Sara (Dalton) ‘Bee’ Simont

CORNWALL — Sara (Dalton) Simont died Feb. 27, 2016, following a brief illness. 

Known all her life as Bee, she was 97 and one half at the time of her death. She was a longtime resident of Cornwall, and the widow of Marc Simont.

Bee was a Tarheel, born and bred as they say in her hometown, Reidsville, N.C. In spite of her many years living in New York and Cornwall, she never lost the lilt of her childhood accent. 

She met her husband, Marc, a Catalan born in Paris, at a USO dance near Fort Bragg in 1944. They were married in 1945, beginning a relationship that lasted until 2013, when Marc died.

Bee attended Hollins College and was a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In the 1960s, after graduate work at New York University in  remedial education, she became an inspiring teacher of reading to generations of reluctant or dyslexic young people, first at the Lorge School in New York  City and later at the Marvelwood School when it was in Cornwall.

She was a dedicated reader, writer and poet, whose work appeared in journals  and small magazines. In 2014, she published “The Green Scarf,” a collection of her short stories and poems, which she delighted in giving away to her friends. Copies are still available at the Cornwall Library.

Bee and Marc were part of a circle of artists and writers centered in Cornwall that included James Thurber and Rose Algrant. It was Algrant who suggested that her artist friends organize a show to display their work. Bee was one of the founders and supporters of the annual Rose Algrant Art Show, now in its 57th year.

A lifelong Democrat, Bee served as chair of the Cornwall Democratic Committee during the 1950s. 

She had a no-nonsense view of politics and public fuss. She famously declined to be a volunteer at the town’s spotting post during the Cold War, declaring that the Russians had no intention whatsoever of sending aircraft to bomb Cornwall.

Bee leaves a son, Marc Dalton “Doc” Simont, and his wife, Lisa, of Cornwall; a nephew, Sumner Ireland and his partner, Melissa, of Salisbury, and their daughters, Ginette and Sara; another nephew, Reid Dalton and his wife, Mary, of Burlington, N.C., and their three daughters, Jane, Mary Margaret and Sarah. 

Bee’s sister-in-law and dear friend, Genevieve (Simont) Ireland, lived with her in Cornwall from 2009 until she died in 2014.

A memorial service is planned for early summer.

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