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Philomena Fazio 1919 - 1999
Philomena Fazio of East Haven, New Haven County, CT was born on September 27, 1919, and died at age 79 years old on July 8, 1999.
Philomena Fazio
East Haven, New Haven County, CT 06512
September 27, 1919
July 8, 1999
Female
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Philomena Fazio's History: 1919 - 1999
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09/271919
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07/81999July 8, 1999Death dateUnknownCause of deathUnknownDeath locationADVERTISEMENT BY ANCESTRY.COMView death records
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Did you know?Philomena Fazio lived 4 years longer than the average Fazio family member when she died at the age of 79.The average age of a Fazio family member is 75.
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Did you know?
In 1919, in the year that Philomena Fazio was born, in the summer and early autumn, race riots erupted in 26 U.S. cities, resulting in hundreds of deaths and even more people being badly hurt. In most cases, African-Americans were the victims. It was called the "Red Summer". Men who were returning from World War I needed jobs and there was competition for those jobs among the races. Tension was heightened by the use by many companies of blacks as strikebreakers.
Did you know?
In 1926, she was just 7 years old when on October 31st, Harry Houdini died in Michigan. Houdini was the most famed magician of his time and perhaps of all time, especially for his acts involving escapes - from handcuffs, straitjackets, chains, ropes slung from skyscrapers, and more. He was president of the Society of American Magicians and stringently upheld professional ethics. He died of complications from a ruptured appendix. Although he had received a blow to the area a couple of days previously, the connection between the blow and his appendicitis is disputed.
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Followers & Sources
Source(s): Social Security Death Index
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Other Biographies
Other Fazio Family Biographies
Fazio, Kenneth (May 23, 1938 - May 7, 2007)
Fazio, Marion (Apr 24, 1926 - Sep 1978)
Balot Fazio, Roan (Dec 15, 1977 - Jun 16, 1993)
Fazio, Helen (Jan 17, 1920 - Apr 6, 1999)
Fazio, Angelina (Oct 9, 1918 - Feb 20, 1995)
Fazio, Margaret (Dec 31, 1908 - Sep 19, 1999)
Fazio, Carmella (Jul 17, 1899 - Jul 1984)
Fazio, Josephine (Dec 10, 1892 - Mar 1990)
Fazio, Italia (Oct 9, 1909 - Mar 1987)
Fazio, Giuseppe (Jul 14, 1890 - Aug 1966)
Fazio, Thomas (Mar 14, 1919 - Sep 1973)
Fazio, Joseph (Nov 14, 1938 - Sep 1986)
Fazio, Maria (Aug 13, 1893 - Nov 6, 1993)
Fazio, Carmela (Apr 14, 1884 - Sep 1975)
Fazio, John (Jul 6, 1962 - Jun 12, 2010)
Fazio, Joseph (Jan 10, 1921 - Apr 22, 1991)
Fazio, Ann (May 8, 1900 - Apr 1, 2001)
Fazio, Salvatore (Oct 15, 1893 - Jul 1978)
Fazio, Mary (Dec 4, 1909 - Jun 2, 2007)
Fazio, Vincent (Jan 26, 1929 - Jan 1985)
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There is a lot of controversy about statues on public land that honor those on the Confederacy side of the U.S. Civil War. Many of these statues and monuments - in fact the majority - were erected decades after the Civil War from about 1900 through 1920 (after the Plessy v. Ferguson trial which upheld racial segregation laws) and during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960's. Who were these men to whom a majority of these statues are dedicated? Perhaps the most interesting perspective comes from Robert E. Lee, one of the men who has the most memorials: "I think it wiser,” he wrote about a proposed Gettysburg memorial in 1869, “…not to keep open the sores of war but to follow the examples of those nations who endeavored to obliterate the marks of civil strife, to commit to oblivion the feelings engendered.”