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NON-LICENSED STAFF Although not licensed funeral directors, these members of our staff are vitally important toward the operation of our firm. These individuals make it possible for us to professionally coordinate funerals with the quality of service our community has come to expect from us.
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 | O'Neill Funeral Home Staff
The non-licensed staff of O'Neill Funeral Home
Pictured from left Paul Ingraham, Bernard Lynch, Bernard Henebery, Francis O'Neill. |
 | Paul Ingraham, Support Staff
Paul has been a familiar face at the O'Neill Funeral Home for the past 21 years. He retired from First National Grocery Stores in 1986 where he was the manager of the Watertown store as well as several others in the area. A long time resident of Oakville, Paul currently lives with his wife Lorette in Waterbury. He is a member of Saint Mary Magdalen Church where he is a Eucharistic minister, a member of the Knights of Columbus Arch Bishop Whalen Council. As well as a Charter member of the Oakville V.F.W. |
 | Francis O'Neill, Support Staff
Fonzi has been with O'Neill Funeral Home since 2004. He retired from the United States Post Office in 2003 after 37 years of service as a letter carrier. He has been a resident of Oakville for the past 35 years, where he lives with his wife Judy. He is a member of Saint Mary Magdalen's Parish in Oakville and the Washington Hill Club in Waterbury. |
 | Bernard Henebery, Support Staff
Bernie has been working at O'Neill's since his retirement in 2006, He is a Communicant of Blessed Sacrament church, the Waterbury Elks club and the Waterbury YMCA. He lives with his wife Margaret in Waterbury |
 | Bernard Lynch
Bernie has been working in the funeral service industry since his retirement from the United States Post Office in 1996. He has been with O'Neill Funeral Home for four of the last eleven years. A life long resident of Waterbury he currently resides in the Town Plot section along with his wife Louise. Bernie is a member of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, as well as the Connecticut Genealogy Society and the Mattatuck Museum. |
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