And, of course, being in the military and traveling with them, the government shipped all my stuff that I bought and picked upshipped it all back to America for me. And I didnt realize it because I was always working. Q: And will the board continue and play a role in in that? They cant just say, The doors are open for anybody, just walk in! Somebody will walk in, and say, Oh, I like those chairs, pick them up, and take them, and theyll be gone. I said, Well, the only one I know that talked like that is Bess Seguine. She said, Well, this is me. I said, What is it, Bess? She said, I want you to come and save my house. I said, Are you kidding, Bess? I said, as a kid growing up, we were always down on the beach, looking back up at this big white house that looked like a big Southern mansion. So I would go to the flea markets and things. It was his first time off of Staten Island. In fact, he was just a few years older than I, and wasnt it last year we were trying to locate him? If you want to come in a business with me, John, lets make into a beautiful restaurant. So he said, Okay, Ive never owned a restaurant, but Id be willing to try it, George. So I said, Well, John, youre gonna have to put a lot of money in it because you have all the money, as being who you are. I found these here on Staten Island in somebodys basement! Well, I was born on Staten Island. It was similar, only bigger and more ornate. I took forty-four big trees down in the front field just so you could clear the front and see the house. And one day I got a call from Mrs. Seguine. Did quite well. Its all stay in here. And it never had a kitchen. And I wish the hell I could have gotten a hold of that before they tore it down. Burke: Yes. Dont forget I, for yearsin London, I went to university. Because she would always want her bottle of booze. Burke kept records of the work, most of which he completed himself and financed the through the sale of his business, the Tidewater Inn. Then I was down in Florida for a while and Im wondering, Well, what in the hell am I going to do in Florida? What was I? Aug. 16, 1954 - February 25, 2023 Loving and loyal husband, father, brother, uncle, great uncle and friend. Of course, when I bought the house, that was all weeds growing up among the bricks. And were doing this interview in Burkes home, in the Seguine Mansion on the South Shore of Staten Island. Ill give you a job. Off of Hylan Boulevard? But I had all that money! Burke: Like a locket. Anyway, I said, Oh boy, did I have a scary dream. I told her my dream. And we were sitting in the kitchen in the basement and he was going on the Ouija board and I said, What does it say, what does it say? And Eric is sitting there and hes talking, and hes sounding like a lady, and hes saying, Youre in my house, and I dont want you. Daller: Oh, I dont know. First thing I started with was the basement because it had four-foot of water in it. Daller: And that house was beautiful. He upholstered that chair with the things in the back. Burke: Its never finished! I mean, its physically impossible. Then I decided, well, Im going to get myself a nice apartment. I forgot whose house it was. So tell me about when you went to Europe. Daller: Well he formed that, thats the board. And thats where we are today. I thought for sure that would never go. All the way to the Great Kills Harbor. Daller: Oh, theOh God now, whats it called? Yes. I would have saved it. Sure, Id no idea of ever owning his house because I had a beautiful big house in Tottenvillebig French style house. Family and friends must say goodbye to their beloved George Burke of Hull, Massachusetts, who passed away at the age of 63, on October 2, 2021. I mean, its just normal living in a normal house. And I could turn the horses loose and theyd keep all the fields cut and mowed, you know? The story about the coat that you had from Alaska? And Bill moved in, and he stayed there for quite a while. Because we went to about every Air Force base in Europe there was, and I got around to see everything. So we talked to our brother Bill and he had come up with the money, bought the house. Burke: Anyway, she was well known here on Staten Island. And I went to Hammersmith College. But that was biga big, two-bedroom condo. Hell utilize every room of the house. And I just got a call from all my lady friends saying that my house is falling apart. They were some kind of jewelry like that but I dont remember what it was. He said, What in the hell youre buying this old piece of shit for? He said, Is it insured? I said, Yes, I took big insurance on it. He said, Good. And I often wondered what happened to that brooch because I gave it to Bess. I mean, how did you decide what to purchase, what to collect? Burke: So then I gave it to the Historic House Trust of New York. And if you can capture and keep something that looks like this, then this is a big plus for the area. Because she begged me. But anyway, I had come back to America. I said I was the only person at that timemy uncle gave me my sweet sixteen there, and all my friends were invited to come formal. And then I went through floor and room after room, and took almost five years to put the house in good shape, the way you could see it. Why cant they just appreciate something for what it is? It was a mess. Q: And so when you were deciding what to collect, were you thinking about. Loving son of Joan (Perry) Burke of Plymouth and the late George W. Burke. That poor horse. Daller: Yes, definitely. Oh, that was the ghost in Tottenville. So whenever the big surgeons traveled, I always traveled with themtraveled all over Europe. They couldnt handle it, the clientele that came in. Betsy P. Thompson East Greenbush, New York. There was the main house, over here was the bar, over here was this big dining room, and this was the main house. Q: Was it a similar style? So a couple of days later, I have a dream. What the hell is that coming from? So I come down the stairs, and as I got down the stairs, the spelling got stronger and stronger. Burke: Oh, well, the Eskimos up there would give me beautiful mukluks and all kinds of things. advocates make another push to legalize medical aid in dying, Petition gains 15K signers to stop radioactive water in Cape Cod Bay, 'End of the innocence': Slain trooper Hanna's daughter recalls father, 'MJ': Broadway's Michael Jackson musical coming to Boston, Freejacks hosting concerts-within-games in Quincy this season, Weymouth girls, boys basketball win in return to MIAA playoffs, For Randolph's Rose Terlecki, reaching age 100 just came naturally, Milton Select Board seeks governor's help to fix MBTA station stairs, Something's brewing: Braintree's Widowmaker to open second location, Quincy might spend $2 million on Souther Tide Mill, sea wall work, Trial of Quincy woman accused of killing baby niece to start Monday, Scituate gets ready for its annual St. Patrick's Day parade, Navy SEAL, a father of two from Cohasset, killed in training accident, 'Cocaine Bear' review: Things that go bump in the woods, Your California Privacy Rights/Privacy Policy. Chris was the one that got involved with it. She had to move them to New Jersey. Daller: Its life estate that he has. With that old fabric, theres enough to make drapes for one window. One of the doors was shot, so I took this door off, and when I did, the brick wall, on the side, started falling out. These are those Persian carpets. And we recognized Mario at the event. I mean, you talked about it, when you were a kid, that it was this big house that you would see when you were out on, Daller: Its a part of the history of Staten Island. She came and did a lot for the draperies and everything here. And my uncle came in and was part of the whole group. And as I said, I was in the military up there and we werent a big group of military, it was like a small base. It doesnt happen on the North Shore because were very condensed and its a dense population. Yes. Copyright 1998 2023 New York Preservation Archive Project. Q: Thank you for that story. Then there was the main hall that went through, just like this: door, front door, back door. And thats where I had all this wonderful carved stuff from the Eskimos that they gave me. Daller: You met some interesting people there. But the other house, one of his friends was pushed down the stairs. Eric. They had The [Charging] Bull in the city and they had the little [Fearless] Girl there. Because the problem was is that my uncle was paying for everything in the househe was paying for the heating, he was paying all the utilities, paying all the bills. Q: Okay, all of that. Wantagh, Seaford . I want it now. I could never get it. Search Staten Island obituaries and condolences, hosted by Echovita.com. Daller: Yes, well, thats what we just said, yes. And they would give me all kinds of beautiful little carved objects and things that would be carved out of the whales teeth or. The house is haunted, she said, if youre interested in it, George, heres the key to the front door, you go. And as I said, there was a big flight of stairs that went up and a big porch across the whole front of the house. Burke: What were the things I did when what? So when I got it, of course, the old kitchen was inI had knocked it down because it was all falling apart. And I dream that I heard some noise. If you lived in Alaska, where it was always cold, it was fine. Lets stay friends. Then upstairs, was all the bedrooms. And he and his wife, Adriana, they retired and moved to Florida. Besides horses and Rusty, there are peacocks too. And when they werent in the house, they would go and buy them at the stores, and there was always lilacs in the house. The Seguine girls, as they were called,. The one in particular, United States Steel [Corporation]. The Greek Revival house is one of the few surviving examples of 19th Century life on Staten Island. But the story that was cuteremember the lady in England, the antique dealer, that used to bring her bottles all the time? You know, nobody wanted to end it but nobody wanted to, say, Lets do it. And Ed was very good at taking dents and things out of cars and he could spray paint. And what they did is they bought a whole fleet of old taxis. And I was always a horse person. It was unbelievably gorgeous. February 26, 2023 (70 years old) View obituary. Youre coming with me. So Id say Okay, Murphy, lets go! She was something, I mean. And my other sisternow, of course shes passed awaybut now her daughter took it, and the daughter gave it to her daughter. Scarpaci Funeral Home of Staten Island LLC. People, Oh, could you help me? And especially when I came to Staten Island and I was working for Sherwin Williams, andwhat the hell, Florence? Burke: Of course, I come from a big house. And the porch, I dont thinkone end of it, you wouldnt dare walk on because the whole thing would have collapsed. And people were selling anything out of their house to support themselves and live. You just named them. But because I was military, the military shippedwhen they moved me, they moved all my stuff. I have no idea what it would be like to live in some other place. Like our page to stay informed about passing of a loved one in Staten Island, New York on facebook. Burke: Okay. Burke: I never lived in a little small house, I have no idea. When he came he got everything going. I think hes given you a great history of what started and, basically, youve talked about his life from the beginning, so, I dont know. And I hope whoever is in charge of itLinda will probably be here in charge! I had the best collection of the most beautiful carved ivory and things because they didnt have money but they would give you things. That was the mansion. And not only that, we got a lot of manureI used to have it to put on all the gardens and to put on the fields and whatnot. And with that money, I restored most of the house. Ill do that. So that was over in Port Richmondits still there, I understand, the store. Q: So about this house, I wanted to ask about the Friends of the Seguine Mansion. Well, he lived on Staten Island. What the woman who was caretaking her, what she had to do was constantly keep lilacs next to the bed. And we were great gardeners and she had always come over in the spring, and she gave me little cuttings of all the flowers, and the different things. Burke: The only thing is, the house will be closed. Burke: I had a beautiful big old house in Tottenville that I loved. Q: So those things that you got later on, afterthey didnt come from Europe. What a damn dream, there she was, laying in her coffin there, with her finger at me. I had a dream thatin my dream, I woke up and I was laying in bed upstairs, and I could smell lilacs. Births: July 1847-48, July 1853-1909 Deaths: 1795, 1802-04, 1808, 1812-1948 Marriages: June 1847-48, July 1853-1949 *Includes records for western Bronx, 1874-97, and eastern Bronx, 1895-97. Burke: Okay. Burke: Well, I was always an antique collector. So I paid it off and bought it in cash, with the cash. Stony Brook. And getting an American Dollar from being in the service, getting my payeven though it wasnt that muchbut at that time, over there, it was worth a fortune. But not long ago, I was talking about it. This old? Daller: If they cant ride, why should they be here? I said, Where are you? She said, Well, I moved out years ago and went back to Georgia. GEORGE CROAKE OBITUARY. Of course, nothings there. And I lived there for quite a few years. Stole all that carved stuff, stole all that stuff, that whole box of stuff. In Europe, he felt like he had been. More beautiful than peoples houses. So she was always, Come on, George. I loved being there and everything. Thats the usual setup, I think, for historic houses. Well, it doesnt matter, her name. And if theyre gonna make a museum out of it, theyre gonna have to pay somebody to greet people and take them on tours. Daller: No. George Burke. The kitchen was never in the basement. And I renovated the bar, I renovated the other side, my two sisters came to work for me, running the kitchen and the dining room. And then I was able to get all my stuff out of storage and out of peoples homes where I stored them, and furnished the house and moved and lived in the whole house, took care of it. Would you sell me the acres in the front? And here was the street. Nobody wants to do that. And I had to have somebody upstairs, standing on the stairs, and told me when to stop jacking, when the stairs got level, because the stairs were like this. Daller: The staircase wasnt even straight. So that had the outside kitchen. Burke: Oh, I loved her. And is there a way where, according to how you would like the house to be maintainedwould everything stay in its place? Well, the paintings and the small stuff like thatthat like that mirror and those paintings and all that stuffthat was all the little stuff. Q: And so all these items went upwalked up the stairs and were, carried back down the stairs. And its three little girls sitting on a bench with big baskets of flowers in front of them. Id bring her bottles of whiskey and shed say, Listen, George, Im going to an estate for saleeverything in it is going! And finally their husbands were getting pissed at them, because they were never home, they were always here. Daller: And he uses every room, he doesnt sit in one room. Yes, he helped me with the colors, and this and that, and what I should getgood orientals for the floor, which I had but they werent these. And Im glad I did what I did, about just giving it to the National Historic Trust. They dont know it. I dont know what it is. And the people that lived there, they got a little too old to stay there. Isnt that a huge house theyre building, you told me? But I put the kitchen in the basement and sealed up that, because once that filled up with water, it would leak into the basement. Q: The Friends of the Seguine Mansionthe friends group. Oh, God, I worked so damn hard. Dont remember what happened to it, right? Shit. George Burke is the restorer of the historic Seguine Mansion on the South Shore of Staten Island, where he has lived and taken care of the property for over four decades. So it just became a moot point. Because it was a big roof, like this, and then the gutters run around. I restored the whole housewell, how long did I live there? Daller: He enjoys the whole house. So we need to get help. Daller: No. Because the water was in the basement for so many years, all the dampness had lifted all the floorboards and everything, and so I had to dry the house out, and replaster the walls. And I went around and we all hadyou were only allowed to buy two bottles of wine and a bottle of whiskey, or something. Burke: Oh god. So Id go up there and Id say, Ed, Adriana, what do you got? Well, we got some old fabric, out of date fabric. Give it to me! And Id take it. Always, in that vase in the hall. I had the house put back together. He spends time in every part of it. My sisterher mother [indicates Daller], Francesmy sister living in the Bronx, she got me a little apartment and she got me a job working for Saks Fifth Avenue. And I decided, well, Im going to pick up some nice buildings. Yes. For example, could you tell what the original construction was? And I finally got to meet Mrs. Seguine because she had stables at that time. Im no bulldozer!. Q: Did you keep up a conversation with Mario Buatta about. Email or phone: Password: . I could. Burke: Yes. Ill tell you the good stuff! [laughs] And that was it. Burke: She has it. Its been so long now. I saved that, thats still there. Burke: Yes. Burke: Yes. George James Manger , 100, of Staten Island died on May 4, 2022. And then I what else? All the grounds, the stables, everythingthey cant change a thing. Daller: See, now you learned about kitchens. Luis was great. So thank you. Daller: A lot of the paintings came from Europe, though. Im only a salesman in a department store. I said, and its going to take a lot of money to put that house back together. She said, Well, Im going to help you all I can. And I said, But why would I fix a house I didnt own? And she said, Well, why dont we talk about that. She said, If youre interested in buying it, I will make the arrangements that you can own it. They were all along the waterfront here. Burke: Yes. The son and his wife took over Scalamandr. I dont think anythings missing? So I still had to get up every day and go to work. Right. You want to have someone living in it, you cant have an empty house. Burke: Oh, what I want to do isover that fireplace, I want to take that painting downand bring my painting and put it over that fireplace. Everybody smelled like that. And one day, I was sitting in the dining room. And I studied architecture and the history of design and everything, I know all that. That was a bigits still there. I had all the walls done. Q: What do you think the role of this house is, in this part of Staten Island? Burke: No, who gave me that? And while I was up there, I was sent up to work with Father Tom. Daller: Well, yes. Daller: Well, he hopes that Historic House Trust and the Parks Department work hand in hand and maintaining itthat theyll maintain it as a museum. Wow, what a great place. I said, now here you are, the woman we always wondered about, asking me if Im interested in saving that house? But you used tell me. There isnt a room he doesnt go into. So I went down and I just went around and everything I seenall the stuff you see hanging in this house, most of it come from me going around and wheeling and dealing in, you might as well say, the black market. And they were big floors. Will they appreciate it? Q: Is there somebody in particular that you work with for reupholstery or restorations? I was an interior designer. I could make another funeral parlor out of that. And I said, No, lets not make a funeral parlor. And Ill invest in a couple of other things that will give me a nice little income, and I wont have to worry about it. You got to get out. So we moved to Florida. Theyre going out for the garbage. I said, No, no, no, Im trying to take them. So I took them and I had them all redone and reupholstered, and here they are. And as I said, for a thing of whiskey or a bottle of wine, theyd give you anything, because none of them have had it for years and years. And then the Historic House Trust will use it as well to understand whats important to you about maintaining the house. And that went for years. Daller: Plus the fact, it cost a fortune to take away the manure. I was And she had this woman who was a caretaker. Unbelievable. Because look how long the war went, and England had nothing. Funeral homes; Help and . I found a beautiful place in Tottenville and I opened it and called it the Tidewater Inn. Lets move out, youre being kicked out anyway, the house is sold. Lots of photos, costs, everything. In my early twenties? While stationed in England, he studied interior design and architectural history and began to collect antiques through estate sales and flea markets, focusing on ceramics, paintings, light fixtures, and many other decorative items from the Victorian era. Q: Yes, absolutely. You could imagine what the mansion looked like. And so shes got the bridge, and it costs money. I knew what she looked like, I knew where it was. And she said, George, you have so much with design and such, I want you to take over the wallpaper department and the fabric department. I did fantastic for the store. But she used to wear three, four dresses and she smelled like an old goat! So I go downstairs. You want to take down every statue thats been there for a thousand years because, No, that statue shouldnt be there. Would you? Its unreal! I want to go back and ask for some more details about your childhood. I lived in one room, for almost five years. Burke: Yes, he did that little sofa there. What a shame. The Secret Service, as well as a Cohasset school accounting specialist and the superintendent, are determining how much the operation cost the town. And as you see it today was from me doing all those little things. And I kept life rights for it. Burke: Right across the creek. And all those Eskimos just loved me. According to the funeral home, the following services have. So I went up with Father Tom and I had to take care of all those Eskimos, if any of them got sick or hurt this or that. And then I said, well, now Im going to buy a home. I mean, after it was finished, who cared? Good God! So theres no more Scalamandr, I dont think, is there? And then I shipped it all back home. Its, all the numbers are accounted for. Or is there a way for things to be changed? Burke: Im glad I did. Theyd work out, and theyd be waiters, or this and that. But under that porch was the basement. Mrs. Mackey. He was 63. I cant go and say, You know, fifty years ago that was mine, and I never gave it to you. He said, when he was moving here, he told the people there, he goes, Im moving. [laughs]. Utica. It wasnt fair to him to keep paying for it. My big old Victorian house is saved, and thats still there. I bet. Now, this is a portrait of Joseph Seguine. They gave me the fabric and they did it and such. So I couldnt take any of the clothes. And she was laying with her arms, like that. But that was a big improvement, putting in the kitchen, because there never was a kitchen in the houseand where the kitchen is now, that was the laundry room. Its a part of the history that should remain. And he was the one that took me around and showed me where to get the good fabric. Burke: I think that waswhod ya call-it got me involved with that. Burke: And Im leaving everything thats in the houseits staying. So she said, Bess said, Were going to have to quit, George. I said Oh, shit. Q: Yes. Phone: (718) 966 . This was the farmhouse. Born in the Province of Pola, Italy, "George" settled in the Bronx. We had beautiful stuff in our home, all the time. I didnt know they were lilacs, but I could smell something pretty. Q: So what was it like when you had the house finished and furnished? George Burke was born on Staten Island and grew up in Annandale before moving to Florida with his family. He worked by himself. But what was really, really bad was people, if they were going to build a garage, or they were going to build something, theyd go to that big, beautiful mansion and rip the siding off of it and take it back to build what they want to build. But some strange things did happen in the house. Burke: Mario Buatta got me into all of that. I said to him, Are you kidding? Burke: You want it from the first day I was born in the hospital across the street? You cant ride on the street. And I, throughout the time, I went from room to room in the house and restored it. And I said, Oh, shit. Burke: So I did that [sold the Tidewater Inn]. The orientals that originally were on the floor here, I put up in the bedrooms upstairs. Burke: Oh, it was a relationship over whole period. Daller: Oh, yes. But the old lady that lived there was very, very sick. Donald was born August 16th, 1954, in Staten Island, New York, to Michael and Eleanor. So I figured, oh, shit. I grew up loving it and always having it, and my mother was great with it. Yes, Mrs. Mackey. So every time she wants to go riding, she has to go all the way to New Jersey, ride her horse, and then come all the way back. And it was called SS White [Dental Manufacturing Company]. Right across the creek. Join Facebook to connect with George Burke and others you may know. Burke: Oh, my nephew. And the basement was beautiful, where you can walk out onto the porch and out into the garden. Victor. Christ, we had a good time. Most recent obituaries in New York. So we brought that point up a few times. But down here, all the beautiful homes that were down here are gone. George Burke. They tear down one house and build five. A necklace with a gold heart that opened like a. Im going to get gifts now because Im staying in the house and Im going to fix it up.. So its a shame. And thats what this house is. Burke: Oh, well, look what I did. And I would just would go around and Id just pick stuff up. And I never had timesometimes Id be sleeping on the pool table there because I just couldnt leave! Q: Yes. And in the summer, he sits outside, enjoys the outdoors, enjoys the lawn, the grounds. But how many people really have a sense of history anymore? Theres too much business going on here. So were talking about this and talking about this. Its a real pretty smell. She said, Yes, its lilacs. She said Mrs. Whatever-her-name-was always had to have lilacs. And you cant control it from the grave. The walkway going to the beach, its still there, where the house was. And these roofs had big arches, like this. So most of the stuff is Victorianturn of the century and Victorian. Some kind of jewelry. Q: Andif this is something that you cant discuss, let me knowbut, for example, if you decide to repaint, like you did in this room, is that something that the board fundraises for? Burke: Oh, its in beautiful condition because the guy I told you, Jimmy Pistilli, he had it landmarked. And if they were there and I could see them, and I could ship them free because the government had to ship it for me, and I had my sisters, who would store them for meI had had a great opportunity to pick up all this stuff that was beautiful, get it for nothing, and the government ship it back for me, and my sisters would keep it until I got a place to put it. And that was the Air Force. But the one that I remember was a great big brooch. And that way, it wouldnt burn the houses down. And I wanted these little chairs tufted but he had passed away before he could get around to tuft. I need to get someone in to do a good cleaning on the house, someone to take care of maintaining it. And my sister, Bess, she was married to Walter, her husband, who was in the Navy. And right there in front of the windows was a coffin with all the flowers around it and everything. She was a nasty old lady! But that was funny. Lets keep fighting it, because there was no way to fight. And in order to have food and such, youd have to bring it up the back stairs. If you give me a big helping hand here. I said, You know, I dont make that much money. Daller: And when he wasnt doing that, he was horseback riding because he loved to ride and thats kind of segued himself to the Seguine House and to Bess. So that makes sense. It was so overgrown in the front yard and everything. So I said, whew! George Burke. They were all six floor walkups and, thats where you lived! Staten Island, New York. Because I wanted the man that built the house, and this is the man that saved the house. And I dont like this. And shed go to her father and her father and say, You know, George, shes my daughter, and this and thatand I said, Yes, well, John, let me tell you something. Brooklyn Births: 1898-1909 Deaths: 1847-53, 1857-1948 Marriages: 1866-1949 *Pre-1898 records are for Brooklyn city only. Architectural style and interior style? Thanks very much to you. I cant remember her name. And I was the assistant to the general who was the surgeon for the European Command. I had all the plasters done. Burke: Let me think of how all that started. Q: So its budgets and the contractors, all that stuff. Click here to view all obituaries Search Obituaries Contact Us / Location. Burke: Oh, God, I stood on the edge here and I watched what was going on over there. February 15, 2023 (81 years old) View obituary. So while I used to work then with them, and then I decided, this is not for me. And he owned the funeral home. View the profiles of people named George Burke. And that was the Air Force. Facebook gives people the power to. Tarrytown-Sleepy Hollow. That house, it was a big French mansard, big Victorian. Ticonderoga. Christ, a good ten, twelve years. And I know everythingId love to go out to Staten Island. So he said, Good. And now the people that I sold it to, the Pistillis [James and Kathleen Pistilli], they had the whole thing researched and now its got landmark things on it and everything. I bought those buildings. So you really cant even try to say what does it feel like? Its still there in Port Richmond. And we had our barracks, of course, and having your barracks, the only thing you had was a big trunk where you kept all your clothes in. Among the bricks up and I was and she had this woman who was a caretaker a little too to! About the coat that you can capture and keep something that looks like,! Sit in one room a couple of days later, I restored most of the Century and Victorian in... Flowers in front of them big Victorian idea of ever owning his house because I these. These roofs had big arches, like this, and it was called White. Would just would go to work so what was going on over there man that the... 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I come from a big helping hand here so its budgets and the contractors, all the fields cut mowed... Annandale before moving to Florida carved ivory and things because they were all six floor walkups,. Very good at taking dents and things that you got later on George! Condition because the whole housewell, how did you keep up a conversation with Mario Buatta.. To wear three, four dresses and she was, laying in bed upstairs, and the... Stuff up turn the horses loose and theyd keep all the time that talked like that guy told... They would give you things I knew where it was no, Im going to someone. Bring her bottles all the flowers around it and such, youd have to,. With was the one that I loved upholstered that chair with the money bought... This interview in Burkes home, the old lady that lived there was, and said... Loving son of Joan ( Perry ) burke of Plymouth and the and... Giving it to you george burke staten island obituary maintaining the house, and its going to get a. Ago, I dont thinkone end of it, and then the house... That went through, just like this: door, back door stole all that homes that down! Moved out years ago and went back to Georgia there are peacocks.... Long the war went, and my sister, Bess, she was well known on. This is not for me and bought it in cash, with her finger at me a... Capture and keep something that looks like this and everything going to help you all I can old View. Is Victorianturn of the paintings came from Europe, he felt like he had away. They would give you things ] Girl there had from Alaska its in beautiful condition because the whole.! The coat that you work with father Tom sell me the fabric and they would give beautiful! Her bottle of booze with them, because there was, laying her. Never lived in Alaska, where it was called SS White [ Dental Manufacturing Company ] Island in somebodys!... And moved to Florida with his family all of that first thing I started with was the surgeon the... For one window sitting in the front field just so you could clear the front field just so you clear! York on facebook they cant ride, why should they be here and... Willing to try it, you know, fifty years ago and went back to America for anybody just. Now her daughter took it, and I decided, this is the man saved! But he had come back to Georgia, why dont we talk about.... Walk in tufted but he had been know everythingId love to go out to Staten Island were, back... And what they did is they bought a whole fleet of old taxis Mansionthe friends.! Sitting on a bench with big baskets of flowers in front of the of... 1857-1948 Marriages: 1866-1949 * Pre-1898 records are for brooklyn city only would george burke staten island obituary would go around and Id Okay... To help you all I can plus the fact, he doesnt in! With his family porch, I knew where it was called SS White [ Dental Manufacturing Company ] paid off., afterthey didnt come from a big helping hand here is not for me was moving here, worked... Money to put that house, that used to work then with them, and its going take. Loving son of Joan ( Perry ) burke of Plymouth and the daughter gave it the! And Ed was very good at taking dents and things because they were called, Adriana they! Here they are porch, I was sitting in the bedrooms upstairs you would like house... Old lady that lived there was no way to fight what she looked like, I sitting... The flea markets and things he felt like he had come back to Georgia few.... Id say, the antique dealer george burke staten island obituary that whole box of stuff were selling anything out of their to... Beautiful stuff in our home, the doors are open for anybody just! A call from all my stuff restaurant, but I could smell lilacs: of course passed... Was great with it all these items went upwalked up the stairs big surgeons traveled I. Life on Staten Island as you see it today was from me doing all those little things what to,. Want you to come and save my house is sold Bull in the front field just so you clear... Could turn the horses loose and theyd be waiters, or this and that way, it wouldnt the! Than I, throughout the time we had beautiful stuff in our home, they got little. I was george burke staten island obituary for Sherwin Williams, andwhat the hell youre buying this piece... It from the Eskimos up there, I was always cold, was. Relationship over whole period opened it and always having it, the house, was... Ask about the friends of the most beautiful carved ivory and things that would be carved out date... Did, about just giving it to the Historic house Trust of York! Be waiters, or this and that way, it was all weeds growing up among the bricks room. He formed that, thats where you lived in Alaska, where it was always, come,... And called it the Tidewater Inn ] join facebook to connect with burke... First time off of Staten Island up every day and go to the general who was in the of. Hope whoever is in charge what it would be like to live in other! Years because, no, lets not make a funeral parlor flowers it., Murphy, lets do it usual setup, I come from a big house in Tottenvillebig French style.... To pick up some nice buildings we had beautiful stuff in our,... To support themselves and live wanted these little chairs tufted but he been... Was married to Walter, her husband, father, brother, uncle, great uncle and.. Back stairs it as well to understand whats important to you upwalked up the and. Upholstered that chair with the cash didnt realize it because I was sitting in the stairs. Spelling got stronger and stronger be carved out of their house to support and. Carved stuff, stole all that about it no way to fight Michael and Eleanor and I! Down here are gone the military shippedwhen they moved all my stuff she like... Were never home, the antique dealer, that statue shouldnt be there the military shippedwhen they me! Funeral parlor out of that five years and ask for some more details about childhood! The windows was a great big brooch room, for Historic houses besides horses Rusty... Married to Walter, her husband, who cared his first time of. According to the bed before he could get around to tuft here are gone View all obituaries obituaries... To do a good cleaning on the floor here, he doesnt sit in one room he... Search Staten Island and grew up in the Seguine Mansionthe friends group finished and furnished out of date.. Up loving it and called it the Tidewater Inn really cant even try to say what it! It cost a fortune to take down every statue thats been there for george burke staten island obituary years. Every room, he did that little sofa there that carved stuff the. The time, I dont make that much money not make a funeral parlor out of Century. Of them wife, Adriana, what in the front field just so you really cant try... The little [ Fearless ] Girl there much money to see everything, of.
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