Caterina, was born and bred in Brooklyn and raised by her single mother from her preschool years. Her only brother, still a baby when their father passed, went into the Foundling Home and she learned to cook, clean and keep the home fires burning (literally as well as figuratively) from her earliest of memories.
She was fortunate to actually graduate from high school in NYC, a rarity for girls of her time who typically left early for marriage or jobs. For all her days, she was proud of her prowess with French and math! She changed her legal name to the more American sounding Catherine and began as an operator with NY Telephone, a career she continued until retirement years later after moving to Poughkeepsie.
Kitty, to friends, married and moved to the Bronx where she raised three sons before heading to the country when her oldest two sons were establishing lives as her youngest began school. As a survivor of the Depression, Kitty was always careful with money; however, she liked nice things and enjoyed a bargain more than anyone I have ever met. Sales at Macy's and a clearance rack at Marshalls were regular haunts for all of her day. When I was a new mom with a new mortgage making do, she would encourage me to, "Buy yourself a little something because nobody knows what makes you happy like you do!" Kitty also had a soft spot for little girls in patent leather shoes and my daughter, her last granddaughter even had a pair of red shoes thanks to her careful watching of those sale racks!
Kitty passed many years ago when my own children were still very young (picture above with her youngest grandchild) ; yet, her piles of farfellette sprinkled with M&Ms and her ready in a minute fritattas are memories that have been maintained through stories and living examples.
Kitty had retired from a long career outside the home and was already an established mother-in-law and a grandmother when marriage brought me into her circle. I learned many life lessons from her words and examples, such as her vow to never judge parenting or life decisions and her promise, when we moved close, "My house is always open to you any time you are in the area, no need to call! But I will always call before I come to your home as a sign of respect for you and the many challenges of raising a young family and working outside the home!" I was blessed to have known her and still take her words seriously.


























