Joe then met a kind-hearted girl from nearby Edwardsville who worked at the local drugstore. He and future wife Dolores (whom he affectionately called Dorie) began a relationship that lasted nearly 70 years. Joe and Dorie's union solidified over two overseas tours for Joe in the Army. He was always staunchly proud of his time in the uniform having served with Company D, 31st Infantry Regiment during the preamble to the Korean War and Company B, 6th Infantry Regiment while rebuilding Germany under the Marshall Plan in Berlin. These times that he and Dorie spent apart convinced him that she was "the one".
His return to the States, steaming under the Statue of Liberty, bestowed on Joe one of his most treasured experiences. With an honorable discharge in hand, Joe and Dorie married. The two eventually settled in Bridgewater, New Jersey where Joe built their house with his own hands in nine months and began a family. The couple lived there together for the remainder of his life. Joe took a job as a lab technician making plastics at Union Carbide, where he worked his entire career and rose to the position of area supervisor to the Polystyrene Department.
Joe experienced the greatest joys in life watching his kids grow and have children of their own. He demonstrated enormous support and love for his grandchildren; he rarely, if he ever, missed a sporting event. His wit came out more with age and once described his best quality as "being cheap." He was never one to miss a trip down the shore or to a flea market in search of rare coins. Contrary to his "cheapness," he showered each of his 8 grandkids and 9 great-grandkids (there's also another on the way!) with Hess trucks and Holiday Barbie dolls each and every Christmas. Looking back on his life he recognized that his greatest legacy didn't rest in his time in the service or the accomplishment of building a house; his greatest legacy was simply, and proudly, his family. He loved us all very much.
Predeceased by parents, Leander & Myrtle Sartin
Joe is survived by his wife of 67 years, Dolores; 3 children; 8 grand children; 8 great grand children
Funeral Home
Cusick Funeral Home
80 Mountain Avenue Somerville, NJ 08876
(908) 725-4100
Published in Courier News on Sept. 25, 2017
Joe then met a kind-hearted girl from nearby Edwardsville who worked at the local drugstore. He and future wife Dolores (whom he affectionately called Dorie) began a relationship that lasted nearly 70 years. Joe and Dorie's union solidified over two overseas tours for Joe in the Army. He was always staunchly proud of his time in the uniform having served with Company D, 31st Infantry Regiment during the preamble to the Korean War and Company B, 6th Infantry Regiment while rebuilding Germany under the Marshall Plan in Berlin. These times that he and Dorie spent apart convinced him that she was "the one".
His return to the States, steaming under the Statue of Liberty, bestowed on Joe one of his most treasured experiences. With an honorable discharge in hand, Joe and Dorie married. The two eventually settled in Bridgewater, New Jersey where Joe built their house with his own hands in nine months and began a family. The couple lived there together for the remainder of his life. Joe took a job as a lab technician making plastics at Union Carbide, where he worked his entire career and rose to the position of area supervisor to the Polystyrene Department.
Joe experienced the greatest joys in life watching his kids grow and have children of their own. He demonstrated enormous support and love for his grandchildren; he rarely, if he ever, missed a sporting event. His wit came out more with age and once described his best quality as "being cheap." He was never one to miss a trip down the shore or to a flea market in search of rare coins. Contrary to his "cheapness," he showered each of his 8 grandkids and 9 great-grandkids (there's also another on the way!) with Hess trucks and Holiday Barbie dolls each and every Christmas. Looking back on his life he recognized that his greatest legacy didn't rest in his time in the service or the accomplishment of building a house; his greatest legacy was simply, and proudly, his family. He loved us all very much.
Predeceased by parents, Leander & Myrtle Sartin
Joe is survived by his wife of 67 years, Dolores; 3 children; 8 grand children; 8 great grand children
Funeral Home
Cusick Funeral Home
80 Mountain Avenue Somerville, NJ 08876
(908) 725-4100
Published in Courier News on Sept. 25, 2017
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Advertisement