NameJoseph L. MATKOVICH/MACKAVICK ®14, ®47
Birth26 Mar 1903, Ely, Saint Louis County, Minnesota, USA ®47, ®14
MemoDr. O. W. Parker
Christen29 Mar 1903, Ely, Saint Louis County, Minnesota, USA ®14
MemoSponsors John and Katherine Gorze, Father A. Smrekar, officiating
Death3 Dec 1980, Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois, USA
MemoMemorial Hospital of DuPage County 3:30 PM
Burial6 Dec 1980, Forest Park, DuPage County, Illinois, USA
MemoForest Home Cemetery, Pedersen-Ryberg Mortuary, 435 N. York, Elmhurst, IL
OccupationAccountant
EducationVirginia High School, Bachelor of Science in Business, University of Minnesota 11 June 1928
ReligionRoman Catholic
Cause of deathCancer of the Prostate with Metastasis and Obstructive Renal Failure
FlagsChicago, Illinois
Misc. Notes
He was born in Ely, Minnesota and moved with his parents and siblings in 1916 (age 13) to 314 Third Street South, Virginia, Minnesota. In 1922 he was a bookkeeper for his father’s grocery and still lived with his parents and siblings at 314 Third Street South, Virginia, Minnesota. In 1928 he was a student at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and lived at 629 Fifteenth Avenue South East. By this date he had changed his name to Mackavick. He graduated from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, on 11 June 1928 with a Bachelor of Science in Business degree. He was living in Chicago in 1935. On 13 December 1941 he was working for Western Electric Company in Chicago, Illinois. On 8 September 1942 he enlisted in the U.S. Army and was discharged on 13 August 1945. From September to November 1942 he received basic training at Sheppard Field, Wichita Falls, Texas. In November 1942 he was sent to Smyrna Air Base, Smyrna, Tennessee. From December 1942- October 1943 he was at McDill Field, Tampa, Florida. He had a furlough home to Virginia in November 1943 and then in December 1943 reported to Albrook Air Base and Rio Hato Air Base, both in Panama, where he was stationed until at least April 1945 as a Sergeant in the Army Air Force. He was a tower controller, directing airplane traffic. After World War II he returned to Chicago to work at Western Electric Company and lived at 281 East Oneida Avenue, Elmhurst, Illinois with his first wife Mae. His neighbor, Mr. Sado Ficarratto, died suddenly on 4 November 1965. Joe worked for Western Electric until his retirement about March 1, 1968, age 65, to take care of Mae, who died in September 1968. After Mae’s death he and Mrs. Ficarratto married and lived in her house at 282 East Oneida, Elmhurst, Illinois 60126 until he died on 3 December 1980.
GPS grave.
First marriage
What was his middle name?
Spouses
Birthca 1913, Stanley, Chippewa County, Wisconsin, USA ®51
Death26 Sep 1968, Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois, USA ®52
Burial30 Sep 1968, Forest Park, DuPage County, Illinois, USA ®53
MemoForest Home Cemetery (Ahlgrim & Sons Funeral Home, 567 S. Spring Road, Elmhurst, Illinois, USA
OccupationRegistered Nurse ®54
Cause of deathCancer of the Ovary
FlagsChicago, Illinois, Vital Records-State
Misc. Notes
On the 1 April 1930 U.S. Census Mabel Moum is single, 17 and lived with her parents and siblings at 646 Madison Street, City of Stanley, Chippewa County, Wisconsin. Her father was Eric Moum, 54, born in Norway, her mother Carrie, 45, born in Norway and siblings, all born in Wisconsin were Clara, 19, Norma, 16, Harold, 14, Lydia, 11, Norman, 9, Everett, 6 and Stanley, 2. Eric was a laborer in a toy factory and their house was worth $2210.
®55 From age 18 in 1931 to 1937 Mabel lived in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. On 1 April 1940 the US Census listed Mabel P. Moum as single, age 27 and a Registered Nurse who lived and worked at St. Luke’s Hospital, West Madison Street, City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for $825 a month.
®54 From 1943 to 1946 she again lived in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. She became ill in February. She had incomplete removal of an ovarian cancer, followed by chemotherapy. She entered the hospital for the last time in early September and died in early September 1968.
Research
Date of birth, marriage
Birth5 May 1918, Newark, Kendall County, Illinois, USA ®56
Death5 Nov 1998, Hinsdale, DuPage County, Illinois, USA
MemoRheumatic Heart Disease
Burial8 Nov 1998, Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois, USA
MemoChapel Hill Gardens West-Hallowell & James Funeral Home, Countryside
OccupationRegistered Nurse
EducationLutheran Deaconess School Of Nursing, Chicago, IL 1940
Cause of deathEnd stage rheumatic heart disease
Misc. Notes
She was born in Newark, Illinois on 5 May 1918. She lived on a farm in Lisbon, Illinois, where she attended a one room school. She graduated from Morris, Illinois High School and then completed a three year Registered Nurse program at Lutheran Deaconess Hospital, Chicago, Illinois in 1940. She served as a Lieutenant in the United States Army Nurse Corps near LeMans, France during World War II. She lived on Ainsley Street in Chicago, Illinois. She worked as a Registered Nurse at the Elmhurst Memorial Hospital for 15 years. Joseph Mackavick and Alphena Ficarrotto lived across the street from each other in Elmhurst Illinois. After the death of their first spouses in 1965 and 1968, they married in 1969 and lived in her house, at 282 East Oneida Avenue, Elmhurst, Illinois, until Joseph’s death in 1980. She had rheumatic heart disease, and was frail, but managed to live alone after moving to be near her only child, Mary, after Joseph’s death. She first lived at 5525 Tennessee Avenue, Apartment 203, Clarendon Hills, Illinois 60514, and then moved to 10 North Washington Street, Apartment 209, Hinsdale, Illinois 60521. She died at 60521 Hinsdale, Du Page, Illinois, at age 80 of end stage rheumatic heart disease. From a letter from her daughter Mary Bacon of 9 January 2000 (copy in David Moody file John Matkovich) "My dad never spent any money on dinner out or travel. I guess this came from being very poor as a child. He was quite the self-made American, putting himself through school while almost being a parent to his younger siblings as they had lost their mother to an illness when he was still a teenager and he was the oldest. He was a structural engineer-bright, but a very solitary man. After he died Joe and my mother just started going to dinner together and soon married. I think Joe was all the things that my dad was not-social, enjoyed food and wine, loved to travel, close with his family. My mom just seemed to love all of this that she had missed. Joe was such a good friend to me, right from the start-accepting of my college friends during the hippie 60’s and loved to get into political discussions with them. And he was such a good "Grandpa Joe” to my David-unfortunately Laura never knew him since he died during my pregnancy with her. My Mom was very stoic (I guess that’s the Norwegian) and never complained, but I know she missed Joe a lot. The holidays were always especially hard for her after he died. I was never successful in lifting her spirits around Christmas, no matter what I did. I think she especially missed just having him there to make little decisions with her-like what color to paint a room-something like that-she’d mention those sorts of things. She treasured her relationship with Joe’s family and was very glad that she kept in touch after his death. My dad’s family (the Fatlands) did not make much attempt to do this after he died.”
Family ID19
Marriage4 Oct 1969, Wisconsin, USA