Honoring Wayne Hammond

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Early in the morning of September 14, 2018, Key West lost Wayne Hammond, one of its most enduring and iconic musicians. Wayne Hammond was one half of the very popular music and comedy duo, Pete & Wayne, who were a fixture at Sloppy Joe’s Bar for over 22 years. He also filled our ears and souls with music as a member of a number of other Key West bands including Wayne’s Addiction, Stray Dogs, The Jeff Clark Five Minus Two as well as countless other bands with which he would occasionally play. Over the years he faced the stages of Sloppy Joe’s Bar, Hog’s Breath Saloon, Green Parrot, Smokin’ Tuna, Virgilio’s and Key West Theater, just to name a few.

Wayne’s music career began in Cleveland, Ohio, where he played in that area’s most popular reggae band. He then performed with a band from New York City that came to Key West to play a two week stand at Hog’s Breath, starting on his birthday in 1994. He loved it here so much he never left, making Key West his home for the rest of his life!

Wayne Hammond was arguably the Keys’ best bass player, displaying what other local musicians considered virtuosic talent. He had the ability to master many genres, including funk, reggae, blues, R&B and rock.  He also had great “pipes” as a singer displaying a huge range and the ability to cover many styles. But, it was his stage presence, personality and comedic ability that set him apart from so many performers.

Wayne literally entertained hundreds of thousands of people in Key West and throughout the country performing with the Pete & Wayne Show. For more than two decades, tourists and locals alike laughed the nights away at Pete & Wayne’s hilarious show, which featured comedic stories and songs they wrote about Key West life and their experiences during their annual summer tours throughout the country. Think of song titles like “Gater Heads and Wind Chimes,” “Homosexual Chinese Monkey Hunter,” “Lookin’ to Breed in Boca,” and you get the idea. Many of their song titles are not fit to print here, but would bring a smile to your face!

There are only a few entertainers one can watch perform over and over again, still enjoying it each time with the same enthusiasm, never tiring of their art. Wayne was one of those people.

But, aside from his stage persona, he touched his many friends with his generosity, empathy and good will. He was quick to help others. A friend once told him he wanted to play the banjo. The next day, Wayne showed up with a banjo as a gift. That’s the kind of guy he was.

Wayne loved to stay up late cooking with his wife Tina at their house on Grinnell Street. Friends were accustomed to receiving hilarious texts from him in the middle of the night. And, he was always proud of his Ohio roots and eager to wear the colors of his favorite Cleveland sport teams, sharing in their occasional thrill of victory and too often agony of defeat.

Those who knew Wayne, know he was one of the most wonderfully unusual human beings they ever met. It’s quite difficult to describe Wayne Hammond because you can't compare him to anyone else. He was authentic, creative and unique in almost every aspect of his being. He was quite literally one of a kind. The world, and particularly Key West, is emptier without Wayne Hammond.

Wayne’s wife Tina has created the “Wayne Hammond Scholarship Fund” to benefit Bahama Village Music Program and enable BVMP to continue Wayne’s legacy through free music lessons and provide scholarships for two high school students to attend the Berklee School of Music’s summer performance program.

Honoring Yvan Agbo

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YVAN AGBO

July 6, 1967-Aug. 15, 2018

Yvan Agbo, one of Key West’s greatest musicians, passed away on Aug. 15, 2018, suddenly and too soon.

Yvan, a French national, was born in Dakar, Senegal and began playing guitar at 4.

He left behind his music to comfort all those that loved him, as he transcends to a higher place.

Yvan is survived by his family, friends and the thousands of people that he entertained around the world.

His beautiful spirit will be missed greatly by all those that were blessed to have known him …

“Fly on my sweet angel.”

Yvan Agbo is one of our Community Honorees for the 2019 second line. If you would like to donate in his honor, please click the link below and choose “Sponsor a Placard”

Honoring Jon McIntosh

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Jon Charles McIntosh, 70, died after a short illness in Key West on March 12, 2018. Born Aug. 8, 1947, he was the son of the late John and Lucile McIntosh of Massachusetts. Jon “Tosh” McIntosh earned a fine arts degree from Rhode Island School of Design and became an accomplished designer, illustrator and visual artist for his own company, McIntosh Ink,  and co-owned the Lucky Street Gallery. 

His work included two syndicated comic strips, book illustrations, projects for NASA and board games. As a member of the Society of Illustrators, he won the Silver Funny Bone Award and many Merit Awards in annual shows. 

Tosh was an active member of the community, from designing original logos for numerous local businesses and election campaigns, to charity work with Anne McKee Artists Fund, Bahama Village Music Program, AIDS Help, VNA, Womankind and Wesley House. He was The Citizen newspaper’s political cartoonist for over a decade, designed three Fantasy Fest posters and was the winner of the 2015 South Florida Consortium Grant. 

Tosh’s great passion — painting — allowed him to share the intensity, mystery and beauty of the sea, as well as scenes inspired by his travels to the Caribbean, Cuba and Europe. 

He found great humor in the world and so much joy in his relationships with family, friends and the Key West community. He leaves a son, Forgan McIntosh, and wife, Jessa, of Dover, Massachusetts, with grandchildren Sayer, Harper and Forrest; and stepdaughter Hays and husband, Jan Blinckmann, of Key West, Florida with grandchildren Hugo and Max.

Jon McIntosh is one of our Community Honorees for the 2019 second line. If you would like to donate in his honor, please click the link below and choose “Sponsor a Placard”

Honoring Ronnie Craven

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Ronnie Craven of High Point and Rocky Mount , North Carolina was:

A. Warm, free-spirited, jovial,  brilliant country musician who composed songs and could play just about any instrument that came alone

B. A crop duster who when he was not working on fields of soybeans was dusting off beverages with his friends

C. A sportsman who loved animals, especially his long time dog buddy Scooter

D. A creative Chef who love  preparing North Carolina Barbecue and all the fixings that went along with it

E. A loving Son to his Mother  and Father of the nation's foremost decorator of motorcycles, Jeff Craven.

Honoring Fran Ford

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Ann-Francis Dale Barker Ford 

Mrs. Ford to the young kids, Fran Ford, Frannie 

Born January 16, 1923, in Providence, Rhode Island, she was the daughter of Brigadier General Harold Richards and Beatrice Winter Barker. 

She married Lt. Cdr. William Render Ford on July 20th 1945. 

They had 4 children, David and his wife Pamela of Newport; Thomas and his wife Greta of Key West; Dale of Cambridge; and Richards and his wife Mimi of Winter Park

Of her numerous activities she was 

An excellent cook. 

President of Key West Audubon Society 

Lifetime Member of Key West Art and Historical Society 

Lifetime Member of Florida Keys Land and Sea Trust 

Commissioner on the board of the Key West Tree Commission 

Active Member of Key West Garden Club 

Active Member of Key West Botanical Garden 

Active Member of Last Stand 

Active Member of the Nature Conservancy 

Active Member of Naval Retired Officer Wives Club 

Active Member of Junior League 

Active Supporter of Florida Keys Mangrove Terrapin Study 

Active Supporter of the Sonny McCoy Indigenous Park 

Active Supporter of Little Hamaca State Park 

Active Supporter of Ft. Zachary Taylor State Park 

Active Supporter of Ft. Jefferson National Park 

Active Supporter of historical Key West Cemetery 

Creator of the Whistling Duck Pond, 

Co-Owner and Operator of Sea Store at 614 Greene St., Key West

Honoring Betsy Dietz

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Betsy S. Dietz was a very special lady.  Betsy attended and volunteered for almost every amazing event in the Key West community.  From serving on the board of directors of AIDS Help, Bahama Village Music Program and many other worthy organizations to founding some of Key West's favorite fundraising events like the Royal Campaign of Fantasy Fest and "Taste of Key West," Betsy was always helping those less fortunate.  Betsy's smile, her zest for life and a "we can do this" approach is irreplaceable.  Betsy was an amazing firecracker of a lady and we miss her.

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Honoring Donna Dalton

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Donna Dalton was a passionate, sensitive being who touched many with her quick smile, free spirit, and generous nature. She made people laugh with her fun and quirky sense of humor, and shared her warmth and open heart easily with those known and unknown.  She took great pride working as a carpenter and painter, swinging a hammer with gusto until the age of sixty.  She also attended Florida Keys Community College, attaining her certificate in Drug and Alcohol Counseling, further deepening and sharing her compassionate nature.  

Donna made Key West her home in the early 90s, and delighted in sharing her enthusiasm about the island with visitors and locals alike.  On Sundays you could find her reading and relaxing in her hammock at Fort Zachary Taylor State Park and swimming in the ocean’s warm waters.  Song filled her home and her heart— Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Brown, Chris Isaak, Neil Young, Stevie Nicks, Emmylou Harris, The Eagles, Van Morrison, and Elton John are just a few of her musical heroes that helped define her outlook on life.   

She studied the Farmer’s Almanac and Pagan ways, holding a firm resolve regarding the magic of nature.  She also bowed deeply to the Catholic church and attended mass as a child and later at St. Mary’s Star of the Sea.  She believed in the soul.  She believed in love.  She believed in One Human Family.  

Carpe Diem and Blessed Be.  You will always be loved & missed.  

Honoring Olga Carito

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Olga Carito loved Key West when she had a chance to visit in the 1990’s. She particularly loved purchasing shopping bags full of used books at the Monroe Library sale and then sweet-talking the postmaster into personally packing them into boxes for her to ship home.
Olga was born in the Italian North End of Boston and only spoke Italian when she started school. She became the first in her family to graduate college and in her first job was a “computer.” Similarly to the women in “Hidden Figures,” she led a team of mathematicians at MIT who did the calculations for the early work on the laser.
Olga broke from work to marry, raise a family of six kids, and involve herself in her community. In her forties, when her kids were older, she became a teacher, learned to drive, and earned a Masters Degree in Mathematics.
At age 60, recently widowed, Olga found herself touring through Maine with a friend, winding up their day at a bed and breakfast in Boothbay Harbor. When she heard the owner and his guests commiserating about him putting the place up for sale, she looked around and announced, “I’ll buy it.”
Being the owner and hostess of The Seafarer Inn was the business she was born to run. Endlessly charming, a lover of people, and proud of her hearty breakfast, Olga entertained countless visitors, most of whom refused to depart without a hug and a kiss.
After her health declined, Olga moved back to the Boston area where she loved to spend time with her family, grandkids, and playing cards with friends.
Olga loved beauty of all kinds - particularly music, art, and flowers. She sang throughout the day and in church choirs and always maintained large gardens. She had a great love for history and books, was a wicked Scrabble player, and an ardent Democrat. She loved her church, had her own special relationship with Jesus Christ, and was particularly devoted to the Blessed Mother. 
Olga died on January 27, 2017. Her family misses her every day.

Honoring Robert Smith

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Robert Joseph Smith  (8/17/87 - 10/31/16)

Rob was taken from us much too early in a tragic accident in October 2016.  He was born in Walnut Creek, CA in 1987 and was a true sports fan.  He played both soccer and baseball (pitcher, catcher & shortstop) and started skiing at an early age and loved to snowboard as well.  Rob always enjoyed getting out of town and going on vacation - camping, swimming, boating, canoeing and kayaking – he loved to spend time with friends and family.  Rob was a good young man, a wonderful friend and a great brother.  Rest In Peace, dearest Rob.

Honoring Ralph "Chip" Elliott

Chip was: (1)appalachian trail hiker, (2)construction entrepreneur,(3) loving father of two daughters and one son, (4) humanitarian visionary, (5) caregiver of the animal kingdom, (6) wilderness adventurer. (7) camping guru, (8) cross country traveler,  and last but certainly not least (9) connoisseur of good food and drink so it's most appropriate that we honor his spiritual passage by including him in the second line parade.

Honoring Purple Sandy Kibler

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Purple Sandy Kibler, 72, left this plateau peacefully on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2018.  

Born July 15, 1945, she was a quintessential Key West character, having migrated here in the mid-1970s from Bloomington, Indiana after spending time in Wisconsin and Illinois. Her birthday was always quite the Key West occasion. 

In true Key West style, upon arrival, she lived in a treehouse on Waddell Street and would hold a collection of jobs as diverse and eclectic as the island she chose to call home. Sandy’s employment history through the years takes longtime Key Westers on an amusingly nostalgic journey through Old Key West: The Green Parrot Sandwich Shop, Singleton Ice, Schooner Wharf Bar, Local Color, Turtle Kraals, Half Shell Raw Bar, Big Daddy’s, The Jungle Room, Hamburger Mary’s, Key West Bar and Grill, Curly’s Ribs, and Peppers of Key West. 

In addition to those jobs, she also worked as a house painter, a glassblower on Duval Street and, for a short period, a shrimp boat worker. 

Sandy was a member of the Moose Lodge, where she was also an employee for a time. And she regularly paid her respects at Key West’s legendary Tree Of Knowledge. 

At one point, Sandy hitchhiked away from Key West with plans to work on the Alaskan Oil Pipeline. Fortunately, engine trouble somewhere around Indiana made her second-guess her Arctic adventure, and brought her back to her adopted island home. 

She is survived by her son, Dylan Kibler, of Key West, and her daughter, Adrienne (Tony) McGargill, of Papillon, Nebraska and she reveled in her role of “Silly Grandma” to her three beloved grandchildren, Hailey, Kalvin, and Macey. Sandy is also survived by her siblings Robert Stevens and Vada Waller. She leaves behind a host of far-flung friends too numerous to name, but all who knew this passionate and intense free-spirit have countless great recollections of their friend. 

She cherished and honored her Native American heritage and was known for her willingness to share her opinions on any topic that captured her attention. Purple Sandy was a strong, independent and one-of-a-kind woman who will be missed by so many whose paths intersected hers. 

In loving memory of Purple Sandy Kibler whose presence and passion enriched our lives and made their indelible mark on our memory. 

“We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings have a human experience.”