MONADNOCK LEDGER-TRANSCRIPT
HANCOCK

Christopher Hussey Adams Jr.

Former Hancock man began career in NYC

CHESTER SPRINGS, Pa. — Christopher “Kit” Hussey Adams Jr., formerly of Hancock, passed away peacefully on Jan. 21, 2010, at the Gwynedd Square Center in Lansdale, Pa.

He was born in 1924 in Geneva, Ill., to Christopher Hussey Adams Sr., and Susan Billow Adams.

His parents moved to Hancock in 1950. Kit graduated from Kings School in Stamford, Conn., in 1942, and Bowdoin College in 1947.

During World War II he served in the U.S. Navy, ultimately as ensign, and spent 14 months as line officer on a Landing Ship Medium in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater.

Shortly after the war, he moved to New York City. He soon met Jean Marian Lausmann, a Portland, Ore., native, who was then working at the United Nations. In 1952, after Jean returned from a U.N. session in Paris, the two were married. They later had three sons.

While in New York City, Kit began a lifelong career in the homebuilding and housing-related industries. In the 1950s, he worked at American Houses Inc., in Allentown, Pa. He then spent two decades at CertainTeed Corporation in Valley Forge, Pa., ultimately as manager of marketing research and then marketing consultant. He later worked for Bickford Development Corporation in Houston.

Kit and Jean moved to Hancock in 1990. They were active in town affairs and generous hosts to many visitors. After Jean’s death in 1999, Kit moved to Chester Springs, where he lived with his oldest son and family for three-and-one-half years until needing specialized care.

Kit loved classical music, the opera, and literature, and served for three years as president of Friends of the Library at the Tredyffrin Public Library in Strafford, Pa.

He will be remembered for his kindness, integrity, and creativity. Inspired by The New Yorker magazine — especially its humor and “Talk of the Town” — he wrote satirical opinion pieces, articles, and reviews that he distributed to family and friends. He once wrote an owners manual for a “MLOCK” (an imaginary clock he conceived of that would tell metric time). He wrote radio plays for his sons and witty and insightful letters. He built miniature furniture, restored an antique grandfather’s clock, and inspired in his sons a love of music, books, storytelling, woodworking, and the great outdoors.

He is survived by son Christopher and his wife, Karen; son Peter and his wife, Robbin; son Daniel; grandchildren Kimberly, Lauren, and Benjamin; niece Lynn (Ellis) Gustafson; nephew Randy Powers, and their families; and the family of a second nephew, the late Richard Ellis.

His family suggests that donations be made to the Hancock Town Library, 25 Main St., P.O. Box 130, Hancock 03449.

- Jan
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