Obituary of Rosemary Rita Zito Molinaro
Please share a memory of Rosemary to include in a keepsake book for family and friends.
In Memory of Rosemary Rita Zito Molinaro
1921-2021
Rosemary Rita Zito Molinaro passed away at home in Kings Point, NY on August 25, 2021, after 100 years of gracing this Earth with her loving heart and beauty, winning smile and smart, inquisitive mind. Her strong-willed optimism of “I can, I will, I must” was matched by her unconditional love of her family.
She reveled in motherhood and loved children, gave selflessly as a devoted wife to Albert, mother to Lorraine and Valerie, also of Kings Point, and grandmother to Michelle Birnbach Katz, while also welcoming her son-in-law Howard and grandson-in-law Danny into the family.
Children naturally gravitated to her, and she found gratification as a volunteer at the Head Start program in the City of Peekskill school system and as a substitute teacher at Church of the Assumption, Peekskill, as well as a volunteer at The Field Library, Peekskill.
Born on May 5, 1921, in The Bronx, she graduated from Evander Childs High School in 1939 with honors and went on to business school to learn Gregg Shorthand stenography. She started out as a bookkeeper at The Fireside Inn, Manhattan, preceded each work day by Mass, and then was in customer service and various other roles at Macy’s, while she waited patiently for her husband to return from Army service overseas during World War II.
She was a gifted writer of poetry and prose, loved books, libraries, birds and trees and would arise at dawn to search in philosophy, religious and medical books for answers to the question “why?”
Rosemary was very civic-minded, always wondering why civics was no longer taught in schools, was active in community matters and found time to take college courses at Fordham University.
She was a proud government employee in the late State Senator Frank Padavan’s Office, the Queens District Attorney’s Office and New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, from which she retired, and she always had an American flag displayed in her home, whether in The Bronx, Peekskill, Albany, Oakland Gardens or Kings Point.
Her unconditional love and tireless care were served with a cup of tea which “made everything better”, healing many wounds.
She was interred in a private service with the assistance of Fairchild Sons, Inc. Funeral Chapel at Nassau Knolls Cemetery in Port Washington, NY, under a cherry tree with chimes playing from the bell tower.
In lieu of flowers, remembrances made with the donation of a favorite book in her name at a local library would bring a smile from Heaven.