Anne Waters Lyddane was a lifelong resident and the fifth generation of her family to reside in the District of Columbia. She graduated from Holy Trinity High School and Temple Business School. In the 1970s, she retired from the United States District Court as Deputy Court Clerk after more than 20 years. Previously she had been a secretary at the Army/Navy Journal and the Social Science Research Council. She was a member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and a docent at Woodrow Wilson House, Decatur House and the Octagon House. She was a member of the Ladies Board of Georgetown University Hospital and volunteered in the hospital's neonatal unit. She was active in the Seton Guild of St. Ann's Infant and Maternity Home in Hyattsville and was a member of Holy Trinity Catholic Church in the District, the John Carroll Society and the Christ Child Society. She died at age 90 on August 22, 1999 at the Washington Hospice of respiratory failure. Survivors included a brother, Eugene Thomas Lyddane and a sister, Mary Catherine Lyddane, both of the District.
Source: The Washington Post, August 24, 1999.
Anne Waters Lyddane was a lifelong resident and the fifth generation of her family to reside in the District of Columbia. She graduated from Holy Trinity High School and Temple Business School. In the 1970s, she retired from the United States District Court as Deputy Court Clerk after more than 20 years. Previously she had been a secretary at the Army/Navy Journal and the Social Science Research Council. She was a member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and a docent at Woodrow Wilson House, Decatur House and the Octagon House. She was a member of the Ladies Board of Georgetown University Hospital and volunteered in the hospital's neonatal unit. She was active in the Seton Guild of St. Ann's Infant and Maternity Home in Hyattsville and was a member of Holy Trinity Catholic Church in the District, the John Carroll Society and the Christ Child Society. She died at age 90 on August 22, 1999 at the Washington Hospice of respiratory failure. Survivors included a brother, Eugene Thomas Lyddane and a sister, Mary Catherine Lyddane, both of the District.
Source: The Washington Post, August 24, 1999.
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