knight, a devout Catholic, a leader,
a servant, a dear friend. We were not
ready to let him go. Joe valued life and fought as hard as he could to sustain
it for as long as he could. Faced with
insurmountable odds, he characteristically never gave up, never gave less than
his best effort. For that and many other
things we admire him. We will miss
him. We will honor him by living in such
a way as to make him proud of us. We
will pass on his stories. He will not be
forgotten nor will the kind acts of his daughters who were with him to soothe him as he passed from this finite world to the
infinite eternal Paradise where never again will he gasp for air. With his new perfect heavenly body, I’m fairly confident that Joe will quickly become bored of
angelic choirs and instead become engaged in the sort of productive mischief
that characterized his earthly life.
Heavenly Sisters, get those yardsticks ready. Joe’s back so you have some work to do. And they better hide the Tootsie Rolls and
butter.
As for us
who remain, we have work to do as well.
Among us are some that must assume roles that Joe occupied so well and
for so long. Using the example he set for us, we must be husbands, fathers,
father-in-laws, grandfathers, brother Knights, devout Catholics, leaders,
servants, and dear friends to each other.
I certainly intend to because he cares deeply about us and what we are doing and I don’t want to get yelled at again. Ever.
Especially not from heaven by a rejuvenated man who now has perfect lungs
and no need to restrain his appetite!
Amen.
G.R. Davis
Jr.
20 December
2007