Florenzo T. “Lolly” Evangelista, of Lincoln, died on April 8, 2024 at Lahey Hospital in Burlington at the age of 98. Lolly was born in Berlin, N.H., on August 31, 1925, to Charles Evangelista and Annie (Bencivenga) Evangelista. Both Charles and Annie grew up in Calazzo, Italy, and moved to the United States after they were married. Lolly was the youngest of their 12 children.
Lolly left school at age 15 after the death of his father and went to work on DeVincent Brothers Farm in Waltham to help support his family. Five years later, on February 6, 1946, he enlisted in the Navy and engaged in active duty as a Fireman First Class on the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Tarawa (CV-40), spending most of his service in the Far East. He was honorably discharged on December 16, 1947. He spent the remainder of his working career as a manager with ABC Building Supply Co. in Waltham.
On September 4, 1949, Lolly married Dorothy L. Hand of Waltham, to whom he was married for 60 years until her death in 2009. They moved to Lincoln in 1958 and raised their family there.
Lolly is survived by his three daughters, Karen McEneaney of Gardner, Mont., Janet Dickey of Littleton, Mass., and Paula Lewis of Lincoln; two grandchildren, Julia Dugan of Manchester, N.H., and retired 20-year veteran First Sgt. Jesse Dugan: and five great-grandchildren.
Everyone who knew him thought Lolly was remarkable for his health and longevity. In fact, he was a three-time cancer survivor and lived with one kidney for 14 years. He went for two walks a day on Mill Street in Lincoln right up until November 2023.
Lolly loved to bowl. He was a member of a bowling league in Acton from the 1970s all the way until Covid hit in 2020. He enjoyed gambling and played cards three nights a week, and belonged to a private club in Maynard. He loved to draw and regularly took art classes at the COA in Lincoln. He could draw anything including cartoon characters, flowers, people, animals, and birds. He volunteered at the Lincoln COA front desk for several years and he enjoyed Senior Dining in Lincoln every Friday. Most of all, he loved singing to anybody and everybody who would listen to him, and he never stopped whistling and singing.
Over the past ten years, during the summer and fall, he helped his friend Frank Rotundo by manning the farm stand at Rotundo Farm in Concord while Frank worked in the field. He even made it onto “Chronicle” when they did a story called “Farmstands,” which aired September 2017. Of course he was singing!
Lolly was a friend to everyone he met. He was always smiling, always happy and would do anything to help anybody. People loved him and constantly commented on how amazing he was, and how happy. He never let anything get to him. He attended Club 600 in Bedford every week and he sang to everyone while he worked out. His daughter Paula, who worked at Bedford Charter school bus company, regularly brought him with her so he knew all the bus drivers. At the end of every summer when Paula had a BBQ/birthday party to celebrate his birthday, the bus drivers would come to celebrate his longevity, happiness and friendship. He loved having people over his house.
Lolly always ended the summer with his three closest friends, Ron, Lynne, and Priscilla, and his daughter, Paula, celebrating his Labor Day birthday with a cookout and an afternoon of playing cards on the back deck. Lolly will be dearly missed by everyone who knew him.
MTO says
Loved his singing at the Council on Aging reception desk!
Ron Boisseau says
Lolly made me smile. He was such a loving and caring human being. I miss him a lot. In today’s world we miss this man who served his country and loved his friends….the void will never be filled. He was my hero and my friend..
Jessica Salmon says
Lolly has inspired me for as long as I remember. I will miss hearing him whistle up the driveway whenever he’d stroll over to see us at my grandparents’ house in Lincoln, and his stories from a very full and happy life will stay with me always. We love and miss you Lolly.
Jessica Salmon
Granddaughter of Ralph and Tina Damico