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Donald J. Norton

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Donald J. Norton

Birth
Death
24 May 2020 (aged 88)
Burial
Millsboro, Sussex County, Delaware, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.6152467, Longitude: -75.3143183
Plot
III-B-35
Memorial ID
View Source
REHOBOTH BEACH, Del. - Donald J. Norton, formerly from Olean, N.Y., passed on May 24, 2020 in Rehoboth Beach.

He was born in Olean, on May 20, 1932. Don and Eugenia Marie (Jean) Mokski were married on June 29, 1957, in Our Lady of Victory Basilica, Lackawanna, N.Y. Jean died of lung cancer on March 8, 2008.

Norton was graduated from Olean High School in 1950, and received a bachelor degree in English, from Canisius College in Buffalo, N.Y. At Canisius, he wrote poetry for the Quadrangle and reviewed books for the Buffalo Courier-Express.

He served in the U.S. Navy, built a cabin, wrote three books and helped his beloved wife, Jean, raise seven children.

Don enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1951, and served four years operating radar with Night Attack Squadron VC-33, based in Pomona, N.J. Sea duty included a six-month Mediterranean cruise, aboard the USS Coral Sea in 1952, and the world cruise of the USS Tarawa, in 1953-54.

Vacations were a problem with their large family, so Don, Jean, 11-year-old Jack and the children, built a cabin south of Buffalo and spent the next 10 years weekending and vacationing there. (An article about the cabin-building project was published in the January 1969 Popular Science.)

After navy service, jobs included crankshaft polish grinder at Chevrolet's Tonawanda, N.Y., engine plant; signal tower operator, New York Central Railroad; editor of the Amherst (N.Y.) Bee; reporter for the Medina (N.Y.) Journal-Register; reporter for the New Haven (Conn.) Register; labor reporter for the Buffalo (N.Y.) Courier-Express; news bureau manager for Bell Aerospace Textron and Cornell Aeronautical Lab; news bureau manager for RCA Government Systems Division and GE Aerospace.

He wrote "Larry," a biography of aviation pioneer Lawrence D. Bell, (Nelson-Hall, Chicago, 1982); a short biography, "Honey, It's Great," about a marvelous man named J. Frank Robinson, (Artex Co., Florida, 2000); and "Chippewa Chief in World War II," (McFarland, North Carolina, 2001), the story of a Chippewa Indian named Oliver Rasmussen, who eluded captivity for 68 days, after his Navy bomber was downed in Hokkaido in World War II. When the war ended Rasmussen was the only American fighting man in Japan who wasn't a prisoner of war.

Norton performed in minor roles in various theatrical productions with his brother, Paul, at the Milton Theatre, and at Possum Point Playhouse, in Georgetown. He also performed with the Ad Hoc Touring Radio Company, recreating old radio shows, such as Fibber McGee & Molly, for a dwindling number of elderly audiences who remembered old-time radio.

He served as president of the Buffalo Chapter, Public Relations Society of America and president of U.S. Navy Squadrons 33 Association (former Navy pilots and crews). He wrote the association's quarterly bulletin for many years.

In 2004 Norton received a $5,000 fellowship grant from the Delaware Division of the Arts for his work in creative nonfiction. He was a member of the Newspaper Guild, United Auto Workers Local 774 (AFL-CIO), the Order of Railroad Telegraphers (AFL), and the Public Relations Society of America.

His family and friends will miss Don, but they will cherish the time they spent together. His spirit lives on forever and he will join our mom/Jean in heaven.

He is survived by daughters, Susan, Ann and Catherine; sons, Jack, Eric and Lawrence; siblings, Gloria Fant, Thomas and Ivers; and his cherished companion, Janice T. Schermerhorn of Timonium, Md.; and grandchildren, Tess Norton, Ricky Norton, Benjamin and Joseph Henley, Adele and Emil Norton.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Ivers and Ailene Eaton Norton; his son, Donnie; his sister, Diana; and his brother Paul.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all services will be private. Arrangements are being handled by Parsell Funeral Homes and Crematorium, Atkins-Lodge Chapel, Lewes.
REHOBOTH BEACH, Del. - Donald J. Norton, formerly from Olean, N.Y., passed on May 24, 2020 in Rehoboth Beach.

He was born in Olean, on May 20, 1932. Don and Eugenia Marie (Jean) Mokski were married on June 29, 1957, in Our Lady of Victory Basilica, Lackawanna, N.Y. Jean died of lung cancer on March 8, 2008.

Norton was graduated from Olean High School in 1950, and received a bachelor degree in English, from Canisius College in Buffalo, N.Y. At Canisius, he wrote poetry for the Quadrangle and reviewed books for the Buffalo Courier-Express.

He served in the U.S. Navy, built a cabin, wrote three books and helped his beloved wife, Jean, raise seven children.

Don enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1951, and served four years operating radar with Night Attack Squadron VC-33, based in Pomona, N.J. Sea duty included a six-month Mediterranean cruise, aboard the USS Coral Sea in 1952, and the world cruise of the USS Tarawa, in 1953-54.

Vacations were a problem with their large family, so Don, Jean, 11-year-old Jack and the children, built a cabin south of Buffalo and spent the next 10 years weekending and vacationing there. (An article about the cabin-building project was published in the January 1969 Popular Science.)

After navy service, jobs included crankshaft polish grinder at Chevrolet's Tonawanda, N.Y., engine plant; signal tower operator, New York Central Railroad; editor of the Amherst (N.Y.) Bee; reporter for the Medina (N.Y.) Journal-Register; reporter for the New Haven (Conn.) Register; labor reporter for the Buffalo (N.Y.) Courier-Express; news bureau manager for Bell Aerospace Textron and Cornell Aeronautical Lab; news bureau manager for RCA Government Systems Division and GE Aerospace.

He wrote "Larry," a biography of aviation pioneer Lawrence D. Bell, (Nelson-Hall, Chicago, 1982); a short biography, "Honey, It's Great," about a marvelous man named J. Frank Robinson, (Artex Co., Florida, 2000); and "Chippewa Chief in World War II," (McFarland, North Carolina, 2001), the story of a Chippewa Indian named Oliver Rasmussen, who eluded captivity for 68 days, after his Navy bomber was downed in Hokkaido in World War II. When the war ended Rasmussen was the only American fighting man in Japan who wasn't a prisoner of war.

Norton performed in minor roles in various theatrical productions with his brother, Paul, at the Milton Theatre, and at Possum Point Playhouse, in Georgetown. He also performed with the Ad Hoc Touring Radio Company, recreating old radio shows, such as Fibber McGee & Molly, for a dwindling number of elderly audiences who remembered old-time radio.

He served as president of the Buffalo Chapter, Public Relations Society of America and president of U.S. Navy Squadrons 33 Association (former Navy pilots and crews). He wrote the association's quarterly bulletin for many years.

In 2004 Norton received a $5,000 fellowship grant from the Delaware Division of the Arts for his work in creative nonfiction. He was a member of the Newspaper Guild, United Auto Workers Local 774 (AFL-CIO), the Order of Railroad Telegraphers (AFL), and the Public Relations Society of America.

His family and friends will miss Don, but they will cherish the time they spent together. His spirit lives on forever and he will join our mom/Jean in heaven.

He is survived by daughters, Susan, Ann and Catherine; sons, Jack, Eric and Lawrence; siblings, Gloria Fant, Thomas and Ivers; and his cherished companion, Janice T. Schermerhorn of Timonium, Md.; and grandchildren, Tess Norton, Ricky Norton, Benjamin and Joseph Henley, Adele and Emil Norton.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Ivers and Ailene Eaton Norton; his son, Donnie; his sister, Diana; and his brother Paul.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all services will be private. Arrangements are being handled by Parsell Funeral Homes and Crematorium, Atkins-Lodge Chapel, Lewes.

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