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Carmen A. “Bucky” Amodei Sr.

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Carmen A. “Bucky” Amodei Sr.

Birth
Hunting Park, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
7 Jul 2007 (aged 86)
Hunting Park, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Langhorne, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
The Philadelphia Inquirer; Tuesday, July 10, 2007, Section B Page 6:

"AMODEI
CARMEN A. SR. "BUCKY" on July 7, 2007, at the age of 86. Beloved husband of Dolores (nee Williams); devoted father to Donna McAllister, Marilyn Sheinberg (Alan), Janice Cook (Dennis), and the late Carmen Jr.; beloved pop of 7 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to his Funeral Friday 8 A.M. Burns Funeral Home, 9708 Frankford Ave. (So. of Grant Ave.) followed by his Funeral Mass 10 A.M., St. Katherine Sienna Church. Int. Our Lady of Grace Cem. Because of Bucky's passion for sports, donations in his name can be made to The Boys and Girls Club of Phila. Development Office, 1518 Walnut St., Suite 712, Phila. PA 19102."

The Philadelphia Daily News; Friday, July 13, 2007, Page 32:

"'Bucky' Amodei, 86, beloved coach
By John F. Morrison

Back in 1953, there came a timid knock at Carmen "Bucky" Amodei's door in Hunting Park. Three youngsters came in and asked if Bucky would coach them in football. The spokeskid weighted "all of 60 pounds," Bucky later recalled. He didn't take the boys seriously and told them to come back that Saturday. He never expected to see them again, but on Saturday, 18 kids showed up. Bucky, who had been a successful sandlot football coach going back to 1944, but had been sidelined for a couple of years by illness, could hardly turn them down. The team they created, Pompeii CC, was entered in the 115-pound division of the Pop Warner Conference and won the division. After the boys had put on some weight, they went on the next year to win the 130-pound division. Bucky's sandlot teams over a 12-year period had a record of 106 wins, 13 losses and three ties. He and his boys had shelves full of trophies. Bucky Amodei, who, when he wasn't coaching kids, was a popular bartender at several night spots in the city and worked as a Common Pleas Court tipstaff for 20 years, died Saturday. He was 86 and lived in Hunting Park. He also coached baseball, managing the Our Lady of Pompeii School team, starting in 1955, and forming the Pompeii Catholic Youth Organization team in 1957. Pompeii CYO received the intermediate playoff championship trophy in 1957 and the runner-up trophy the next year. Bucky loved sports, but discovered early that he wasn't a very good player. He started coaching football in 1944 with the Franklinville Boys Club. The club was later combined with St. Anthony's Club and the team won the first "Most Courageous" trophy ever awarded by the Pop Warner Conference in 1948. His teams received a total of 16 trophies from 1948 to 1958, and he was awarded a number of personal trophies for his work. "If I can teach my boys to accept all challenges and to realize you get out of life only what you put into it, I'll feel my time has been well-accounted for," he told a Daily News reporter in 1956. Bucky was born in Philadelphia to Alfonso Amodei and the former Maria De Lisi. He attended Our Lady of Pompeii School, but, because it was the Depression, had to quit and go to work. He sold newspapers at 6th Street and Erie Avenue and worked in a hosiery factory. Eventually, he got a job as a clerk in Traffic Court while bartending at various clubs in the Hunting Park area. He learned to coach on the job, so to speak, by watching other coaches and listening to them. James King, longtime high school basketball and football referee and a 20-year friend of Bucky's, said Bucky "loved sports, loved kids, loved everybody." After his coaching days, Bucky liked going with Him to games he was referring. "I would pick him up and he would ask what games we were going to that day," Jim said. "It didn't really matter where we were going. He loved to watch all games and would have comments about them." Bucky and Dolores Williams were in 1946. He also is survived by three daughters, Donna McAllister, Marilyn Sheinberg and Janice Cook; seven grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by his son, Carmen Jr. Services: Funeral Mass 10 A.M. today at St. Katherine of Siena Church, Frankford Avenue and Primrose Road. Friends may call at 8 A.M. at the Burns Funeral Home, 9708 Frankford Ave. Burial will be in Our Lady of Grace Cemetery, Langhorne. Donations may be made to the Boys and Girls Club of Philadelphia, Development Office, 1518 Walnut St., Suite 712, Philadelphia, PA 19102."
The Philadelphia Inquirer; Tuesday, July 10, 2007, Section B Page 6:

"AMODEI
CARMEN A. SR. "BUCKY" on July 7, 2007, at the age of 86. Beloved husband of Dolores (nee Williams); devoted father to Donna McAllister, Marilyn Sheinberg (Alan), Janice Cook (Dennis), and the late Carmen Jr.; beloved pop of 7 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to his Funeral Friday 8 A.M. Burns Funeral Home, 9708 Frankford Ave. (So. of Grant Ave.) followed by his Funeral Mass 10 A.M., St. Katherine Sienna Church. Int. Our Lady of Grace Cem. Because of Bucky's passion for sports, donations in his name can be made to The Boys and Girls Club of Phila. Development Office, 1518 Walnut St., Suite 712, Phila. PA 19102."

The Philadelphia Daily News; Friday, July 13, 2007, Page 32:

"'Bucky' Amodei, 86, beloved coach
By John F. Morrison

Back in 1953, there came a timid knock at Carmen "Bucky" Amodei's door in Hunting Park. Three youngsters came in and asked if Bucky would coach them in football. The spokeskid weighted "all of 60 pounds," Bucky later recalled. He didn't take the boys seriously and told them to come back that Saturday. He never expected to see them again, but on Saturday, 18 kids showed up. Bucky, who had been a successful sandlot football coach going back to 1944, but had been sidelined for a couple of years by illness, could hardly turn them down. The team they created, Pompeii CC, was entered in the 115-pound division of the Pop Warner Conference and won the division. After the boys had put on some weight, they went on the next year to win the 130-pound division. Bucky's sandlot teams over a 12-year period had a record of 106 wins, 13 losses and three ties. He and his boys had shelves full of trophies. Bucky Amodei, who, when he wasn't coaching kids, was a popular bartender at several night spots in the city and worked as a Common Pleas Court tipstaff for 20 years, died Saturday. He was 86 and lived in Hunting Park. He also coached baseball, managing the Our Lady of Pompeii School team, starting in 1955, and forming the Pompeii Catholic Youth Organization team in 1957. Pompeii CYO received the intermediate playoff championship trophy in 1957 and the runner-up trophy the next year. Bucky loved sports, but discovered early that he wasn't a very good player. He started coaching football in 1944 with the Franklinville Boys Club. The club was later combined with St. Anthony's Club and the team won the first "Most Courageous" trophy ever awarded by the Pop Warner Conference in 1948. His teams received a total of 16 trophies from 1948 to 1958, and he was awarded a number of personal trophies for his work. "If I can teach my boys to accept all challenges and to realize you get out of life only what you put into it, I'll feel my time has been well-accounted for," he told a Daily News reporter in 1956. Bucky was born in Philadelphia to Alfonso Amodei and the former Maria De Lisi. He attended Our Lady of Pompeii School, but, because it was the Depression, had to quit and go to work. He sold newspapers at 6th Street and Erie Avenue and worked in a hosiery factory. Eventually, he got a job as a clerk in Traffic Court while bartending at various clubs in the Hunting Park area. He learned to coach on the job, so to speak, by watching other coaches and listening to them. James King, longtime high school basketball and football referee and a 20-year friend of Bucky's, said Bucky "loved sports, loved kids, loved everybody." After his coaching days, Bucky liked going with Him to games he was referring. "I would pick him up and he would ask what games we were going to that day," Jim said. "It didn't really matter where we were going. He loved to watch all games and would have comments about them." Bucky and Dolores Williams were in 1946. He also is survived by three daughters, Donna McAllister, Marilyn Sheinberg and Janice Cook; seven grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by his son, Carmen Jr. Services: Funeral Mass 10 A.M. today at St. Katherine of Siena Church, Frankford Avenue and Primrose Road. Friends may call at 8 A.M. at the Burns Funeral Home, 9708 Frankford Ave. Burial will be in Our Lady of Grace Cemetery, Langhorne. Donations may be made to the Boys and Girls Club of Philadelphia, Development Office, 1518 Walnut St., Suite 712, Philadelphia, PA 19102."


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  • Created by: Donna Di Giacomo
  • Added: Apr 23, 2008
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/26230593/carmen_a-amodei: accessed ), memorial page for Carmen A. “Bucky” Amodei Sr. (16 Jul 1920–7 Jul 2007), Find a Grave Memorial ID 26230593, citing Our Lady Of Grace Cemetery, Langhorne, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by Donna Di Giacomo (contributor 16208410).