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Hubert
J. FitzGerald, 87, a Lancaster artist and decorated World War II
veteran, died Saturday, June 4, 2011.
Hube, also
called “Fitz,” drew inspiration from the fields and farmland of
Lancaster County for his art. His paintings and drawings were
widely exhibited, including the Corcoran Gallery of Art in
Washington, D.C., the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia, and the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. Just
last month he attended the opening of his one-man art show,
Moments in Time: Paintings by Hubert J. FitzGerald, at the
Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg, Pa. He was part
of a recent exhibit at Pittsburgh’s American Jewish Museum.
Hube spent 34
years at Armstrong World Industries, where he served in varying
design capacities until retiring in 1985. He was married to Nancy
A. McKee FitzGerald for 49 years, until her death in 2000.
Hube was born
in 1923 in Jeannette Pa., the son of Hubert Joseph and Clara Yurt
FitzGerald. He studied fine arts at Carnegie Institute of
Technology (now Carnegie Mellon), but his education was
interrupted by World War II. He was selected for the Office of
Strategic Services (OSS), an elite intelligence branch that
preceded the CIA. He was shot in 1945 during a mission in
Holland. He was awarded a Purple Heart, which he kept tucked away
in a cedar chest, along with a wooden cross given to him in the
hospital by the young German soldier who shot him.
Hube graduated
from Carnegie Tech with the Class of ’49, which included artist
Andy Warhol. He worked for Alcoa in Pittsburgh, and then
Armstrong, where he was a product design manager for the flooring
division. Every night after supper with his five children, he
headed for his basement studio, where he always had a painting on
the easel. As his mobility decreased, his dining room table became
his studio, a perfect spot for the watercolors he so enjoyed.
“His work is
noteworthy for its technical precision and versatility and he is
comfortable working in a broad spectrum of different
media—graphite, egg tempera, oil, watercolor, or woodcut,” The
Westmoreland noted at Hube’s show, which continues through the
summer. Hube told the museum: “After choosing a subject, I make a
decision to use the art medium that best expresses and supports…
each visual moment.”
He was a
long-time member of the Echo Valley Art Group, and a judge for
Lancaster’s Scholastic Art Show and the summer art show in Stone
Harbor, N.J. He designed an annual Christmas card, some years
silk-screening hundreds of prints with his family.
Hube had a
passion for fly fishing and liked nothing better than a day at the
Yellow Breeches Creek. He tied his own flies and did illustrations
for Trout magazine. He was a founding member of St. Leo the
Great Catholic Church.
In addition to
his wife, Hube was preceded in death by a daughter, Ann. Surviving
are a son, Roche FitzGerald (Fran) of Columbia; four daughters,
Mary Scaccia (Peter) of Lancaster, Susan FitzGerald Cochran
(David) of Villanova, Sarah Mika (Andy) of Fairfax, Va., and
Patricia Aichele (Tom) of Arlington Heights, Ill.; 16
grandchildren; and a sister, Mary Lou Domenick of Jeannette. He is
also survived by a very close friend, Carol Morgan.
A viewing is
scheduled for Wednesday, June 8, 6 to 8 p.m., with a recitation of
the Rosary at 7:45 p.m., at Charles F. Snyder Funeral Home &
Crematory, 414 E. King St., Lancaster. A Mass of Christian Burial
will be celebrated Thursday, June 9, at 11 a.m. at St. Leo the
Great Catholic Church, 2427 Marietta Ave., Lancaster, with The
Rev. Peter I. Hahn officiating. Entombment will be at St. Joseph’s
New Catholic Cemetery, with Military Honors accorded by Red Rose
Veterans Honor Guard. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to
Lancaster Catholic High School/Art Department, 650 Juliette Ave.,
Lancaster, Pa. 17601, or Hempfield Meals on Wheels, 2120 Shaaron
Dr., Lancaster, Pa. 17601. To send the family online condolences,
please visit SnyderFuneralHome.com. Charles F. Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory 717-393-9661. |