Bro.
Andrew LaCombe died on June 30 at Calvary Hospital in the Bronx, where he had
been hospitalized with terminal cancer for a short time. He was 86 years old
and had been a professed Salesian brother for almost 67 years.
Bro.
Andy was a member of the provincial residence community in New Rochelle, N.Y.,
arriving there in 1967 in order to study architecture at Pratt Institute in
Brooklyn. He completed his master’s degree at Pratt in 1972, was certified by
the American Institute of Architects and various state boards, and then worked as
the New Rochelle Province’s architect until his final illness.
He
was fond of telling the story of his acceptance by Pratt’s dean of admissions
even though he didn’t have a high school diploma, the dean sympathetically
recognizing his novitiate courses for credit.
Bro.
Andy was the son of Jean and Anna LaCombe. He was born and raised in Verner,
Ont. He entered Don Bosco Juniorate at Haverstraw, N.Y., as an aspirant in
1948, made his novitiate in Newton, N.J., and professed his first vows at
Newton on September 8, 1951.
Bro.
Andy returned to Haverstraw as part of the juniorate support staff (1951-1957),
then went back to Newton in the same capacity (1957-1967). He was a very
capable maintenance man and property manager. He liked to recall how often,
when he was at Haverstraw, the Palisades Interstate Park police would call him
at all hours to fetch a deer just killed along the parkway; the aspirants ate a
lot of venison in the 1950s.
Bro. Andy in his office in 2007. |
As
the province’s architect, Bro. Andy worked on many buildings from Tampa to
Boston for both the Salesians and the Salesian Sisters and consulted on
projects also in other parts of the world. He was very active in the
prestigious New Rochelle Art Association, including serving as president for
several years and often as a member of prize juries. In October 2012 the Association honored him with a special award for his many services.
NRAA president Jesse Sanchez presents plaque to Bro. Andy in 2012. |
Besides
being the architect for the province, at the provincial residence Bro. Andy did
extensive work on the grounds—decorating for every feast day, barbecuing on
holidays, tending flowers, cutting up fallen timber, repairing damaged
ceilings, plowing snow in the winter, and much more. He was also famous—or
infamous—for telling jokes.
Working in the house garden on a painting project in 2013. |
At
some long-forgotten date in the mid-1990s, a stray cat adopted Bro. Andy. The
province bookkeeper, Helene Lorenzo, named her Tinkerbelle, and she became
Brother’s companion—well accepted by the confreres, as well—for the rest of her
long life.
With Tinkerbelle on the back porch, October 2005. |
Bro.
Andy was, moreover, a treasured confrere, reliable, faithful, modest, and
prayerful. He hated to be away from the community. His annual vacation
consisted of less than a week, driving included, to visit his family at Lake
Simcoe in northern Ontario toward the end of every summer.
On
his 60th anniversary of profession in 2011, Bro. Andy said, “I am thankful to God for giving me the
perseverance and talent to help our province and some of
our missions in many ways, especially as an architect.”
Bro.
Andy’s funeral will be celebrated at the Marian Shrine in Haverstraw (174
Filors Lane, Stony Point, N.Y.) on Monday, July 2. He will be waked from 2:00
to 7:00 p.m. The Mass of Christian Burial will be at 7:00 p.m.
He
will be buried in the Salesian Cemetery in Goshen, N.Y.—the design and
maintenance of which was another one of his many province projects—on Tuesday,
July 3, at 10:00 a.m.
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