Jean (Hamant) Gray

NORFOLK — Jean (Hamant) Gray, 91, of Glens Falls, N.Y., and formerly of Norfolk died Nov. 22, 2012, at The Pines of Glens Falls.Jean was born in New Haven, Mass., to Frances (Clark) and Max J. Hamant on Nov. 21, 1921. She graduated from Newton High School and attended Wheaton College in Norton, Mass., before transferring to the University of Wisconsin. She graduated cum laude from Wisconsin in 1943 with a BA in psychology.During her junior high school years, she wrote for the school paper, The Transmitter, and in 1936, Jean interviewed Bette Davis. She was news editor of the high school paper, The Newtonite, and was class president. She was a member of the National Honor Society.In college, Jean modeled and worked for Filene’s. She was a member of the Delta Gamma Sorority. She was a summer counselor at Birchmont camp in New Hampshire. She continued her interest in journalism, joining the news staff for the Wheaton News.She married Cpl. Almon D. Gray in December 1943 and they moved to Kansas for three years while Al was stationed there with the Air Force. They found their way back to the Natick/Framingham, Mass., area, and started their family. Jean became a bank branch manager for the Framingham National Bank while Al worked in Boston. In 1961, Al’s position with the insurance company brought them to Glens Falls. Jean went to work for A.N. Heber and Associates, a temp employment agency, where she was personnel manager.Jean joined First National Bank in 1969 as a personnel assistant. During the next 14 years, she rose to be the first female vice president in the bank’s history. She retired in 1983 but continued as a personnel consultant for another five years.In 1983, she and Al moved to Jean’s grandparents’ ancestral home in Norfolk. They continued to travel between Connecticut and their summer home in Essex, N.Y., until a few years before Al’s passing. During their retirement, she and Al took many road trips. The most memorable one was driving along the coast of California and visiting the wine country.In 2002, Jean sold the beloved Clark family home where her parents were married and where she and Al spent their honeymoon. She became one of the first residents of the new Geer Village campus in North Canaan. She was the first Resident Council president and held that position for several years.Another move in 2011 brought Jean to Queensbury, N.Y., to be closer to her family.Throughout her career, Jean was very active in the communities where she lived. She was treasurer/assistant director of the Red Cross and director of the hostesses for Greeters Inc. in Natick.In Glens Falls, the number of organizations and community activities in which she was involved was extensive. She served on the Mayor’s Citizens Advisory Committee, was a member of the Board of Trustees for the Presbyterian Church, founder of the Youth Employment Service, co-founder and director of the Volunteer Service Bureau, which became the Voluntary Action Center, was vice president and membership chair for the junior high school PTA, secretary and treasurer of the Employee Assistance Program and director and secretary of the Adirondack Regional Chambers of Commerce.For several years, Jean was president of the League of Women voters, president of Zonta and president of the board of directors for the Community Workshop. She served on the Board of Trustees of Crandall Library from 1971 to 1983 and was Community Chest director. She served on the Assessment Task Force for the Glens Falls Board of Education, the Craft Advisory Council for BOCES and the National Association of Bank Women. Jean was awarded and honored for Partners in Industry and for her dedication in the Voluntary Action Center.Jean wrote and taught for seven years, the course Women in Management at Adirondack Community College.She and Al hosted students from Vietnam, Granada and India.Jean continued to serve in the community of Norfolk. She was president of the Women’s College Club, the Colebrook Garden Club and the Norfolk Library Association. She was treasurer of the Board of Directors at Meadowbrook, a senior community. She was a member of the Isabella Eldridge Club, of which her grandmother was a founding member. Jean was a trustee and secretary of the Norfolk Library and she was involved in the business and investment committee for the Church of Christ.Jean’s other interests included gardening and bridge, and she was an avid reader. The Norfolk area is rich in family history, and she enjoyed riding through Cornwall, Falls Village and Winsted as well as Norfolk. Her grandfather, Dr. Irving L. Hamant, a longtime physician in Norfolk, was largely responsible for pasteurization of milk in Connecticut. Another grandfather, Myron N. Clark (his wife was Minnie C. Beebe) was president of Norfolk Savings Bank. Other ancestors include the Stevens, Spauldings, Ives and Beebes.Jean was predeceased by her husband of 53 years, Almon, and her brother Richard Clark Hamant. She is survived by her daughter, Leslie Armando and her husband, Gabe, of Queensbury; her son, Paul, and his wife, Helene, of Essex, N.Y.; one grandson, Nathaniel Gray, and his wife, Jill, of Washington state; and several nieces, nephews and cousins.Although Jean loved flowers, she loved her cats as well. In lieu of flowers, she would request any donations noted in her name be made to the Mohawk Hudson Humane Society, 3 Oakland Ave., Menands, NY 12204;, Pet Connection/WTEN, 341 Northern Blvd., Albany NY 12204; or RENEW, Mary Ann Schultz, PO Box 87, Essex, NY 12936.Arrangements are under the care of Singleton Sullivan Potter Funeral Home in Queensbury. To send an online condolence, go to www.sbfuneralhome.com.

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