Jennie
Benedetto
Volpe
, 98, the wife of late
Massachusetts Governor John A.
Volpe
, whose life took her from poverty in the mountains of rural Italy to the corridors of power in Washington, D.C., has died.
Mrs.
Volpe
died on Wednesday morning, peacefully and in her sleep, at the Lafayette Convalescent Home in Marblehead, of natural causes. She was attended by family throughout her final days.
Known for her natural warmth and infectious laugh and a graciousness refined by three decades in politics and public life, Mrs.
Volpe
was born Giovannina
Benedetto
in 1912 in Pescosansonesco, Italy, in the
mountainous eastern central Abruzzo region, the first daughter of Sante B. and Angelina
Benedetto
. She emigrated to the United States through Ellis Island in 1915 and later graduated from Wakefield High
School, becoming a registered nurse at Winchester Hospital and Bellevue Hospital in New York City.
During her husband's three-terms as Massachusetts Governor, 1960-1964 and 1966-1968, Mrs.
Volpe
worked to improve the quality of the state's mental-health facilities and she delivered numerous addresses
on her husband's behalf on the campaign trail. She would accompany her husband to Washington, D.C. in 1969, when he became the country's first Secretary of Transportation and later to Rome, Italy, in 1973,
when he was appointed U.S. Ambassador to Italy. Guests at Ambassador and Mrs. Volpe's Rome villa included prominent political figures and stars of Italian cinema.
During Volpe's years at the State House, Mrs.
Volpe
became an amateur milliner, specializing in making hats that featured elaborate floral displays. Her lifelong fascination with flowers included taking up
the Japanese art of sumi-e, a still-life painting style characterized by simple natural scenes and muted colors using an "ink and wash" technique - producing many accomplished works. She also studied
Japanese flower arranging and was a vigorous gardener, with a love of roses, well into her later years, after she and Governor
Volpe
retired to Nahant, in 1978, following their four years in Rome. "My mother had a genuine love of life, of art and of people," said her daughter Jean
Volpe
Rotondi. "Being gracious came so naturally to
her - it never felt forced but was always accompanied by genuine warmth and a twinkle in her eye."
Mrs.
Volpe
is survived by her daughter, Jean
Volpe
Rotondi and her husband Roger, of Paris, France and Naples, Fla.; four grandchildren, Joy Rotondi of Marblehead, Rod Rotondi of Los Angeles, Calif., John
Rotondi of Boston and James Rotondi of New York, N.Y.; and four great-grandchildren, Ian Rotondi-Gray, Isaiah Rotondi-Gray, Geneva Cann and Lilli Rotondi. Her husband, John, and her son John A. "Jack"
Volpe
Jr., predeceased her. Mrs.
Volpe
is the sister of Belinda Devine, of Wakefield. She also leaves many loving cousins, nieces, nephews, grand-nieces and grand-nephews.
Visiting hours will be held on Monday, Jan. 17, from 4-8 p.m., at the McDonald Funeral Home, 19 Yale Ave., Wakefield. Services will be held from the funeral home at 9:30 a.m., Tuesday, Jan. 18, followed
by a funeral Mass at 10:30 a.m. at St. Florence Church, 47 Butler Ave. in Wakefield.
Read
Jennie
Volpe's Obituary and Guestbook on www.mcdonaldfs.com.
Visitation
McDonald Funeral Home
19 Yale Ave.
Wakefield
,
MA
US
01880
Monday, January 17, 2011, 4:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Service
St. Florence Church
47 Butler Ave.
Wakefield
,
MA
US
01880
Tuesday, January 18, 2011, 10:30 AM
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