| Eugene Richard
Gensiak
1939 - 2005
"Forever in our hearts!"
 |
ugene
Richard Gensiak was born in 1939 in Throop, Pennsylvania, to Gertrude
(Kelley) and Joseph Gensiak. Grandmother Catherine helped him
into this world, saving his life by removing the umbilical cord
from around his neck. Gene’s parents had met at a carnival
where his dad worked and were married shortly thereafter. One
year later, Gene’s brother Joseph was born, and the next
year Gene was born. Joan, Frank, Clarence, Thomas, Stanley, Paul,
Albert, and Michael followed.
When he was five, the family moved to Binghamton, New York, of
which he had fond memories into his adulthood. Most of Gene’s
childhood was spent in and around Scranton, Pennsylvania. His
father was a coal miner and operated a ham radio as a hobby, a
passion Gene shared. When his dad could no longer work in the
mines, he sold newspapers, which became a family business. Gene
learned the printing trade at Scranton Tech after spending his
preteen years at St. Michael’s, a boarding school for troubled
boys, because of the extreme poverty of his family.
Gene moved to Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, as a young man to pursue
his trade at Kistler Printing. He also joined the army reserves.
While living in a boarding house, Gene frequented the Colonial
Diner next door, where he met his future wife, Elissa Limons,
who attended East Stroudsburg State College.
Gene moved to Allentown in 1965, primarily working at Laros Printing,
where he worked for 25 years during many ownership and name changes.
Gene and Lissa married in 1967 and had three children —
Richard, John (J.J.), and Kara.
Science fiction and fantasy always interested Gene. Tolkien and
Asimov were two of his favorite authors. He was one of the first
Trekkies from the original Star Trek TV series. Outer
space fascinated him, and he often said he wanted his ashes shot
into space.
Gene was a soccer enthusiast and loved music, especially country
artists like Hank Williams and Patsy Cline. But his first and
greatest love was his family.
Robust, unaffected laughter often emerged from Gene’s den
when something on TV tickled him. Even at the cancer center he
would find something humorous.
Life knocked Gene down many times (quite literally, by a pipe
when he was 15 and a car when he was 57), but he always managed
to get up and go on. Jobs ended, money was tight, diabetes developed,
and then cancer attacked his kidney. He simply turned “lemons
into lemonade,” facing it bravely and with little complaint.
Gene will be remembered for his soft side. He opened his doors
to down-and-out kin, friends, and sometimes strangers. During
a blizzard he brought home a stranded family with five children,
who stayed the night. He said he didn’t want pets, but he
loved all the strays finding their way to the Gensiak home.
In 2005, Eugene Richard Gensiak succumbed to cancer.
Gene, you are loved and missed by your wife, children, siblings,
and friends. Shine down on us from your star (Forever Gene) until
we meet again.
The Family of Eugene Richard
Gensiak
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