Death of Daniel Lewis Hickey, 1947

The Times, Feb 3, 1947

Hickey – In San Mateo, Feb 2, 1947, Daniel Lewis Hickey, dearly beloved husband of Nellie Pauline Hickey, brother of Mrs Helen Judge, Portland, Ore. A member of the Pacific Service Employees Association.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday, Feb 4, 1947 at 2 pm at the Chapel of Crosby-N Gray & Co, 231 Park Road, Burlingame.

Marriage Nellie Paulin and Benjamin Bantly, 1951

Times Colonist 26 July 1951

Well-known Victorians wed

Victoria friends will be interested in the announcement that Mr Benedict Bantly and Mrs Nellie Hickey were married in Burlingame, Calif on July 18.

Now on an extended honeymoon, Mr and Mrs Bantly will spend a brief time in Victoria Friday, arriving on the Seattle boat at noon and leaving again on the afternoon boat for Vancouver, en route to England.

Both wedding principals are well known here, Mrs Bantly being the former Miss Nellie Pauline of Victoria, and Mr Bantly being one of the city’s outstanding music teachers some years ago.

Obituary, Nellie Paulin Hickey Bantly

 

The Times, 27 Sep 1954

Bantly – In San Mateo, September 25, 1954, Nellie Hickey Bantly, beloved wife of Benedict Bantly; loving sister of Mrs Polly Williams of Vancouver, BC; Mrs Nugent Short of Victoria, BC; Mrs Violet Lapraik of Etna, Calif, and Fred a Pauline of Victoria, BC; also survived by several nieces and nephews.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday, September 28, 1954 at 2:00pm at the Colonial Mortuary of Crosby-N, Gray & Company, 2 Park Road, Burlingame.  Internment will be in the family plot in Victoria, BC.

Benjamin Bantly Concert, 1935

Monrovia News, 9 December 1935

Local Orchestra will be heard Friday Night

A distinctive musical event occurs locally Friday night when the Community Symphony Orchestra will play the first performance anywhere in the world of a composition by Benedict Bantly, concertmaster of the orchestra, “Valse Grotesque”.  Mr Bantly wrote the composition a number of years ago for the piano solo and used it as such in concert appearances throughout Germany and England.

Recently he has rewritten the number as an orchestral composition, and in this arrangement the valse will be given its first hearing Friday night of this week.  The number is scored for a very rich instrumentation – the usual strings and the brasses and woodwinds plus bass clarinet and an extensive battery of percussion instruments including typani, side drum, bass drum, cymbals, triangle, tom-tom, Chinese gong and tambourine.  A number of Mr Bantly’s friends from his home community, Puente, are planning to attend the concert.

Other numbers on the program include the Largo from Dvorak’s “New World Sympathy”.  Tschaikowsky’s [sic] ever popular “Nutcracker Suite” and Bizet’s second suite from the incidental music to Daudet’s “L’Arlesienne”.  In the minuet movement of this suite.  Miss Margerete Weigel will play the famous flute solo.

An additional number which will move the great charm is a quartet by Mozart for flute, violin, viola and cello.  This number will be played by Messrs Fitzgerald, Bantly, Scott and Riley.

Benedict Bantly Concert, Puente, CA 1924

The Los Angeles Times, 29 August 1924

St Joseph’s Church, Puente

Puente, Aug 28 – St Joseph’s Catholic Church, opened for the first time last Sunday, was the scene of a sacred concert and organ recital tonight, which was attended by an audience taxing the capacity of the new auditorium.  It was the first time many of the residents had had an opportunity to hear the new organ and to view the interior of one of the most beautiful small churches in the Southland.  The recital was under the direction of Prof Benedict Bantly, church organist, who was assisted by members of the choir and several vocal and instrumental soloists.

Services were held for the first time in the new edifice last Sunday when a special mass was celebrated by Rev Father Louis Ph. Genest, resident pastor, whose efforts are in a great part responsible for the new church building.

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