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The number of known coronavirus cases in the District, Maryland and Virginia has surpassed 1 1000000. More than 17,000 people across the area accept died of covid-xix. Among the victims have been teachers, nurses, veterans, small-concern owners and government workers. Here are their stories.

We're reporting on the lives of the victims and the impact they had in their communities. Has someone close to you died of covid-19? Tell The Washington Mail.

• • •

Mercia Bowser, 64

Washington, Feb. 24

Bowser, who was the eldest of 6 siblings, had retired from a career serving children, the elderly and people with behavioral disorders. She was the sis of D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser.

Read more than about Mercia Bowser

• • •

Blanca Kling, 68

Prince George'south County, Jan. 27

Over decades working for the Montgomery County police force, Kling comforted victims of crime and disaster. She was a trusted voice in the county'south growing Latino customs.

Read more most Blanca King

• • •

Tiffany Shackelford, of Alexandria, on a family unit trip to Alaska. (Family photograph) (Family photo)

Tiffany Shackelford, 46

Alexandria, Dec. 27

Shackelford, who worked in news and public policy, was known as fun-loving and warm. Friends said she was happiest when she was with her 9-year-erstwhile son.

Read more near Tiffany Shackelford

• • •

Richard Southward. Madaleno Sr., 78

Bethesda, Dec. 12

A Navy veteran, Madaleno built a long career as a sales and marketing executive in the structure industry and afterwards endemic a construction management company. He was also an aesthetic storyteller who could spend hours at a dinner party captivating a crowd.

Read more than about Richard S. Madaleno Sr.

• • •

John D. Bowen, 84

Colesville, Dec. 8

Cheryl Diday said her male parent was a "walking encyclopedia of information." Bowen was fascinated with the past, especially family unit genealogy and military history. He used his research skills to assist veterans and their families in the Boxing of the Bulge Association.

Read more than about John D. Bowen

• • •

Jerry Samet was known as a "collector of friends." (Family photo)

Jerry Samet, 75

Spencerville, December. 2

Samet was a gregarious sort, a lifelong networker, a "collector of friends," every bit ane of them put it. A former k main, or president, of all Masonic lodges in the District, a local political activist and the owner of a haberdashery, he immersed himself in youth-leadership programs for decades, mentoring thousands of teenagers.

Read more nearly Jerry Samet

• • •

Elsi Mabelicia Campos had six grandchildren. (Family unit photo)

Elsi Mabelicia Campos, lx

Alexandria, Nov. 30

Campos, a devoted Catholic, worked her way from cleaning hotel rooms as a recent immigrant from El salvador in the 1970s to supervising teams of custodians for one of the largest cleaning companies in the D.C. area. It immune her to assist her relatives flee civil war in her home country, to raise two children every bit a unmarried mother, to care for her elderly parents and to build a life for her vi grandchildren.

Read more about Elsi Mabelicia Campos

• • •

Charlie Lund, 82

Chevy Chase, Nov. 30

Lund'southward daughters recall him reading "State of war and Peace" to them before tucking them in at night when they were children. Lund, a one-time English professor, had a lifelong dear of reading and learning.

Read more about Charlie Lund

• • •

Jerrold Yard. Mail service, 86

Bethesda, Nov. 22

Post, a pioneering psychological profiler for the Key Intelligence Bureau who after became a consultant, had a long career that included advising President Jimmy Carter before the Army camp David peace accords and producing psychological profiles of terrorists. He as well published a book almost President Donald Trump.

Read more well-nigh Jerrold Post

• • •

William Beaver, 87

Waterford, November. 12

Decades ago, Beaver, a medical educator and researcher, played a key role in the FDA'southward development of rules for safe clinical drug trials. He was also an avid woodworker who built and restored furniture.

Read more well-nigh William Beaver

• • •

Don Brooks died just a few months shy of his retirement. (Abby Sevcik)

Don Brooks, 75

Washington, October. 24

For more than a half-century, Brooks helped run the historic Dupont Circle domicile of the Carnegie Institution for Science. Brooks, who was shut to his family unit, was months shy of his retirement when he died.

Read more about Don Brooks

• • •

Miriam Gershfeld, 89, loved to play the viola. She is shown here with her husband, Norman. (Family unit photo)

Miriam Gershfeld, 89

Bethesda, Oct. xviii

I of Gershfeld's great loves was the viola. Well into her 80s, she played at noon every Friday in a group dubbed "The Arthritis String Quartet." Her favorite composer was Franz Schubert.

Read more about Miriam Gershfeld

• • •

Margot and Michael Kernan in Italy in an undated family photograph. (Lisa Kernan)

Margot Kernan, 93

Mitchellville, Sept. 23

Kernan was a video artist whose work was shown in New York's Museum of Mod Art and the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Ane of her greatest loves was teaching.

Read more than about Margot Kernan

• • •

Ronnie Hogue Sr. was the first African American to receive a total athletic scholarship to the University of Georgia. (Family photo)

Ronnie Hogue Sr., 69

Washington, Sept. 18

Equally the start African American to receive a total athletic scholarship to the University of Georgia, Hogue battled racism in the Deep Southward and set up a path that dozens of young athletes have followed. He was drafted by the so-Washington Bullets, though he was not ultimately chosen for the team. He lived in the Washington suburbs and raised a family while building a career every bit a retail director.

Read more about Ronnie Hogue Sr.

• • •

Stephen F. Williams, 83

Washington, Aug. 7

Williams, a longtime appeals court guess, was a vehement advocate of the philosophy that free markets create free societies. He presided over a host of significant legal cases that touched on energy deregulation, gun command, the powers of independent prosecutors and the Ceremonious Rights Act.

Read more about Stephen F. Williams

• • •

Patrick Ellis was the longtime host of a pop gospel radio show. (WHUR)

Patrick Ellis, 77

Annapolis, July 16

In one of the country'southward leading gospel markets, Ellis hosted 96.3 WHUR-FM's Sun morning gospel plan for more than than four decades, edifice a devoted audition that made his "Gospel Spirit" show the about popular plan in its time slot.

Read more than about Patrick Ellis

• • •

Santos Rodriguez, 45

Hyattsville, July 4

One of the proudest moments of Rodriguez'south life was the day he moved into his Hyattsville home with his family fifteen years ago and realized a dream to become a homeowner. Seeing his children graduate from higher was his other dream.

Read more than about Santos Rodriguez

• • •

Jennifer Marmer, 64

Silver Spring, June 30

Marmer was a lawyer by trade and a musician for fun. She taught herself to play the guitar at a young age and fell into music wholeheartedly.

Read more near Jennifer Marmer

• • •

Garry Garber, 89

Baltimore Canton, June xx

When the District's Latin American Youth Centre ran into financial problem, Garber, a champion bantamweight boxer and community advocate who spent decades as a social worker with the city's Section of Parks and Recreation, fought to keep it from going under.

Read more about Garry Garber

• • •

Howard Croft, 78

Baltimore, June xx

Some of Croft's most important social activism came in the trenches of local politics, focused on statehood for D.C. residents.

Read more than about Howard Croft

• • •

(Family photo) ( and Family photograph/Family photo)

Elaine Fanning, 97

Bethesda, June 16

During World War II, Fanning lived with her parents in New York and worked for the Daily News, where she wrote a column that offered social services tips for military personnel, her family said.

Read more about Elaine Fanning

• • •

Joseph Wood, 83

Montgomery County, June seven

Forest, who had worked for the Energy Department, loved dancing and the beach. In retirement, he and his wife joined an Irish folk dance troupe, the Ring of Kerry Irish Dancers, which took them to diverse St. Patrick's Day parades and a plan in Ireland.

Read more about Joseph Wood

• • •

Jesus Collazos, 67

Arlington, June 6

Collazos immigrated to the U.s. from Columbia and settled in Arlington, Va., where he spent 25 years every bit a postal worker. He and his married woman raised a family in a home he bought after admiring it on his commitment road.

Read more virtually Jesus Collazos

• • •

(D.C. Law)

Keith Darnell Williams Sr., 53

Prince George'south County, June four

Williams, a longtime D.C. police officeholder, spent much of his time on the force mentoring kids equally a school resources officer. Family and friends knew him as a practical joker with a kind eye.

Read more near Keith Williams

• • •

Iraj Askarinam, 76

Washington, June two

Askarinam, an immigrant from Islamic republic of iran, began his work in Washington in jobs washing dishes and busing eatery tables. He learned to cook Italian nutrient and somewhen opened his ain eatery, the Spaghetti Garden, in Adams Morgan in 1981. He became known as 'Mr. Spaghetti.'

Read more than about Iraj Askarinam

• • •

Anatol Surak, 90

Rockville, June 1

Surak emigrated from state of war-torn Belarus to a displaced-persons campsite in Deutschland, fleeing Soviet and Nazi occupation during Earth War II. In 1950, Surak sailed to the U.s. on the USS General C.C. Ballou equally function of a refugee resettlement plan in the war's wake.

Read more than about Anatol Surak

• • •

Luevella Jackson, 87

Washington, May xxx

Jackson witnessed and participated in decades of Blackness history — and ever did so with a vocal in her heart. She was a lover of music and colonnade of her church building and neighborhood.

Read more than most Luevella Jackson

• • •

((Family unit photo))

Robert M. Laughlin, 85

Alexandria, May 28

Through years of rigorous field work, Laughlin, curator of Mesoamerican ethnology at the Smithsonian Establishment's National Museum of Natural History, helped revive the Tzotzil language, rescuing information technology from concluding dilution.

Read more about Robert Laughlin

• • •

Robert Shawn, 100

Herndon, May 24

Born in the Bronx, Shawn was the oldest of 3 sons. All were passionate almost airplanes and went on to serve in the U.South. Ground forces Air Forces in Globe War II. When Paris was liberated, Shawn, a fighter airplane pilot, flew a P-51 Mustang under the Eiffel Tower. The stunt surprised and awed his colleagues.

Read more about Robert Shawn

• • •

Marvin H. Wagner, 90

Springfield, May 23

Wagner helped arts and crafts some of the nation's outset drunken-driving laws based on blood booze content as an official with the National Highway Traffic Safe Administration. He went on to get an attorney representing juvenile offenders in Virginia.

Read more about Marvin H. Wagner

• • •

(Family photo)

Otilia Levi, 97

Gaithersburg, May 23

Levi, who fled Romania with her family in 1941, helped other Jews hide from Nazis during World War II. She later taught herself how to make miniature dollhouses and dried flower arrangements, a meticulous art form that led to the opening of Otilia's Originals in Prince George'south Plaza.

Read more almost Otilia Levi

• • •

Edward McCaffrey, ninety

Olney, May 22

McCaffrey rose through the ranks of the Mail, where he began in the mailroom in 1949 and eventually became banana postmaster full general in 1977. McCaffrey visited places as far abroad every bit Switzerland and Brazil to acquire more than almost the profession and further his career.

Read more well-nigh Edward McCaffrey

• • •

Ricardo Leon, 61

Argent Spring, May 22

Growing up in Guatemala, Leon learned his offset skills as a builder from his male parent. After he came to the United States, he founded and grew his own abode comeback business organization. Now Leon'south wife and four children are trying to keep that legacy going.

Read more than about Ricardo Leon

• • •

(Baltimore Lord's day)

Mary Wilson, 83

Baltimore, May 21

Wilson was known for her magic with animals. She was the first African American woman to serve equally a senior zookeeper at what is at present the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. "She took fourth dimension to sit and watch animals, enjoying the world from their perspective, non ours," said Mike McClure, who worked with Wilson.

Read more about Mary Wilson

• • •

Isidoro Armenta, 73

Wheaton, May 21

Armenta grew upwards in the Mexican port urban center of Tampico, off the Gulf of United mexican states, surviving his neighborhood's sometimes unforgiving streets by taking up boxing, baseball and basketball. Afterward coming to the U.s.a., Armenta landed a task as foreman for a Bethesda physical construction company and subsequently became a co-pastor of his Maryland church. He became a U.S. citizen in the 1990s.

Read more about Isidoro Armenta

• • •

(Tina Hager/(Courtesy of the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum))

William Roosevelt Jerman, 91

Woodbridge, May 16

Jerman, a longtime butler at the White Business firm, was a man who left an impression. He had served presidents from Dwight D. Eisenhower to Barack Obama. "With his kindness and care, Wilson Jerman helped brand the White Business firm a home for decades of First Families, including ours," Michelle Obama said after his expiry.

Read more than near William Roosevelt Jerman

• • •

Dar'Yana Dyson, fifteen

Dundalk, May 16

Dyson, who loved music and dancing, wanted to become a cosmetologist.

Read more about Dar'Yana Dyson

• • •

Haruko Adkins, 90

Fairfax County, May 16

Adkins never forgot the training she received as a young adult female in Nihon on how to adapt flowers. She consistently helped a group at Goodwin House, a retirement customs in the Baileys Crossroads area of Fairfax Canton, Va., arrange flowers for the hallways and common areas.

Read more nearly Haruko Adkins

• • •

Margaret Lerner, 97

Rockville, May xiv

Lerner, a Lumbee Indian who lost her parents to disease when she was a teen, was a hero and office model to many of her relatives. She congenital a life in Washington, including working for the National Security Agency, but remained active in the affairs of her tribe in North Carolina.

Read more about Margaret Lerner

• • •

Jose Mardoqueo Reyes, 54

Washington, May 12

Reyes, who came to the United states as a state of war refugee from El Salvador, was a well-known Net radio presence in the Washington region's Spanish-speaking customs. He and his married woman raised iii children in the Washington area.

Read more about Jose Mardoqueo Reyes

• • •

(Family photo)

Chantee Mack, 44

Silvery Bound, May 11

Mack worked in the Prince George's Canton Health Department's sexually transmitted disease clinic, informing people of their exam results. Information technology was at work that her family believes she contracted covid-nineteen. She was i of more than 100 clinical staff who the county deemed essential to assistance with the county's coronavirus response.

Read more than about Chantee Mack

• • •

((Family photo))

Dave Parker, 80

McLean, May ten

Parker had a beloved of nature that led him to visit each of the country's national parks. While working for the Interior Section, he helped write legislation creating the Redwood and Northward Cascades National Parks, and he promoted visits to the park system.

Read more than about Dave Parker

• • •

(Family photo)

Herbert 'Wolf' Melgar, 56

Prince George's Canton, May nine

Melgar was a broadcaster who organized major Hispanic festivals in the Washington region and galvanized the Salvadoran diaspora to stay engaged in the future of their domicile country. Melgar co-hosted the well-known weekly talk show Salvavisión, an Cyberspace platform he used to discuss political and social affairs in his native El salvador, reaching thousands of Spanish speaking homes in the region.

Read more most Herbet Melgar

• • •

Patricia Thompson, 79

Rockville, May nine

Thompson, a federal employee who worked on health-care policy, would have been "outraged" at the authorities's response to the coronavirus crisis, her daughter said. Thompson worked as an administrator reviewing grant applications for the Section of Health and Man Services. After retirement she became a principal naturalist.

Read more nigh Patricia Thompson

• • •

Anne Stephansky, 93

Olney, May 8

Stephansky was a clinical social worker who went on to become a therapist recognized in the D.C. region for her innovation. After about a decade working at authorities-funded clinics, she switched to private psychotherapy, which in the late '70s was still a relatively new frontier for social workers and a field dominated past psychologists and psychiatrists. Believing that she and her colleagues had valuable insights to offer, Stephansky helped set up a novel kind of practice where psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers collaborated as equals.

Read more almost Anne Stephansky

• • •

(Family photograph/(Family photo))

Phyllis and Stanley Kylis, 93 and 92

Landsdowne, May half-dozen and April 29

Phyllis and Stanley Kylis met on a bullheaded date in Los Angeles in the late 1940s. She was a nurse and a flight bellboy who wanted to travel the world. He was a soldier with a knack for languages. They shared a lifetime of beloved that transcended borders earlier they died of coronavirus but a calendar week apart.

Read more well-nigh Phyllis and Stanley Kylis

• • •

(Family unit photo)

Arlene Chesley, 78

Charles County, May vi

Chesley moved into Charles County Nursing and Rehabilitation — now Sagepoint Senior Living — in 1999. Doctors told her afterwards a encephalon aneurysm and stroke that she would exist lucky to alive for five years. She lived another 21, years filled with bingo, music — Diana Ross and the Supremes were her favorite — and visits from her vi grandchildren.

Read more than near Arlene Chesley

• • •

John Valentine Sr., 75

Upper Marlboro, May half dozen

Valentine started working at Metro washing buses. With a natural talent for fixing cars, he speedily became a bus mechanic and worked for decades at the transit agency'south garage in Bladensburg. He retired from Metro afterwards 29 years. Valentine believed that "if you love what you lot practice, you're not really working," his daughter said. Family said he loved fixing things — from buses to cars, to backyard mowers and washing machines for friends.

Read more about John Valentine Sr.

• • •

Donald Gross, 83

Fairfax Canton, May five

Anne Henry-Gross said she and her married man had shared "the want to serve others and to serve God." Donald Gross was once a priest and worked in the Capuchins religious lodge, serving in Baltimore, Washington and Newark. He left the priesthood at 39, earlier coming together his futurity wife.

Read more than most Donald Gross

• • •

(Family photo)

Connie Galmeijer, 92

Rockville, May v

Galmeijer was a Japanese immigrant and mother of three. Her splendid calligraphy skills helped her get a chore equally a library technical assistant in the East asia Drove at the Academy of Maryland'south McKeldin Library in College Park, where she worked for 27 years.

Read more than about Connie Galmeijer

• • •

Bradley Fields, 68

Washington, May 5

Fields delighted tens of thousands of schoolchildren and families with his intimate alloy of Vaudeville-style storytelling and magic. "I similar the kids show. You lot can become pure wonder, pure thrills," Fields said in a 2022 interview with Vaudevisuals.com. "But I also like the grown-up shows where you can bring people dorsum to that sense of wonder."

Read more about Bradley Fields

• • •

(Family photo)

Jaimala 'Mala' Singh, 65

Lutherville, May 5

Growing up in Republic of india, Singh designed saris and tapestries in that location, then moved for marriage to Baltimore in 1980, eventually condign one of the country's top-selling designers for Calico, a design-store concatenation. But to those who knew her well, Singh was most memorable equally a whirlwind of caring — a charismatic, attentive mother, aunt, wife and friend in stylish Punjabi article of clothing who was always present if someone was hurting or in need.

Read more than near Jaimala Singh

• • •

(Family photo)

Shirley Strang, 87

Fairfax, May 3

Strang died in the Virginian, an apartment complex for seniors in Fairfax County, Va. — nigh three schoolhouse campuses where she spent nearly two decades as a Fairfax County Public Schools fine art instructor.

Read more about Shirley Strang

• • •

Meyer Rubin, 96

Manassas, May ii

Rubin was a researcher whose piece of work at the U.S. Geological Survey included major contributions in radiocarbon dating, mass spectrometry, climate science, archæology and water. He and his colleagues predicted the massive Mount St. Helens volcano eruption four decades ago by examining previous eruptions.

Read more than well-nigh Meyer Rubin

• • •

(Family unit photo)

Patricia Weissenborn, 100

Springfield, May ane

Weissenborn had spunk enough at age 19 to go to the courthouse in rural Montana in 1938 to alter her name to match a movie star's. In her 20s, she ditched her job teaching in a one-room schoolhouse and headed solo to Oregon, for office work at a shipyard gearing upward for World War Two. She insisted on driving into her 92nd year, outfoxing her girl, who had purposely locked the keys in the automobile, by calling AAA and and so hiding her Oldsmobile.

Read more than about Patricia Weissenborn

• • •

(Family photograph)

Ruth Eastward. Shinn, 97

Potomac, May 1

Shinn was a nationally known advocate for gender, racial and LGBT justice who was known in her family for a childlike joy almost things similar sharks' teeth, blooming mountain laurels and swimming. After she retired in 1995, younger people in her family unit associated her with hosting big, warm gatherings at her cottage on the Chesapeake Bay, blowing huge bubbles and pond several times a calendar week into her 90s.

Read more well-nigh Ruth Shinn

• • •

Darrell Jones, 39

Prince George'south County, April 30

Jones, who had a passion for become-go music, worked as a security guard at Miriam's Kitchen, a homeless services organization in Foggy Bottom. He left backside a 5-calendar month-old son.

Read more about Darrell Jones

• • •

(Lena H. Sun)

Yu Lihua, 90

Gaithersburg, April 30

Lihua was one of the nigh important Chinese American writers of her day. She published more ii dozen books, the fruit of a fascination — and obsession — with writing that spanned 75 years. The piece of work guided her and her mostly Chinese-speaking readers through heartbreak, divorce, struggles over identity and belonging, and questions of sex, sexism, friendship and family. She pushed herself, and those she loved, with a mantra she held onto from a grade-schoolhouse teacher who read ane of her early stories: "You can make something of yourself."

Read more most Yu Lihua

• • •

(Yuletta Pringle)

Alyce Gullattee, 91

Washington, April 30

It was not unusual for Gullattee, a pioneering psychiatrist and devoted civil rights activist, to wander solitary down alleys in Northwest Washington, at the acme of the cleft epidemic of the 1980s, searching for a patient she feared had overdosed. She would become one of the nation's most respected experts on substance abuse in a career that spanned one-half a century at Howard University, where she served as an associate professor of psychiatry and every bit manager of the schoolhouse'southward Plant on Substance Abuse and Addiction. Before her expiry, Gullattee was the oldest kinesthesia member at Howard.

Read more about Alyce Gullattee

• • •

(Family photo) ( and Family unit photo/Family photo)

Norma Darling, 93

Arlington, Apr 29

Darling was a ping-pong powerhouse at Walter Reed, refusing to go easy on soldiers wounded in World State of war Two. Fred Darling, her husband, challenged Darling to a friction match after his eardrums were blown out from fighting in the Pacific. It was the seed of a love story that would take the Darlings and their two daughters to Army posts across the globe.

Read more about Norma Darling

• • •

(Family photo)

James Cooley, 82

Argent Spring, April 28

For more three decades, Cooley devoted his mathematics talent to the nation'due south space program, tackling challenges such as the orbital mechanics of satellites and puzzling out various aspects of mission design for the NASA Goddard Space Flying Center. By the time he retired from the middle in Greenbelt, Md., in 1997, Cooley had risen to become an aerospace engineer with supervisory duties, co-ordinate to NASA.

Read more near James Cooley

• • •

Richard Paul Thornell, 83

Washington, April 28

Thornell worked under Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver to help fix the first Peace Corps program. He afterward became a professor at the Howard Academy Schoolhouse of Law.

Read more most Richard Paul Thornell

• • •

Nora Caplan, 93

Sandy Springs, April 25

Caplan, a mother of two and a longtime librarian, enjoyed sharing stories of her childhood and travels in a column she wrote for a community newspaper. At 88, Caplan fulfilled her dream to write and publish a volume. "Noni's Little Problem" was semi-autobiographical, virtually a young girl in the 1930s who establish that showing kindness was the all-time way to deal with bullying.

Read more almost Nora Caplan

• • •

( and family photo/(Family photo))

Mardena Dobson, 89

Washington, April 25

Dobson always brought extra money on field trips — if a student couldn't afford tiffin or snacks, the D.C. instructor would sneak them some pocket alter for nutrient. The longtime educator at Kimball Elementary in Southeast Washington loved education immature students, delighting in seeing offset- and 2nd-graders larn how to read.

Read more about Mardena Dobson

• • •

(Cynthia Frankenburg/National Museum of the American Indian)

Roger Whiteside, 67

Fort Washington, April 24

When he was in high schoolhouse, Whiteside got a camera as a gift. It launched him on a decades-long career every bit a lensman, including 14 years as a staff photographer for the National Museum of the American Indian. His former wife, Carolyn Bell, said his "sweet, humorous" nature helped him photograph a variety of people.

Read more nigh Roger Whiteside

• • •

Annie Mae Fuller, 82, and Connie D. Madden, 64

Suitland and Washington, April 24 and April 27

Fuller was known for her sweet potato pies. Connie D. Madden worked as a teacher's aide. Mother and daughter died inside days of each other in April.

Read more about Annie Mae Fuller and Connie Madden

• • •

(Family unit photo)

Gerald Slater, 86

Washington, April 24

In two decades as an executive at PBS and so WETA, Slater played a cardinal function in the development of public television, expanding its coverage of public diplomacy and the arts. In 1974, during the Senate's Watergate hearings, he took responsibleness for offering up the hearings in prime time, shifting the organisation's image.

Read more than most Gerald Slater

• • •

(Bill Campbell)

Edna Adams, 105

Washington, Apr 21

Adams defied expectations her entire life. Built-in in 1914, she lived to meet the other side of the 1918 flu pandemic, women'southward suffrage, the Great Low and two world wars — all before she moved from her home in Clover, South.C., to the District in the mid-1950s, where worked for more than two decades as a sales associate at Jelleff'due south, a department store in Northwest Washington, until it airtight in 1979.

Read more than about Edna Adams

• • •

(Family photo)

Wogene Debele, 43

Takoma Park, April 21

Debele, who immigrated from Federal democratic republic of ethiopia with her family unit most a decade agone, was eight months pregnant when she decided to render to Holy Cross Infirmary a 2nd time for "a checkup" in tardily March. It was the terminal time Debele's husband and three children would accept her in their midst. She also left backside a newborn son, who was built-in a month premature the day Debele was admitted to the hospital.

Read more than nigh Wogene Debele

• • •

(Family photo)

William East. "Pecker" Jackman, 85

Reston, April 21

Jackman, a retired press spokesman who loved to travel the world with his wife of sixty years, was also a large sports fan. He became a Washington Capitals flavour-ticket holder in 1974, the hockey team's inaugural year, and had flavour tickets to the Washington Bullets, Baltimore Orioles and Washington Nationals at diverse points in his life.

Read more about William Jackman

• • •

H.G. Carrillo, 59

Berwyn Heights, April twenty

Carrillo was chairman of the literary PEN/Faulkner Foundation and a beloved storyteller, telling kaleidoscopic fiction that plumbed the pregnant of the Cuban American experience he said he lived. It wasn't until his death, a week before his 60th birthday, that Carrillo's fans, friends and husband learned his true identity — a man from Michigan, born in Detroit, with no known Latino heritage.

Read more nigh H.M. Carrillo

• • •

Calvin Richardson, 57

Maryland, April xix

Richardson worked at Veterans Affairs Medical Middle in Washington, where he was an addiction therapist who ran substance abuse recovery groups and did case management. "He was always extremely warm and gentle. The veterans loved him," a colleague said.

Read more nearly Calvin Richardson

• • •

(First American Bankshares)

Jack Westward. Beddow, 98

Rockville, April 19

Beddow was a retired pinnacle executive at Get-go American Bankshares who helped guide what was once the largest financial establishment in the Washington area as it became embroiled in the BCCI bank-fraud scandal of the 1980s. He served as president, chief executive and managing director of First American Bankshares for three years until his retirement in 1991. At the time, the $xi billion privately owned financial-holding visitor operated more than 250 branches.

Read more about Jack Beddow

• • •

Veronica Norman, 75

Prince George's County, April 18

Norman worked as a nurse at St. Elizabeths Hospital, the District's psychiatric facility, for twoscore years. "She loved helping people and never got tired of it," her niece said. "She celebrated her altogether, merely if they needed her, she would get to work."

Read more nearly Veronica Norman

• • •

Carla Thompson, 67

Washington, April xviii

Thompson, a patient at St. Elizabeths Infirmary who was struck by covid-nineteen, had no family unit she was in touch with to mark her passing, advocates said. She was undergoing treatment for leukemia and voluntarily living at the District-owned hospital, where she was civilly committed as an outpatient in 2016. She was the fifth of 10 patients to dice amongst a coronavirus outbreak at the city's public psychiatric facility.

Read more about Carla Thompson

• • •

(Family photo)

Ruth Hunter, 96

Washington, April 17

Hunter came to the District in 1944 equally a regime daughter — the young women who arrived to piece of work for federal agencies during World War Two, many of them from small-scale towns like her birthplace, Apollo, Pa. She connected at the Pentagon after the state of war and lived the next eight decades in the Commune.

Read more than nigh Ruth Hunter

• • •

Dolores Guindon Gaffney, 95

Springfield, Apr 17

Gaffney was 17 when she came to Washington in 1941, joining other young women who arrived to aid go on the authorities running during Globe State of war II. She worked for the Department of the Navy and later equally a secretary in Fairfax County schools.

Read more than virtually Dolores Gaffney

• • •

(Family photo)

Van Martel Brathwaite, 67

Beltsville, April 16

Brathwaite served every bit assistant general counsel for the D.C. Department of Health for more than two decades. He had a passion for the law and for his 7th-day Adventist congregation, just his greatest devotion was to his daughter Caprice.

Read more most Van Martel Brathwaite

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(Courtesy of Florie Matondo)

Zoao Makumbi Sr., 75

Prince George's County, Apr 16

Makumbi had his dream job equally a psychologist at an elementary school in Northeast Washington. He told his family unit every year that he planned to retire, but the work, he believed, was besides important. Makumbi'due south winding path to becoming a school psychologist spanned two continents and five decades — from Congo to a Full general Motors factory in Michigan to Howard University to Houston Simple in Ward vii.

Read more well-nigh Zoao Makumbi Sr.

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Alfred Veerhoff, 82

Kensington, Apr 16

Veerhoff was born into a storied D.C. fine art family unit that opened its showtime gallery in the 1870s, but he decided early in life to follow his own path. Instead of art, Veerhoff studied English literature in college and chose journalism equally a career.

Read more nearly Alfred Veerhoff

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James Weaver, 82

Rochester, N.Y., April 16

Weaver worked for four decades in what is now the National Museum of American History and the Smithsonian Institution's performing arts section. He brought in musicians, storytellers and dancers, and used the museum's collection of more than 5,000 instruments to re-create historical music.

Read more about James Weaver

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(Family photograph)

Celine Tracy, 91

Bethesda, Apr 15

Tracy'south whole life was defined by her love of music. She began giving piano lessons to children in 1983 and continued doing so through her retirement in 1999. "She just was a fabulous pianist and believed fully that music would not simply integrate your hands and your mind, only too your heart," said her daughter Cynthia Tracy. "She was a true musician."

Read more most Celine Tracy

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(Carrie Kelly)

Lawrence, 69, and Minnette Nokes, 71

Carroll County, April xv and Apr seven

Lawrence Nokes was admitted to Carroll Hospital Centre on March 30 and intubated. Later most a week in a coma, his prognosis improved, his family unit recalled. He started to breathe on his ain. When he regained consciousness, Nokes asked for just one person: Minnette, his wife of 24 years.

Minnette Nokes had died days earlier, on Apr vii, a day before her 72nd birthday, of a centre attack. The medical examiner's part said she posthumously tested positive for the coronavirus. One time Lawrence Nokes institute out, his animate grew raspy once more. He died on April 15, eight days afterward his wife.

Read more most Lawrence and Minnette Nokes

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(Courtesy of Donna Miller)

Michael Miller, 60

Temple Hills, Apr 15

Miller was rarely spotted alone. In the nine years he worked at the Silverish Spring double-decker depot, he was nigh often seen in "a crowd of fellas," and on summertime weekends he hosted barbecues at his Temple Hills home, playing '70s music while grilling ribs. At that place was nothing that pleased Miller more, said his wife, Donna Miller, than seeing the people around him having a skillful time. He was the first Montgomery County regime employee to lose to his life to the disease.

Read more near Michael Miller

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Marian Briefel, 90

Silver Spring, April fourteen

A longtime Silvery Spring resident, her family described Briefel equally a kind and caring woman who readily took in relatives and friends at various times because of need or circumstance.

Read more about Marian Briefel

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Jeanette B. Iten, 88

Rockville, April 14

A erstwhile Girl Scout, Iten led the program in Staunton, Va., where she raised her family for a half-century. She in one case took about 30 girls camping and taught them first assistance.

Read more about Jeanette B. Iten

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Rosalie Lois Shaver, 89

Fairfax, April 14

Shaver joined Fairfax Canton Public Schools in 1973 as an instructional aide, assigned to a special-education grade for students with hearing impairments. Her interactions with the students then impressed other teachers and administrators that they urged her go a fully certified teacher. She did, and a decade subsequently she was named Teacher of the Year at Mantua Elementary School in Fairfax.

Read more well-nigh Rosalie Lois Shaver

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(Landon School)

Bob Condit, 79

Vienna, April 13

Condit was a truthful believer in community service. Not simply did he personally effort to help others whenever he could, he also instilled the value of service in thousands of students over a 35-year career at Landon School, an independent higher preparatory school for boys in Bethesda.

Read more most Bob Condit

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(Family photo)

Charles H. Simpkinson, 85

Silver Spring, Apr 13

During his career as a psychotherapist, Simpkinson took a holistic approach to his work that combined psychotherapy, spirituality and creativity, his family said. Simpkinson had a passion for the Washington Redskins and enjoyed sailing in his younger days.

Read more nearly Charles Simpkinson

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((Family photograph))

Antoinette "Annette" Meyer, 95

Crownsville, April thirteen

Meyer was the first female deputy sheriff in Prince George's County. She worked on the strength from 1963 to 2000, when she retired at the historic period of 74. Even then, she could fire a 9mm pistol well enough to continue her sidearm. She died at the Fairfield Nursing and Rehabilitation Heart in Anne Arundel Canton.

Read more most Annette Meyer

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(Michael Southward. Williamson/The Washington Post)

Jerry Givens, 67

Richmond, April 13

Givens led the 2nd-busiest execution squad in the country for 17 years, presiding over 62 executions in Virginia before turning against capital punishment and becoming 1 of the land'due south most prominent opponents of the death sentence. He organized protests, testified before lawmakers and met with the family members of incarcerated people and their victims, every bit well equally with corrections officers whom he urged not to perform executions.

Read more virtually Jerry Givens

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(Family photo)

Brian R. Miller, 52

Alexandria, April thirteen

Miller overcame blindness, and a sometimes unaccommodating public didactics arrangement, to become multiple degrees, including a PhD. That journey led him to a career with the U.Southward. Education Department's Rehabilitation Services Administration, where he helped students with disabilities like his, and to a rich and decorated life filled with friends and travel.

Read more about Brian Miller

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(Courtesy of Elizabeth Weller, Deon Crowell's attorney)

Deon Thousand. Crowell, 51

Washington, April 13

Crowell had been in the D.C. jail since 2018, when he was charged with get-go-caste murder in the stabbing death of a D.C. woman. His was the first in-custody death attributed to covid-nineteen at the facility. His attorney had petitioned a D.C. Superior Court approximate to take her customer released every bit he awaited trial, arguing that Crowell's diabetes and other wellness challenges associated with the disease put him at greater risk of contracting the coronavirus.

Read more than nigh Deon M. Crowell

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(Santos-Gaffney family)

Theodore Gaffney, 92

Washington, April 12

Gaffney, a Washington freelance photographer, was asked past Jet magazine to travel with the Freedom Riders in the spring of 1961. He found himself risking his life and documenting 1 of the about tumultuous 48 hours in civil rights history. Gaffney would live six more decades and take many more pictures of presidents, and even Queen Elizabeth, according to his family.

Read more than near Theodore Gaffney

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(Landon Schoolhouse)

Maclear "Mac" Jacoby Jr., 93

Gaithersburg, April 11

Jacoby led a life defined by service — commencement in the U.S. Navy during World War 2 then fighting in Korea as a member of the Air Force. In 1955, Jacoby turned his attention to educating children. During a 65-year career at Bethesda's Landon School — the longest in the school's history — Jacoby served many roles, including two decades as a math teacher, head of the center school and as a varsity tennis autobus.

Read more than most Maclear Jacoby Jr.

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Cynthia Whiting, 66

Charles Canton, April 11

Whiting loved her only granddaughter then much that when the little daughter pointed out places on a map that she wanted to become, Whiting would make it happen. "She spoiled her m-infant rotten," said her daughter, Angelica Whiting, 33. "Every fourth dimension yous saw my girl, my mom was right in that location." At present, Angelica Whiting is struggling to help 7-year-old Mackenzie understand that her grandmother is gone, and why she did not become to say goodbye.

Read more than almost Cynthia Whiting

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(Courtesy of January Hirschfeld)

Steve Joltin, 75

Rockville, April 11

Joltin, who spent his retirement years playing poker and hunting for undiscovered gems, tested positive for the novel coronavirus on April 10. His dr. told his married woman, Barbara, that he still appeared healthy and was likely to make a full recovery. But the next solar day, only after midnight, she was awakened past a call from the nursing facility. Steve had died.

Read more about Steve Joltin

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(Clement Britt/Richmond Times-Dispatch)

Gerald Glenn, 66

Chesterfield, April eleven

Glenn was the founder and leader since 1995 of the New Deliverance Evangelistic Church in Chesterfield, Va. He died on the eve of Easter. Glenn was the first Black chaplain of that community'southward police force department and was a constabulary officer earlier becoming a pastor. "He was a friend and pillar of [the] Richmond faith customs," Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) tweeted following his expiry.

Read more almost Rev. Gerald Glenn

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(Family photo)

Rhonda Clark, 58

District Heights, Apr ix

Clark was a mother of three who worked 14 years in the Prince George'due south County school system. Known to many every bit "Lil Honey," Clark was family unit-minded and fun-loving, with roots in Southwest Washington and a talent for cooking and the card game bid whist. Those who did not know her nickname might have guessed it from the license plates on her white Lexus.

Read more well-nigh Rhonda Clark

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((Family unit photo))

Curtis Orr, 55

Lanham, Apr 9

Orr, the youngest of x children, emigrated from Trinidad and Tobago to the U.s. when he was 25. Growing up impoverished with no indoor plumbing and no clothing or shoes of his own, Orr was determined to not only do well simply to too be generous when he became successful. In late March, days earlier Orr started feeling weak, he went to the grocery store to stock up on food for his family. While at that place, he picked upward cases of water to drop off at the homes of some elderly friends. He as well made a finish to deliver a few masks to a friend, a front end-line worker, who needed them for her family.

Read more nigh Curtis Orr

• • •

Valerie Ball, 77

Arlington, April eight

A native of British Columbia, Ball moved in her mid-20s to the Washington area with a friend from Montreal to work at the International Monetary Fund. During her xxx-twelvemonth career at the IMF, she rose from typist to administrative assistant, a trajectory that allowed her to travel the world.

Read more about Valerie Brawl

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(Family photo)

Chianti Jackson Harpool, 51

Baltimore, Apr 8

Jackson Harpool moved easily from the streets of Baltimore, where she one time worked every bit a social worker helping the homeless and drug-addicted, to a political fundraiser in the city on the arm of her husband, who owns a public relations and marketing house. She spent a week at home waiting for test results, then was rushed to the hospital as her status deteriorated. Earlier she died, Jackson Harpool told her hubby that she was sad. "What are you sorry virtually?" he recalled asking. "I didn't know I was this sick," she said.

Read more about Chianti Jackson Harpool

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Betty Jane Jones, 81

Seat Pleasant, April eight

Jones was the kind of cook who could draw her children within just by the smells. When she took her breadstuff pudding to a cookout, it never made information technology past the forepart door. The host would meet her and grab it, keeping it hidden for a select few. Food was how Jones bonded with family unit.

Read more about Betty Jane Jones

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(Family photo)

Irwin Schorr, 89

Silver Spring, April 7

Schorr, a retired IBM employee and bibliophile, always idea at that place was something more than to learn. Two weeks before he died of covid-19, Schorr signed up for remote saxophone lessons from an unemployed musician in Baltimore.

Read more near Irwin Schorr

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(Courtesy of Linda Flowers)

James N. Flowers Jr., 84

Fort Washington, April 6

Flowers founded a business firm of worship in a vacant machine garage in 1982 and in 38 years built information technology into a handsome brick church building with about 200 congregants in Seat Pleasant, Md. "My dad was just a special, humble, off-white, caring human being of God," said his daughter, Linda Flowers. He was the pb vocalizer of a ring on the rising on the D.C. social club circuit during the 1950s and 1960s.

Read more about James Flowers

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(Courtesy of Michael Hyland)

Annis Creese, 72

Hyattsville, Apr 5

Creese was in her terminal year of instruction Spanish at Northwestern High School in Hyattsville, Md. Nearly everyone who crossed paths with her could feel her warmth, which she projected so strongly some of the children she taught called her "Mom." Creese left behind two grown children and the hundreds of students who passed through her classroom at the Prince George's Canton schoolhouse over her 25 years in that location.

Read more well-nigh Annis Creese

• • •

Betty Robinson, 91

Silver Spring, April 5

Robinson, an avid reader and female parent of two, loved Washington for its vibrant arts and civilization scene. Her children said she oft took them to come across the urban center's museums and, when Robinson retired, she somewhen volunteered at the Smithsonian.

Read more almost Betty Robinson

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(Courtesy of Dave Bainum)

Peter Bainum, 82

Bethesda, April 3

Bainum'southward writings weren't the sort yous'd run across in your neighborhood bookstore. I of his volumes, for example, is titled, "Orbital Mechanics and Formation Flying: A Digital Control Perspective." But in the field of aerospace engineering, the former Howard University professor was "a star," his son said.

Read more nearly Peter Bainum

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Horace and Violet Saunders dancing in 2011, when they were both 88. (Courtesy of Saunders family)

Violet and Horace Saunders, 96

Mount Airy, April 2 and March 29

Saunders was the mayor of every room he walked into — a gregarious chap for whom all life was a performance — while Violet, in her placidity, gracious style, "kept him in his identify, kept him grounded," their granddaughter recalled. If he was belongings forth and got carried away, Half dozen, pleasantly exasperated, might coil her eyes. They died v days apart after catching the virus in Pleasant View Nursing Dwelling house, in Mount Airy, Md.

Read more about Violet and Horace Saunders

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(Family unit photo)

Samuel Kramer, 91

Potomac, April 2

Kramer was a founding member of Congregation Har Shalom in Potomac and spent decades in government service. He worked at the Bureau of the Budget, which eventually became the Office of Management and Budget, and at the National Constitute of Standards and Applied science, from which he retired as deputy manager in 1997. He died in the hospital on the morn he was scheduled to exist discharged.

Read more about Samuel Kramer

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(Family photo)

Sean Boynes, 46

Bowie, April two

Boynes was a natural comedian and loving male parent who always knew when any of "his girls" — his daughters, his wife or his mother — needed a hug. He was born in Silver Spring, graduated from Gonzaga Loftier School, graduated with iii degrees from Howard University, and was a member of the Air Force before becoming a manager of a pharmacy, where he worked until the day he developed symptoms of covid-xix.

Read more most Sean Boynes

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(Family photo)

Richard 'Dick' Passman, 94

Silver Jump, April 1

Passman, a retired aeronautical engineer, designed some of the state'south first fastest shipping and worked on the starting time spy satellite during the Cold War. At Bell Shipping, he worked on the Bong 10-one, the plane piloted by Chuck Yeager that was the showtime to pause the speed of sound.

Read more near Richard Passman

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(Lucian Perkins/The Washington Post)

David C. Driskell, 88

Hyattsville, April ane

Driskell was an artist, art historian, art collector, fine art teacher, author and curator who became a primary sponsor and advocate for the role of African American art in the national civilisation. Every bit an artist, Driskell was best known for a 1956 painting, "Behold Thy Son," a graphic representation of the mutilated corpse of Emmett Till. He served on the fine art faculties of several historically Black colleges but was best known for his amalgamation with the University of Maryland from 1977 to 1998.

Read more than virtually David Driskell

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(Zenobia Shepherd)

Leilani Margurite Jordan, 27

Upper Marlboro, April 1

Jordan'southward mother called her "Butterfly," for her love of collywobbles. She worked part fourth dimension at a Giant supermarket in Largo and continued to piece of work despite the spread of the coronavirus. Jordan's mother, Zenobia Shepherd, tried to explicate the risks of working. But she said Hashemite kingdom of jordan, who had a disability that caused "cognitive delays," impaired her vision and left her reliant on a service domestic dog, probably did non fully understand the potential dangers of the coronavirus. And her daughter's desire to assist others, Shepherd said, was overpowering.

Read more about Leilani Jordan

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(Courtesy of Kenneth J. Moore Jr.)

Kenneth J. Moore, 52

Prince George'south Canton, April 1

Moore was a male parent effigy wherever he went. By day, he helped counsel and guard teenagers who had been arrested in the Commune for the city's Section of Youth Rehabilitation Services. On nights and weekends, he was a dad to his three sons, two stepchildren and many other youths he encountered every bit his children grew upwardly in Prince George's Canton.

Read more than most Kenneth J. Moore

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(Courtesy of Alice Matthews)

Sterling Matthews, threescore

Chester, March 31

Matthews was a veteran of both the U.S. Air Force and U.Southward. Army. He was working in support services at Fort Belvoir when he became ill. He went to the hospital on March 23 to exist tested for the coronavirus but was told he had pneumonia and sent domicile. The Chester, Va., resident returned four days later past ambulance and died 4 days afterwards that at Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center.

Read more about Sterling Matthews

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(Courtesy of Nate Garland)

Jerry Manley, 58

Huntingtown, March 31

Manley was a retired law sergeant beloved for his generosity and wisecracking humor, a devoted volunteer for charities and a married father of four. "A gentle behemothic who'd give y'all the shirt off his back and non expect anything in return," said his neighbor Kelly Brogan.

Read more than nearly Jerry Manley

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(Tracy Shavell)

Gary Holmberg, 77

Mount Airy, March 29

Holmberg was a retired D.C. firefighter who loved sports, pranks and being outside. He grew upwardly in the District and joined the D.C. National Guard afterward graduating from Anacostia High Schoolhouse. He served for 22 years as a firefighter, retiring in 1988 from Engine 15.

Read more than virtually Gary Holmberg

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(Family photo)

Republic of chad Capule, 49

Cheverly, March 29

Capule was an IT projection director. His family remembers him as a cheerful and inquisitive man who was known equally a peacemaker. For eight years, he organized a trivia fundraiser for the Rotary Gild of Dupont Circumvolve, his wife said. He fifty-fifty appeared on one episode of "Jeopardy!" in 2015. He died at St. Agnes Hospital in Fond du Lac, Wis., where he had traveled in March to oversee the installation of a computer system at the infirmary.

Read more about Chad Capule

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(Family unit photo)

Eastern Stewart Jr., 71

Bowie, March 29

Stewart, a military veteran, could manage a crowd and de-escalate conflict like no i else. He was the house managing director at the Bowie Center for the Performing Arts and had worked for nearly a decade at the 800-seat Bowie performing arts center.

Read more than nigh Eastern Stewart

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(Preston Keres/The Washington Post)

Terrance Burke, 54

Hyattsville, March 27

Burke was a well-known school counselor and basketball bus at Northwestern Loftier School in Hyattsville, Md. The Navy veteran had asthma merely was physically fit and ate a healthy nutrition. His expiry came as a shock to his family.

Read more about Terrance Burke

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(Family photo)

Noel Sinkiat, 64

Olney, March 27

Sinkiat planned to retire in December after 41 years of working every bit a nurse at Howard Academy Infirmary. He would finally go on a long motorcycle trip with his friends. He was the beginning member of National Nurses United, which represents about 150,000 health-intendance workers nationwide, to succumb to the virus, the union said.

Read more nearly Noel Sinkiat

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(Family photo)

Maria Linda Villanueva Sun, 61

Newport News, March 25

Sun was, at various times in her life, a restaurateur, interior designer, auditor, stay-at-abode mom and Ground forces wife. It was the terminal of these roles that brought the longtime San Francisco Bay area resident to Newport News, Va., where her husband had recently been transferred to Fort Eustis. The couple bought a house in October and were still in the procedure of moving some items from the West Coast when Sun died of covid-xix.

Read more about Maria Linda Villanueva Sun

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(Office of Mayor Muriel Eastward. Bowser)

George Valentine, 66

Washington, March 27

Valentine was a longtime lawyer in the D.C. Attorney Full general'south Function who later worked equally a legal adviser to Mayor Muriel Eastward. Bowser (D). Those who worked with Valentine described him every bit a stellar chaser who knew the urban center and its laws. Valentine, who went on to Harvard Law School from a modest historically Blackness university in Alabama, defended a long career to public service and mentored young lawyers.

Read more about George Valentine

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(Family photo)

Keith Redding, 59

Fort Washington, March 25

Keith Redding had an easy grin and skilful-natured sense of sense of humor, according to his wife, Dana. They were both members of the Fort Foote Baptist Church motorbike ministry in Fort Washington, Md.

Read more about Keith Redding

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(Courtesy of Valerie Balser)

Susan Rokus, 73

Loudoun County, March 25

Rokus, a Loudoun County Public Schools reading tutor, died of health complications related to the coronavirus. Rokus started as a first-grade teacher in 1969 and retired in 2014, staying on part time to tutor struggling readers at two simple schools. She was the kickoff known death in the county.

Read more about Susan Rokus

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(Courtesy of Katharine Maddox)

Sterling "Ruffin" Maddox Jr., 78

Arlington, March 24

Maddox was a trained ceremonious engineer. He was built-in and raised in Montgomery County and crossed the Potomac River only in the past decade to live close to his daughters and beloved grandsons in Northern Virginia. He served a brief stint in the Maryland Legislature 5 decades ago and later became a developer, helping establish neighborhoods in the region.

Read more about Sterling Maddox

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Michael John Summers, 65

Suitland, March 22

Summers had a talent for photography. Information technology was skill that served him well in his piece of work as a real manor appraiser. He was a quiet man who enjoyed attending church building and occasional trips to Atlantic Urban center.

Read more about Michael John Summers

• • •

(Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in America)

John-Sebastian Laird-Hammond, 59

Washington, March 20

Laird-Hammond had been a member of Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in America since the belatedly 1980s and had for the past xiv years run its twenty-four hours-to-day operations every bit business organization manager. He was the outset person to dice of the novel coronavirus in the District.

Read more about John-Sebastian Laird-Hammond

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Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2020/04/06/dc-maryland-virginia-victims-coronavirus/

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