Death Announced of Elizabeth Margaret Brodeur, Formerly of Old Lyme; Member of OL High School Class of 1975

Elizabeth Margaret Brodeur

EAST LYME — Elizabeth Margaret Brodeur, beloved daughter, sister, aunt, and friend, passed away peacefully surrounded by her loving family following a courageous battle with cancer. 

Born on July 20, 1957, to Donald S. and Elizabeth H. (Nancy) Brodeur, Elizabeth, affectionately nicknamed Liz, was the second oldest of ten children. Growing up in Old Lyme, Connecticut, Liz’s early years were rooted in the strength and joy of a large, close-knit family where she often took on a motherly role for her younger siblings. 

Elizabeth graduated from Old Lyme High School in 1975, where she was a proud member of the National Honor Society.  Her academic drive and spirited energy reflected the determination that would guide her throughout life. She went on to attend the University of Connecticut, where she studied abroad and graduated in 1981 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Spanish with a minor in Economics. Forever a Husky, Liz looked forward to basketball season, enthusiastically cheering on both men’s and women’s teams.  

Elizabeth’s exceptional Catholic faith sustained her, especially in times of personal suffering. She met life’s challenges with courage refusing to let her illnesses define her, she was  a passionate advocate for mental health. Her deep spirituality encompassed every aspect of her character, integrity and her commitment to living her life without apology. 

Elizabeth dedicated herself to the field of elder care, offering comfort, dignity, and companionship to those in their most vulnerable moments. Her life’s work was a testament to her compassion, patience, and deeply held belief in the value of every human being. 

She cherished the simple pleasures of life: an afternoon in the sunshine, a dinner out with a friend or loved one, caring for her beloved cats, or the joy of giving a thoughtful gift chosen with care. Her generosity and attentiveness made those around her feel seen and loved.  

In recent years, Elizabeth made her home in East Lyme and New London, where she made a point to connect with those she loved through calls, texts and her signature hand-written cards. She will be remembered as a family treasure, cherished for her personal relationships with each member, her big heart, sense of humor, and the twinkle in her blue eyes. 

She is survived by her siblings, Donald Jr. and Karen (Agres), Jonathan and Susan (Andrews), Christopher and Margaret (Randall), Rosemary and Michael Cairns, Eric and Stacie (Skinner), Stephan, Stephanie, Marc and Jennifer (O’Connell), her Uncle Roderic Hartung and her cat Emily.  She was predeceased by her brother Timothy and wife Theresa (Sottile), her parents, Donald and Elizabeth Brodeur, her companion of 19 years, Richard Kay, and their beloved cat, Spice Girl. Elizabeth “Aunt Liz” will be deeply missed by her twenty-five nieces and nephews.  

Calling hours are Friday May 30th from 4-7 pm at Christ the King Church, 1 McCurdy Road, Old Lyme, CT.  A mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Saturday May 31st at 10 am at Christ the King Church. In lieu of flowers, the family kindly asks that donations be made to NAMI, 4301 Wilson Blvd., Suite 300, Arlington, VA 22203 or online at www.nami.org , to The Foundation for Women’s Cancer 26533 Network Place Chicago, IL 60673-1286 https://foundationforwomenscancer.org/support-us/ways-to-give/?campaign=646054 or to Forgotten Felines,153 Horse Hill Road, Westbrook, CT 06498 or online at  www.forgottenfelinesct.org

 Please visit www.fultontherouxoldlyme.com for tributes and directions.

Death Announced of Henry ‘Hank’ Dugan of Lyme; Father of Kelly of Lyme, and Ryan

Henry ‘Hank’ Dugan

LYME, CT —Henry ‘Hank’ Dugan, aged 82, died peacefully on May 5, 2025 at home in Lyme, CT. Hank was born and raised in Central Falls, RI after which he attended Northeastern University and RI College. He attended OCS at the Coast Guard Academy, becoming an Academy math instructor and basketball coach. Hank spent his professional life in marketing and sales for tech companies while living in CT, MA, NJ, CA and Wash, DC until retiring to Ocean City, NJ and then Lyme.

His lifelong interests included: playing golf (2 holes-in-one), cycling, bridge, the Yankees, handball, gin, UConn women’s basketball and the beach. He played on Northeastern’s first team to make it to NCAA Division II Sweet Sixteen, and won competitive matches as a senior handball player in the DC area. His bridge game was outstanding.

He is predeceased by his wife, Ann Gibbons Dugan, of Providence, RI, his mother, Dorothy Peterson, of Pawtucket, RI, and his father, Henry ‘Dixie’ Dugan, of Cumberland, RI. He leaves behind his daughter, Kelly Dugan, of Lyme, CT, his son Ryan Dugan and his wife Sarah Smith, of Glen Burnie, MD as well as three amazing grandchildren: Olivia, Makayla, and Tristan. Of his many first cousins in the Siok family, Carl Romanovich was like a brother to him.

Services will be private. In lieu of flowers, please consider donating in Hank’s name to the Central Falls Public Library or The Nature Conservancy. To celebrate his life hit a golf ball, have a VERY DRY martini, and root for the UConn women next spring.

Death Announced of Susan P. Rankin, Former Associate Pastor at First Congregational Church of Old Lyme

A Remembrance of Susan Rankin by Jasper Craven

On a perfect summer day in late August of 2022, I met Susan Rankin on the bank of the Passumpsic River, in St. Johnsbury. It was the first I’d seen her since the pandemic and we caught up for hours, seated at a picnic table with pizza from Kingdom Crust. I’d brought my then-new girlfriend, Lauren, on Susan’s insistence, even though the reason for our gathering was somewhat grim. We were supposed to discuss her obituary. 

Susan was then in her early 70s, and for much of her life she’d been sick. Shortly after she moved to Vermont, in the mid 1980s, she’d been in a bad car accident that left her with a brain injury. In the decades since, she’d struggled mightily with migraines and other comorbidities, yet remained insatiably curious and exceptionally witty. She was also deeply caring.

For the first eight years of my life, Susan lived across my driveway, in an apartment she rented from my parents on Old West Road, in West Barnet. During my early childhood, she took care of me a lot. Nominally, she was my baby-sitter, but she always treated me like family. I don’t think she ever charged my parents for her services, nor did she gripe at any last-minute requests for care.

I was an energetic flower child, prone to bursts of wild dancing in the nude and other forms of joyful chaos. Susan handled me with patience, letting my wild side thrive while also imparting some manners and responsibility. She had me haul things to her shed and help with other chores, but also spoiled me rotten. She read to me, took me to the playground, introduced me to figure skating. She also cooked for me a lot, reminding me at the river that among all the creative dishes she made I was most obsessed with a simple peasant meal: creamed tuna and peas.

At Christmas each year, Susan would shower me with presents. But she also tempered my materialism by insisting we purchase presents and wrap them for less fortunate families. She also drilled into me the value of thank you cards — which has served me well through the years.

As I grew up, Susan continued to be in my life. She read books to my elementary and middle school classes, picked me up after high school, and called regularly while I was in college. We talked about life, politics, television, and religion. 

Rarely would she dwell on her own acute medical issues. Instead, she wanted to know how I was doing, an instinct she turned to even during our riverside chat. I was there to learn more about Susan’s life so that, one day, I could properly chronicle it for her obituary. Still, she couldn’t help but spend the majority of our time discussing the particulars of mine, regaling Lauren with many tales of my mischievous youth.

As the sun started to set, Lauren and I walked Susan to her car, said goodbye, and went our separate ways. We hadn’t discussed her obituary much, but I assumed we’d carve out another time to do so. We spoke a good deal more after that, but neither of us ever broached the obituary again, hoping, perhaps, that such evasion would forestall the inevitable. Then, on January 3rd 2025, Susan died at the age of 76.

*******

Obituary

Susan P. Rankin was born on September 8th, 1948. She grew up in the rural hamlet of Hiram, Maine, with her parents Albert P. Rankin and Helen E.(Brown) Rankin. She also had a younger brother, Alan. 

Susan attended high school at Fryeburg Academy, in Maine, then appears to have spent some time in college before working for about a decade as a medical secretary. At age 30, Susan heard the call of the ministry. She completed her undergraduate studies at UMaine at Orono before entering the Bangor Theological Seminary. She graduated from this latter institution in 1982 with a Master of Divinity.  

Susan then served at several churches under the umbrella of the United Church of Christ, a socially liberal mainline Protestant denomination with New England roots. Its flock came to encompass three of Susan’s favorite politicians: Barack Obama, Howard Dean, and Jim Douglas.

In 1982, Susan served as the Interim Pastor at a church in North Haven — one of the Maine’s most remote islands, with a wintertime population of just 400. At the end of that year, she was appointed Associate Pastor at the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme, Connecticut. A news article announcing Susan’s appointment noted that she would be spending much of her time focused on youth programs. It was this work, she told the paper, that excited her the most.

In October 1985, Susan landed as interim pastor at the United Church of Christ, in Greensboro, where she served for a year. She also served as an interim pastor at Hampden Congregational Church in Hampden, Maine.  Before the first day of her dream job, settled pastor of the United Church of Strafford, Vermont, she was rear-ended in a motor vehicle accident and suffered a chronic brain injury. At the congregation’s behest, she struggled to serve as best she could until they could call another pastor, but she was never able to serve as a full-time parish minister again. 

Still, Susan remained active in the Vermont Conference of the United Church of Christ. She served as head of the Nominating Committee, and contributed significantly to the Ministerial Standing Committee, the Department of Mission, and Department of Christian Education. 

“I sometimes felt that Susan was a modern-day Job,” reflected her former pastor in Barnet, Reverend Howard Gaston. “She had lost so much in her life and yet continued to have a faith that she tried to share with others and for her own life struggles.”

He concluded: “I know that like Job, ‘the lord has restored her fortunes and gave her twice as much as she had before’ in God’s loving presence.”

***

Remembrance Continued

Susan spent much of the 1990s volunteering in the community when her health allowed it. She was an active ally and, later, board member, for the Brain Injury Alliance of Vermont. She also helped lead support groups for people with head injuries at her two favorite hospitals: NVRH and Dartmouth-Hitchcock. (She would frequently illustrate for me the caring and humane staff she dealt with in both locales.)

Susan’s brain injury made it difficult for her to grasp technology, but she loved keeping in touch with the ones she loved. And so, in the early aughts, she bought a newfangled email machine. Her most frequent pen pal was her brother, Alan, who, in 2004, became homeless in Boston due to a debilitating mental health condition.

Alan corresponded with Susan from a computer in the library, which he visited often to check in on the season of his beloved Boston Red Sox. Like Susan, Alan was uncommonly kind and tender despite his struggles. He was quieter than she was, but nonetheless caring. 

Alan was often resistant to Susan’s help, though she convinced him to visit once a year or so for a “vacation” marked by hot showers, good food, and fun outings. Later the family of my close friend, Ezra Racine, offered Alan a job at Eagle Eye Farm, a residential care facility near Lake Willoughby. 

He worked there until his physical and mental health became too compromised to continue. Eagle Eye Farm helped Alan for months after he ceased to be their employee. The whole Alexander family – particularly John, the patriarch – was extremely kind and generous.

Susan tirelessly coordinated efforts to keep Alan housed and cared for. After he had a stroke, she also expertly coordinated his care. Susan participated in the National Alliance on Mental Illness Family Support Group while Alan was alive. After he passed, in November 2017, she continued to provide support for others. She also wrote his touching obituary, and dusted off her pastoral skills to plan his funereal.

The pandemic hit Susan hard. She was hoping to start a grief support group for people who had lost loved ones, but her own health was deteriorating. Among other things, she developed a tremor that interfered with her ability to use an iPad for video conferencing into meetings for the Brain Injury Alliance. “Susan was an advocate who tirelessly gave her support and unwavering resolve to make Vermont a better place for the brain injury community,” the organization recently stated.

Despite her mounting health challenges, Susan took pride in keeping her check book balanced, and her bedside table stacked high with books. She loved to read, especially memoirs and biographies. She also subscribed to, and read, many magazines. If she caught wind that I was writing for a new publication, she would often subscribe to it. Once, when one of these publications didn’t pay me for months, she angrily canceled her subscription. I often joked that her voracious reading habits were single-handedly keeping my industry alive. 

I last saw Susan a few days before Christmas on a short stay in a rehabilitation facility. She was clearly weak physically, but maintained the funny spark I’d come to adore. 

She told my mother and me about the strangest new turn in her health struggles: hearing the same Christmas song play incessantly in her hand. She told it in her classic way, finding humor and resilience in an objectively terrible situation.

Not long after, Susan returned home and died of natural causes in her own home, as she had wished.

Susan is predeceased by her parents, her brother, Alan, her dog Clooney to whom she was devoted, and many dear friends. She is survived by close friends she considered family, including me, my folks, Kathy Gale, Betty Keller, Bob Hawes, Allyson Crawford, Jeanne Eisner, and her old neighbors on Old West Road.

There will be a party in remembrance of Susan on Sat. June 7th in Peacham.

Please contact Bess O’Brien at bobrien@pshift.com to attend.

Donations in Susan’s memory may be made to Doctors without Borders and/or Brain Injury Alliance of Vermont.

Death Announced of Kathryn (Kathi) Tray Hill, Partner of Skip Broom of Hadlyme

HADLYME — Kathryn “Kathi” Tray Hill, a beloved mother, grandmother, partner, and friend, passed away on April 12, 2025 surrounded by love. She was predeceased by her devoted husband of 32 years, Thomas W. “Dutch” Hill …

Born and raised in Narberth, Pennsylvania, Kathi was a walking ray of sunshine …

Later in life, Kathi reconnected with her high school sweetheart, Skip Broom, and together they created a beautiful new chapter. She moved to Hadlyme, Connecticut, and through Skip and his children, she discovered the beauty of Fisher’s Island …

Kathi is survived by her loving children: son Justin Hill, and daughter Carlye Miller and her husband Matt. She was a deeply proud and doting Grandy to Trey (18) and Beckett (15) Miller, and Kai Hill (14). She is also survived by her brother, William Tray (Carol), her partner Skip Broom; his children Adrien Broom (Nico) and Margot Broom McClowry (Terry); and Skip’s grandchildren “T” and Cal …

Editor’s Note: Visit this link to read the full obituary published by Dignity Memorial.