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Charlotte Lambard <I>Goodell</I> Catoni

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Charlotte Lambard Goodell Catoni

Birth
Houghton, Houghton County, Michigan, USA
Death
24 Nov 2010 (aged 101)
Eagle Harbor, Keweenaw County, Michigan, USA
Burial
Eagle Harbor, Keweenaw County, Michigan, USA GPS-Latitude: 47.4545943, Longitude: -88.169897
Plot
D15
Memorial ID
View Source
Charlotte was born to Horatio Stuart Goodell and EAGLE HARBOR, Mich. Charlotte Catoni, a long-time resident of Eagle Harbor, died peacefully on November 24, 2010, at her home with her daughter, Tottie, at her side.

Charlotte (Lambard) Goodell was born to Horatio Stuart and Charlotte (Hubbard) Goodell on July 14, 1909, in Painesdale.

In 1912, the Goodell family moved to their Houghton home, which many years later became the Goodwill Farm.

Her childhood summers were spend in Eagle Harbor at the family home, with her brother and sisters. It was there that she grew to love and appreciate the beauty of nature. She took it a step further by becoming an accomplished black and white photographer. She developed her pictures so as to share with others. She was often seen during the summer riding her bike through Eagle Harbor and in the winter cross country skiing.

When she was 18, her father presented her with a wood and canvas canoe which she treasured and enjoyed with her children.

Charlotte attended schools in Houghton and Bradenton, Fla. She also attended the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, Penn. where she loved to play field hockey and tennis. She traveled with her parents to Europe and the Middle East, later joining her sister, Ruth in Paris where they attended the Sorbonne, taking courses in Art History and French.

She returned to Houghton in 1930 and later that year went to New York City, where she worked at a small advertising newspaper. It was during this time that she happened to meet, through friends, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, wife of the famous aviator, Charles Lindberg.

While living in New York, she met Richard A. Catoni and married him on August 15, 1936, in a garden wedding at the Houghton home of her grandfather, Lucius Hubbard. Her new husband was a British immigrant who had been born in Paris and was working for a steamship company in New York.

After many moves, Charlotte and Dick settled outside Minneapolis and lived there until their retirement in 1976. They immediately made plans to move back to the Upper Peninsula to build their home in Eagle Harbor, where she could return to her great love of the woods, animals, blueberries, thimbleberries and swamp gardens.

The both wanted to live and die in Eagle Harbor and they were granted their wish.


Charlotte was born to Horatio Stuart Goodell and EAGLE HARBOR, Mich. Charlotte Catoni, a long-time resident of Eagle Harbor, died peacefully on November 24, 2010, at her home with her daughter, Tottie, at her side.

Charlotte (Lambard) Goodell was born to Horatio Stuart and Charlotte (Hubbard) Goodell on July 14, 1909, in Painesdale.

In 1912, the Goodell family moved to their Houghton home, which many years later became the Goodwill Farm.

Her childhood summers were spend in Eagle Harbor at the family home, with her brother and sisters. It was there that she grew to love and appreciate the beauty of nature. She took it a step further by becoming an accomplished black and white photographer. She developed her pictures so as to share with others. She was often seen during the summer riding her bike through Eagle Harbor and in the winter cross country skiing.

When she was 18, her father presented her with a wood and canvas canoe which she treasured and enjoyed with her children.

Charlotte attended schools in Houghton and Bradenton, Fla. She also attended the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, Penn. where she loved to play field hockey and tennis. She traveled with her parents to Europe and the Middle East, later joining her sister, Ruth in Paris where they attended the Sorbonne, taking courses in Art History and French.

She returned to Houghton in 1930 and later that year went to New York City, where she worked at a small advertising newspaper. It was during this time that she happened to meet, through friends, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, wife of the famous aviator, Charles Lindberg.

While living in New York, she met Richard A. Catoni and married him on August 15, 1936, in a garden wedding at the Houghton home of her grandfather, Lucius Hubbard. Her new husband was a British immigrant who had been born in Paris and was working for a steamship company in New York.

After many moves, Charlotte and Dick settled outside Minneapolis and lived there until their retirement in 1976. They immediately made plans to move back to the Upper Peninsula to build their home in Eagle Harbor, where she could return to her great love of the woods, animals, blueberries, thimbleberries and swamp gardens.

The both wanted to live and die in Eagle Harbor and they were granted their wish.




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