Skip to main content

Class of 1943

Welcome to the Trinity Class of 1943 page! This page will be updated with class notes, memorials, and information about reunion and class gifts when relevant.

Class Co-Chairs

1943 Class Notes

2021

Marjorie Monagan Kelly writes in that she just turned 99 and is still alive! Hopes to hear from more classmates.

2016

Thanks to all of our classmates who sent me their news! It was great to chat on the phone with Gloria Pignatelli. She continues to live at home in Newport, RI, but was nursing a sprained ankle when we spoke.  Gloria said she still loves to read books when she can.

Diana Diaz Zorrilla is doing very well in beautiful San Juan, Puerto Rico. She’s delighted to have her daughter living in the house right next door to hers.  Her other daughter lives in Miami and Diana enjoys when she comes to visit.  Going out for lunch with family and friends is something Diana looks forward to regularly.

Marjorie (Marge) Monagan Kelly wrote from sunny Naples, FL where she lives in a lovely community with fun activities and friends.  Marge recently had a nice visit from her sister Joan Monagan Clinton ’49 and two nieces.  Christmas can’t arrive soon enough for Marge, as she’s expecting her daughter to spend a few days with her over the holiday.

We received a lovely note from Frances (Fran) Maguire Brannon, but were saddened to learn of the death of her husband last winter.  Fran is in Alexandria, VA and is happy to have her son Phillip living with her. She continues to enjoy playing bridge whenever she can.

I am still living at home and even get into the office to work a few hours a week.  Exercise class (which I love to hate) three times a week, helps to keep me fit.  I love my books and daily crossword puzzles.  I’m enjoying my children, grandchildren (14), and great-grandchildren (11)! We had a great trip to the Jersey shore in July with 45 of us, counting girlfriends and boyfriends-what a week!

We all still hold our memories of Trinity dear to our hearts and cherish the values and education we received there. It was such a special time in our lives. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all our classmates. May the Lord continue to bless us with the strength and grace to do His will.

Love,
Monica
Monica Quirk Bubser

2014

Greetings Classmates,

Although we don’t have too much to report, I am sure that we will all enjoy hearing the news from our ’43 grads.

Peg Metzger O’Donnell ’43 with Trinity students at Reunion

News from our only classmate to get to our 70th Reunion came in a letter from Peg Metzger O’Donnell, who wrote: “I had the privilege and honor of being the lone representative of the Class of 1943 at Reunion in June 2013. Two of my children and a nephew made sure I was able to attend the lovely luncheon and the very moving Mass in the chapel where there was a much-deserved tribute to Sr. Margaret “Peggy” Claydon, SND, ’45. Peggy and I have been friends for decades, so it was especially rewarding to have some personal time reconnecting with her. It was wonderful to be back on campus. Much has been changed since we were on Michigan Avenue 70 years ago, but it was so heartwarming to witness Trinity thriving and the campus looking so beautiful. The Trinity family truly went out of their way to make sure the class of 1943 had a memorable experience; my sincere thank you for the hospitality.”

 

Peg Metzger O’Donnell ’43 and Sr. Margaret Claydon, SND ’45 are surrounded by Peg’s family at Reunion.

My first letter was from Fran Maguire Brannon, who says that there is nothing new to report – no weddings or births to talk about. At the bridge table, she likes a “weak two opening,” even though there are not too many games now. Her family comes around often, so that makes them all happy.Peg is still residing in a nursing care facility in MD and is fortunate to have regular visits from family and friends. Her eldest grandchild, Siobhan O’Neil (daughter of P. A. O’Donnell O’Neil ’70, who passed away in 2011) is getting married in September in DC. Peg is hoping to join in the celebration and is going to be a great-grandmother for the first time this fall. Two exciting things to look forward to, Peg! Peg reports she is still getting over Notre Dame’s loss in the national championship to Alabama, but is looking forward to following another season of Irish football.

eg Metzger O’Donnell ’43 with Sr. Margaret Claydon, SND ’45 at Reunion

Kathryn “Kay” Bernatz Meihaus is fortunate to remain well and is enjoying her home in Pasadena, CA. She manages to keep everything going with loving assistance from others, including several children living fairly close by. Kay is still involved in several bridge groups and often makes daily Mass. She expresses that the expansion of Trinity into a successful university is great news and that the memories of our happy years in the ’40s mean so much.

Marjorie “Marge” Monagan Kelly reports that the event of the year for her was her brother’s 100th birthday party. It was a great family event and her sister Joan Monagan Clinton ’49 and she were lucky to be a part of the celebration. About 70 people were in attendance.

Marge gets along nicely at the retirement home. Still drives a bit, but gone are the days when she could drive back to CT. Speaking to how fortunate she is to have so many nieces and nephews and their children in the area, Marge closes her note by saying “I don’t know how I got so old!”

Well-wishes are extended to all the ’43ers from Helen Bronzo, who reported that she had a difficult year health-wise and was so sorry that she was unable to get to Reunion. She was fortunate to have good medical care and is recovering slowly, but well.

I had a nice phone call from Abigail “Gail” Hoye Meury, who is well but less active now and is still busy with church, health club and many friends. She even occasionally gets into Manhattan. Gail relates how fortunate it was that her apartment building was so high up in Brooklyn Heights that she escaped the damages of Hurricane Sandy.

A recent phone call with Gloria Pignatelli found her still in Newport, RI. Although the sight in one eye is failing now, she is still able to drive to the store, etc. Gloria enjoys gardening and time with good friends who are close by and who help out quite a bit.

I enjoy frequent phone calls with Diana Diaz de Zorrilla, who is 90 years old now and wishes she were much younger! She still remains in her own home with lots of help. Daughter Diana Maria lives next door, and daughter Christina lives in Miami. Christina’s son is an American Airlines pilot stationed in NYC. Diana’s son Patrine left his grandfather’s dental practice and teaches in a school of dental medicine in Puerto Rico.

To wrap up the news from the ’43 grads, I keep busy with work at our family business two or three days a week and a bridge game about once a week with friends. My family all resides in PA, with three in the local area. As I write this letter, I await the birth of my eighth great-grandchild. I stay active with exerciseswalking, reading and crossword puzzles. I enjoy vacationing in Ocean City, NJ, with 34 immediate family members! Later in the summer we spend a little time in Dennis, MA.

Many thanks for your calls and letters. It was good to hear the news from so many of us. My best wishes to all of you. Trinity has been such a dear part of our lives; may God continue to bless us and our families.

Monica Quirk Bubser

Submit A Note

Share your news with your class by submitting your notes online!

Submit a Class Note

1955 In Memoriam

Sr. Dorothy Beach, SNDdeN

Sister Dorothy Beach SNDdeN
July 25, 19219 – October 12, 2021

“Above all, cultivate the spirit of order everywhere, even in the smallest things. By being faithful in little things, we succeed little by little in being faithful in great things.”(Letter 383, Saint Julie Billiart, Foundress, Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur)

Ellen Dorothy Beach was born in Brookline, Massachusetts. Her father was a career Army officer, so her childhood saw the family moving frequently. Dorothy once said some of her earliest memories were of moving. Once she started school there was one thing that did not change: she attended Catholic schools no matter where the family lived. Her father was not Catholic, but he had promised her mother and the Church that he would see to it she received a Catholic Education. By the time Dorothy finished secondary school, she had attended nine different schools run by eight different religious congregations. She enrolled at Trinity College, Washington, D. C. in 1939. For the first time in her life, she was in one place for four years. That alone was an impressive experience for her.

Dorothy was also greatly impressed by the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who operated Trinity. Vague ideas about religious life gradually began to take focus in her mind and heart. This was difficult for her parents. Dorothy was an only child and they had other expectations for her future. By the time she graduated from Trinity, world events influenced Dorothy’s decision to wait a while before she entered. The United States was heavily involved in World War II, and it was natural for a child raised with military influences to look for a way to help the war effort. Dorothy wanted to serve, but she did not think it would be a good idea to serve in the army as her father did. He agreed and supported her decision to enlist in the female section of the U.S. Naval Reserve known as the WAVES.

After a short period of initial training, Dorothy was assigned to work in Washington, D.C. She lived with other young women and would look back on her time in the WAVES with good memories and wonderful stories. When the war was over, however, Dorothy still felt called to life as a Sister of Notre Dame. With her parents support, she entered the community at Ilchester, Maryland the summer of 1946. With other young women who entered at the same time, Dorothy prepared to teach. She appreciated the regularity of schedule, the simplicity of the lifestyle and the comradery of community life. Dorothy received the name Sister Francis Mary as a novice, and that was how she was known until 1968 when she resumed her baptismal name Dorothy.

Being experienced at moving came in handy for Dorothy from early 1949 to September of 1950. She hadcompleted college before entering the community, so when a teacher was suddenly needed at Notre Dame HighSchool, Wyncote, Pennsylvania, Dorothy was sent to fill the vacancy even though she was still a novice. She returned to Ilchester to profess her vows and then served at both Notre Dame High School, Moylan, Pennsylvania and at West Catholic High School in Philadelphia before being missioned to Trinity College in 1950. Her mission to Trinity was two-fold: she was to be Assistant Librarian and she was to study Library Science at Catholic University. Dorothy would spend 35 years in the Trinity Library where she became head librarian in 1972. She loved her years at Trinity. Recently she shared, “My assignment to Trinity College was such an honor for me. The founders had so much courage and foresight to open a women’s college when it was so needed. I continue to be in awe of those founding Sisters.”

In 1985, Dorothy went to Rome as librarian for the graduate house of the North American College where diocesan priests from the United States were sent to study for advanced degrees. She became friend and mentor to many of the priests who passed through the North American College during her six years there. The priests valued her presence, incorporated her into outings, and with them Dorothy enjoyed many lively conversations. She felt that part of her ministry there was accompanying these young men on a journey to a deeper understanding of their own vocations. Dorothy also loved living it Europe. She appreciated the chance to meet SNDs from all over the Notre Dame world who came to Rome for various reasons. Dorothy especially appreciated the opportunity to spend her summer vacations with the Notre Dame community in Oxford, England and the chance to get to know so many of the British Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur.

In 1991, Dorothy returned to the United States and was asked to serve as Archivist for the Maryland Unit of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. She again became a part of the Trinity Community which had been home to her for 35 years before going Rome and commuted to Ilchester to work. One of Dorothy’s conditions for saying “yes” to this new ministry was being able to visit the Ohio Unit Archives. She came to Mt. Notre Dame for a whole week. To her great frustration, she saw only the Ohio Unit Museum and never the Archives. Dorothy had no interest in starting a Museum in Maryland. She was excellent at keeping the boundaries in place on her job description and on the archival holdings for which she was responsible. Her organization of records was consistent and meticulous, creating collections that remain a joy with which to work. When the Maryland Offices moved from Ilchester to Villa Julie, Dorothy was equally meticulous in setting up the Archive area at Villa Julie. She continued commuting to work until she asked to be replaced in 2001.

Even though she was in her 80th year, Dorothy did not retire in 2001. Instead, she returned to the Trinity College Library as a volunteer. It wasn’t until 2006, as library practices began to change radically, and mobility started to become difficult for her, that Dorothy “retired” to spend her days in community service and prayer. In 2010 she joined the Health Center Community at Mt. Notre Dame in Cincinnati, Ohio where she continued her ministry of prayer and presence. Dorothy described years at Mt. Notre Dame as years filled with peace, joy, rest and contentment.

As Dorothy marked her 70th and 75th anniversary as a Sister of Notre Dame de Namur, she expressed deep gratitude for the challenges and opportunities of the wonderful journey of her life, and especially for those who were with her on the way. She saw her different ministries, the Sisters, students, coworkers and friends she came to know as gift. In 2016 she said, “Jubilees are a celebration of God’s goodness and his countless blessings. In my 70 years in Notre Dame these many blessings have come to me, both in the people I have met and in the places I have been. Seventy years of service to God – what a blessing to me! Praise to the Good God!” In 2021 Dorothy said, “As I reflect upon 75 years as a Sister of Notre Dame and my approaching 100th birthday I realized just how blessed I am for the many people who have entered my life. And I give thanks. God is so Good!”

Dorothy did not want a lot of fuss and bother made about either her 100th birthday or her 75th jubilee. But she let us fuss a little. Her community is grateful they had the chance to celebrate her jubilee just a week before she died. As we now gather to celebrate her life, we give thanks for the gift she has been to us, and for the many ways she made God’s goodness known to so many people in so many places. We echo Saint Julie’s thoughts: “My God what thanksgiving can repay so many blessings?” (Letter 402, Saint Julie Billiart) Indeed, our God is so very, very Good!

Bio Data

Born July 25, 1921 in Brookline, Massachusetts
Parents: William A. Beach (born in New Albany, Indiana) and Marian R. Maxey (born in Highland Falls, New York)
Baptized on November 18, 1921 at St. Aidan’s Catholic Church, Brookline, Massachusetts
Confirmed on May 11, 1931 at the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament, Washington, District of Columbia
Entered on July 2, 1946 at Ilchester, Maryland
First Profession: April 2, 1949
Final Profession: July 31, 1954

Education:

A.B. in English from Trinity College, Washington, D.C. 1943

M.A. in Library Sciences from Catholic University, Washington, D.C. 1952

M.A. in Medieval History from Catholic University, Washington D.C. 1962

Assignments Included:

4/1/1949-8/1/1949 Notre Dame High School, Moylan, Pennsylvania

9/1/1949-2/1/1950 West Catholic Girls High School, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

1950-1972 Assistant Librarian, Trinity College, Washington, District of Columbia

1972-1985 Librarian, Trinity College, Washington, District of Columbia

1985-1991 Librarian, Graduate Department, North American College, Rome, Italy

1991-2001 Province Archivist, Ilchester and Stevenson, Maryland

2001-2007 Library Volunteer, Trinity College, Washington, District of Columbia

2007-2010 Community Service and Ministry of Prayer, Trinity College, Washington, District of Columbia

2010-2021 Ministry of Prayer and Presence, Mt. Notre Dame Health Center, Reading, Ohio

Died: October 12, 2021

Helen M. Bronzo

Helen M. Bronzo, 100, of Shrewsbury, passed away on Friday, January 22, 2021 at Notre Dame Rehabilitation Center.

One Hundred years ago, Helen Marie Bronzo was born on October 21, 1920 in Somerville, Massachusetts, daughter of the late Frank A. and Elizabeth A. (Boyle) Bronzo. Helen was raised in Arlington and graduated as Valedictorian from Mount Saint Joseph Academy, now Mount Saint Joseph Preparatory High School, in Brighton, before beginning her studies at Trinity College in Washington D.C, now Trinity Washington University, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1943. Upon graduation from Trinity, Helen worked for Shawmut Bank in the Foreign Department, where she oversaw international accounts and currency exchange. Helen later moved to Shrewsbury in the 1970’s as she worked for the family business as the President of Babyhood Industries.

Visit Helen Bronzo’s obituary at Legacy.com.

Gloria (Datre) Smith

Surrounded by loving children, Gloria D. Schmidt passed away December 19, 2016 in Kentfield, California. She is preceded in passing by her adoring parents, Anthony and Antionette Datre; devoted husband, Richard L. Schmidt; and infant grandson, Peter Schafer. Gloria is survived by her dear sister Elaine D. Kerin; beloved children, R. Michael (Cynthia) Schmidt, Elise Moeck, Richard A. (Cathy) Schmidt, Gloria (Wayne) Schafer and Janis (John) Parente; cherished grandchildren, Robert, David, Elise, and Elizabeth Moeck; Anthony, Annie, and Christopher Schmidt; Paul and Brian Schafer; and Joseph Parente.

Visit Gloria D. Schmidt’s obituary at Legacy.com.

Diana Diaz de Zorrilla

Diana Diaz de Zorrilla passed in December 2021. May she rest in peace.

Share News of a Departed Classmate

Email alumnae@trinitydc.edu with news of deceased classmates. Please include a link to the obituary if possible.

In Memoriam Submission Form