She and her first husband, Ignazio (Nick) drove from New York to California to persue his career with Lockheed Martin in Los Angeles, Ca.
Mary had four children, two grandchildren, Nicholas and Jamie and two great grandchildren, Trevor and Brooke.
Her third great grandchild, Kylie was born 2014.
Her fourth great grandchild, Austin was born 2016.
She was an autodidact in religion and history. In her former occupations she was an auditor, corporate controller, and chief financial officer.
She had been active in the League of Women Voters, Business and Professional Women, The National Association of Accountants, and Parents Without Partners.
During the second vanguard of the women's movement, she became a founder and treasurer of the first chapter of the National Organization for Women in the State of Washington.
A dedicated feminist and activist, she participated in several movements for the enhancement of human welfare. She served as Legal Chairman and discussion Chairman in Parents Without Partners. She participated in researching divorce statistics for Governor Edmund G. Brown's committee on perspective reform of California divorce laws, and was gratified when the first bill Governor Ronald Reagan signed was the new "irreconcilable divorce law".
She served as a soldier in the Salvation Army '93 and was an avid traveler with a penchant for visiting pyramids.
She also enjoyed writing, gardening, home remodeling, painting in oil and watercolors and building bird houses.
She and her first husband, Ignazio (Nick) drove from New York to California to persue his career with Lockheed Martin in Los Angeles, Ca.
Mary had four children, two grandchildren, Nicholas and Jamie and two great grandchildren, Trevor and Brooke.
Her third great grandchild, Kylie was born 2014.
Her fourth great grandchild, Austin was born 2016.
She was an autodidact in religion and history. In her former occupations she was an auditor, corporate controller, and chief financial officer.
She had been active in the League of Women Voters, Business and Professional Women, The National Association of Accountants, and Parents Without Partners.
During the second vanguard of the women's movement, she became a founder and treasurer of the first chapter of the National Organization for Women in the State of Washington.
A dedicated feminist and activist, she participated in several movements for the enhancement of human welfare. She served as Legal Chairman and discussion Chairman in Parents Without Partners. She participated in researching divorce statistics for Governor Edmund G. Brown's committee on perspective reform of California divorce laws, and was gratified when the first bill Governor Ronald Reagan signed was the new "irreconcilable divorce law".
She served as a soldier in the Salvation Army '93 and was an avid traveler with a penchant for visiting pyramids.
She also enjoyed writing, gardening, home remodeling, painting in oil and watercolors and building bird houses.