MORRIS GASS AND SARAH HAEFITZ GASS
|
|
Seated front: Sarah Haefitz Gass with her oldest father, Mr. Haeiftz; standing, left to right: Edward and Rebecca (Rae) Budnitz, Carole & Sam Gass, Morris Gass, Gertrude & Harvey Gass |
Sam Gass remembered his father:
"Morris Gass was a mild-mannered man, a man of the highest ethical order, and very unusual. He stood out head and heels above most people that you would meet, but you would never know it. He was quiet, reserved. There was nothing really that he wouldn't understand about another person's operations or doings. He would understand it, wouldn't be critical.
|
Sara Gass, 1937 |
"He was a very ethical man, but not forceful. He wasn't ministerial or admonishing. He did the right thing just doing it naturally. He didn't force himself to do it. And that's not easy. Everything he did he did in moderation. This was the way he was. He was a rare guy."
"The reason that Lion Shoe stayed together right up to the end was because of my father. Morris was the kind of person who kept things cohesive. I don't think Nathan and Samuel would have gotten along that well by themselves. Nothing that I saw was that apparent, but they would pull in different directions. My father would step in instinctively and say whatever had to be said, and it would be done.”
Carole Diamond Gass, Sam's wife, described her father-in-law:
"He was humble, self-effacing and modest. A highly principled person. Very sensitive and very wise. He was really a mature human being, interested in the world around him rather than being self-centered. I don't know if Morris really believed in G-d. I think he had his reservations, but he certainly believed in the Jewish heritage."
Morris was a quiet man but his wife, Sarah, was gregarious. She won trophies in golf and loved to travel and entertain. Sarah recalled their life together:
"I married a very fine man and we both understood what life really is about—work hard and doing it well. I lived a beautiful life with my husband. I am content. Maybe I lived to ninety-seven years old because of that. They tell me I'm unusual, all my friends tell me I'm unusual. I'm really living a long life."
|
Morris and Sarah Gass |
"He would say to me, 'Sarah, where else do you want to go?' in Jewish, Wo wilst du? We were the first ones I think that flew to Hawaii. After the Lindbergh, a group arranged it to go to Hawaii. And we went. And after we stayed there two weeks or so Morris enjoyed it so much that he said he hoped to go back.
"That was a life. I have a lot to think about, how things came true. Grandchildren—I have eight. And from the eight grandchildren, I have sixteen great-grandchildren. Two of the great-grandchildren are married. If David would have a child I would be a great-great grandmother!
"My children all went to good colleges and that made me happy, because I didn't get an education. I didn't go to college but I have quite a bit I know about. I taught myself English. I read whatever I can. Life is so exciting. See I'm interested, you understand?”
To read the entire interview with Sarah Haefitz Gass and Rae Gass Budnitz, click here.
Carole Gass shed some additional light on the relationship between Sarah and Morris:
"Morris treated Sarah like a child. He made all the major decisions. She was a good wife. She cooked and ran the home. She would arrange get-togethers with friends and made the travel plans. But there were parts of Sarah we never saw until Morris died because in his own quiet way, he handled her."
In 1936, Morris and Sarah’s son Sam married Carole Diamond, a graduate of Barnard with a masters from Radcliffe. Carole worked as a psychiatric social worker in Boston. At that time Sam was working at Lion Shoe with his father and uncles.
Morris and Sam both stayed with Lion Shoe until it closed. Then Morris went into the credit union business on his own until his death in 1965.
|
Sam’s obituary |
Sam, a graduate of Dartmouth College, stayed in the shoe business. In 1938, he formed Klev-Bro Shoe Company in Derry, New Hampshire, with two partners. During World War II, Sam served in the Marines, but returned to Klev-Bro after the war. In 1966, the shoe factory was sold and Sam stayed on as chief financial officer until his retirement in 1982. At the time of the sale of the company, Klev-Bro was the largest single-story shoe factory in New England, covering 72,000 square feet and employing 500 workers. Sam Gass died in 1992 at the age of 80.
Click here to read the entire interview with Sam and Carole Gass.
Rae Budnitz, Morris and Sarah's only daughter, attended Brown University and married Edward Budnitz, a graduate of Harvard Medical School and a practicing cardiologist.
|
Rae and Edward Budnitz |
Dr. Harvey Gass, Morris and Sarah's youngest child, went to the University of Michigan Medical School, served in the Navy during World War II in the Medical Corp, and then finished his medical training, specializing in neurosurgery.
[1][2]