Descendants of Dennis Lally

Citations


Irene C. Klausing

1Louisville Courier Journal, Newspaper.
"LALLY, IRENE C., 90, of Louisville, died Tuesday at Christopher East Nursing Home. Survivors include two sons, Robert P. and James J. Lally; two daughters, Betty Cassady and Mary Jane Baron; two brothers, Richard and Jack Klausing; 19 grandchildren; and 30 great- grandchildren. Her funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Tuesday at St. James Catholic Church, with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Visitation will be from 2-9 p.m. Monday at Bosse Funeral Home, Barret and Ellison Aves. A vigil service will beheld at 4 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy may be made to Mass of the Air."


27. Joseph Henry Lally Sr.

1Louisville Courier Journal, Newspaper, Section: NEIGHBORHOODS Edition: NEIGHBORHOODS EAST COUNTY Page: 10N, 10 Apr 1991.
"April 10, 1991

ON PAR FOR CHARITY
GOLF TOURNEY TO BENEFIT LITTLE SISTERS OF THE
POOR

By TERRY WELLS


Article Text:

Avid golfer Steve Fogarty doesn't usually need a great excuse to hit the links. But he
found one anyway -- the Little Sisters of the Poor.

The Catholic order, internationally known for charitable works with elderly and poor
people, will soon dedicate its new St. Joseph's Home for the Aged in Louisville after
a 14-year absence from the city.

After Fogarty, a stockbroker, was asked to donate, he and several friends decided to
organize a tournament for the Little Sisters. They hope to make the new tournament
an annual event.

"Anybody who is is familiar with the Little Sisters knows what a good cause they are,"
said Fogarty, of Vieux Carre. "They're solely dependent on charitable contributions,
and we're hoping to keep this going for them each year."

The tournament is set for 1 p.m. Monday at Wildwood Country Club, 5000
Bardstown Road, one of Louisville's more challenging courses. The rules call for
foursomes to play a best-ball scramble.

"It caters to the golfer who likes to make aggressive shots in a team context that they
wouldn't normally try," said the tournament's treasurer, Mark Zoeller, of Benjie Way.

The tournament is named for the late Joe Lally Sr., a Kentucky Golf Hall of Fame
member who spent 35 years as the pro at Seneca Golf Course. Lally died in January.
When his funeral notice asked people to donate to the Little Sisters, a member of the
order asked the family to lend its name to the tournament.

"The Little Sisters was always one of dad's favorite charities. It was one he felt
particularly close to," said Joe Lally Jr., who followed in his dad's footsteps and
serves as the pro at Owl Creek Country Club in Anchorage.

Joe Lally Sr. started his career as a golf teacher at age 14. He was Kentucky's first
PGA Club Pro of the Year and played 10 years on the PGA's winter tours.

A 1928 newspaper photo used in fliers for the tournament shows Lally in mid-swing
when he was an 18-year-old pro at a New Albany golf course.

Zoeller said preparations for the tournament will cost about $5,300, and organizers
hope to net $7,500 to contribute to St. Joseph's. Players will pay $100 each to
register.

Sponsors include Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. Inc., an investment banking firm where
Fogarty works, and Wehr Constructors Inc., the company that built the Little Sisters'
new facility. Reservations are still available by calling Fogarty at 587-6053 or Zoeller
at 451-0257.

Sister Maureen, one of five members of the order working to ready the nursing home
for occupancy, was preparing last week for final inspections. A dedication ceremony
is set for May 15 at the facility at 15 Audubon Plaza.

"There is a great deal to be done right now," she said. "It's a wonderful challenge."

Financial problems forced the order to close an earlier home at 10th and Magazine
streets in 1977 after more than a century of caring for the elderly and poor in
Louisville. Members of the order vowed to return, however.

In May 1989, the order fulfilled its promise, breaking ground on land donated by the
Archdiocese of Louisville.

The 165,000-square-foot building will provide 50 beds for nursing-care patients and
30 apartments for self-sufficient seniors. All residents must be eligible for Medicaid.

Volunteers working with the Little Sisters raised $3.5 million to pay for construction
and other costs, and hope to raise an additional $2.3 million. Most of that money
came from foundations and businesses -- although the Little Sisters were delighted
recently when an Eagle Scout candidate, Alex Lindle of Anchorage, organized a raffle
and raised $48,000 for the cause.

Anne Hoeck, who directed an 18-month campaign to raise money, said she was one
of many Louisville residents saddened when the former home shut down 14 years
ago. The facility offered top-notch care, Hoeck said.

"It's another world; you can't call it a nursing home or anything like that," Hoeck said.
"You're extremely fortunate if you get to go to the Little Sisters" to live.

Hoeck said she was confident the tournament would be able to establish a reputation
and earn money each year, despite the city's already full card of tournament dates.
Forty-nine charity golf events are scheduled this year, organizers said.

Sister Maureen said the Little Sisters will have to continue seeking donations to make
up the difference between costs and the modest payments Medicaid makes for each
resident's care. But she said she is not worried.

"People here have been very good to us," she said. "We know this (tournament) is
going to become one of many events to help us continue in our work."

Caption: STAFF PHOTO BY SAM UPSHAW JR.

Steve Fogarty, left, and Mark Zoeller, right, have helped to organize a golf
tournament to aid the Little Sisters of the Poor. Mother Catherine, second from left,
and Sister Maureen are members of the order.

Caption: PHOTO BY SAM UPSHAW JR.
DISCARD

Copyright 1991 The Courier-Journal

Record Number: LVL294684.".

2Louisville Courier Journal, Section: SPORTS Edition: METRO Page: 03D, 29 Oct 1990.
"October 29, 1990

KGA HALL OF FAME TO INDUCT LALLY, DOLL, READ
TONIGHT


Article Text:

Two PGA professionals and an amateur who was active in the Kentucky Golf
Association will be inducted into the Kentucky Golf Hall of Fame tonight at 7:30 at
the annual KGA awards banquet at the Executive Inn.

The inductees are professionals Joe Lally Sr. of Louisville and Pete Doll of Frankfort
and the late Lee S. Read of Louisville.

Lally, 79, retired as head golf pro at Seneca Golf Club in 1980. His first job was at
New Albany Country Club, where in 1924 he was the golf pro at age 14. He left that
job in 1929 to become the pro at Shawnee and remained there until 1945 when he
took over at Seneca.

Doll retired as head professional and greens superintendent at Frankfort Country
Club in 1980. A PGA member for 39 years, his first job was at Cherokee Golf
Course. After one year, he left to take over at Iroquois and remained for 13 years
before going to the Frankfort club in 1960.

Read, one of the founders of the Kentucky Golf Association, was active in the
promotion of junior golf. He was a member of the USGA Junior Golf Committee and
helped organize the Tri-State Junior Championship, an annual event for the top 12
juniors from Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio. The KGA recognizes his achievement
annually at the State Amateur with the low junior receiving the Lee S. Read Trophy.

Copyright 1990 The Courier-Journal

Record Number: LVL264955.".

3Holy Trinity Church, New Albany, Church Records, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA.
Godparents: Michael Lally and Catherine Milligan.

4Louisville Courier Journal, Section: NEWS Edition: METRO Page: 04B, 15 Jan 1991.
"January 15, 1991

JOSEPH LALLY, FORMER PGA GOLF PRO, DIES AT 80

Section: NEWS
Edition: METRO
Page: 04B

Article Text:

Joseph H. Lally Sr., retired PGA golf professional, died yesterday of cancer at St.
Matthews Manor Nursing Home. He was 80.

He played on the PGA Tour from 1935 to 1945.

He was head pro at Seneca Golf Course from 1945 until 1980, when he retired. He
was the first pro at Shawnee Golf Course, where he worked from 1929 to 1945.

Lally began his career as golf pro at the New Albany Country Club in 1924.

In 1962, he was named Kentucky's first PGA Golf Pro of the Year.

He was past president of the Kentucky section of PGA and longtime chairman and
organizer of the Employment Committee of the Kentucky section of PGA.

Lally had taught golf at U of L, several YMCA branches, the YWCA, Jewish
Community Center, Lawyers' Auxiliary and Newcomers Club.

He was inducted into the Kentucky Golf Hall of Fame last year.

Survivors include his wife, the former Irma Winkler; two sons, Joseph H. Jr. and
Terry E. Lally; three daughters, Nancy C. Stromberg of Carmel, Ind., Dr. Kathleen
Lally of Milwaukee and Patricia L. Minton; a brother, Charles E. Lally of Palatine,
Ill.; and 14 grandchildren.

The funeral will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Raphael the Archangel Catholic
Church, Bardstown Road and Lancashire Avenue, with burial in Calvary Cemetery.

Visitation at Ratterman's, 3711 Lexington Road, will be from 1 to 9 p.m. today.

The family requests that expressions of sympathy take the form of contributions to
Little Sisters of the Poor Building Fund.

Caption: Joseph H. Lally Sr.

Caption: 1974 FILE PHOTO
FILE LOCATION LALLY, JOE SR.

Copyright 1991 The Courier-Journal

Record Number: LVL278634.".

5Tombstone.

6Deed Records/ Floyd County, IN.

7Kentucky Marriage License.


Irma Minnie Winkler

1Kentucky Marriage License, 956.

2Louisville Courier Journal, Newspaper, 10B, 7 May 1995.

3Kentucky Birth Records.
P. 1 of 2.

4Kentucky Birth Records.
P. 2 of 2.

5Tombstone.


29. Charles J. Lally

1Holy Trinity Church, New Albany, Church Records, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA.
Godparents: Harry Edward Lally and Mae Josephine (Milligan) Robertson.

2Louisville Courier Journal, Newspaper, 6B, 30 Apr 1995.
Obit.

3Louisville Courier Journal, 6B, 30 Apr 1995.

4Tombstone.


Ann Scheda

1Tombstone.


Ruth Hampton

1Louisville Courier Journal, Newspaper, Metro, 8 Oct.
"Ruth Hampton Lally died Saturday, October 5, 2002 at Norton Audubon Hospital.
She was a native of Louisville, a retired employee after 25 years of service at Chevron Standard Oil of Kentucky and she was a member of St. Raphael Church.
She was preceded in death by her husband John R. Lally.
She is survived by her son, Kenneth R. Lally; a daughter, Carol Lally; four grandchildren, Shannon Hanington and Sean, Michael and Brent Lally; and seven great-grandchildren.
The funeral will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Martha's Catholic Church, 2825 Klondike Ln, with burial in Calvary Cemetery. Visitation will be from 4-8 p.m. Tuesday at Highlands Funeral Home, 3331 Taylorsville Road."