2006.04.05: April 5, 2006: Headlines: COS - Tanzania: Obituaries: The Philadelphia Inquirer: Tanzania RPCV Frank E. Boynton dies in Philadelphia
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2006.04.05: April 5, 2006: Headlines: COS - Tanzania: Obituaries: The Philadelphia Inquirer: Tanzania RPCV Frank E. Boynton dies in Philadelphia
Tanzania RPCV Frank E. Boynton dies in Philadelphia
In 1965, he joined the Peace Corps. After an eight-week course in Swahili, he taught English in Tanzania from 1965 to 1967. While in Africa, he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro and went on a photographic safari with his future wife, Carole Brady. They were married in 1968.
Tanzania RPCV Frank E. Boynton dies in Philadelphia
Frank E. Boynton | Retired teacher, 65
Frank E. Boynton, 65, of Roxborough, a retired Philadelphia teacher who was the humorous subject of a newspaper column his wife wrote for 15 years, died of a stroke Sunday at Chestnut Hill Hospital.
Mr. Boynton, who graduated from Northampton (Mass.) High School in 1957, earned a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Vermont in Burlington in 1961. For the next four years, he attended classes at the University of Vermont and kicked around at a variety of jobs.
In 1965, he joined the Peace Corps. After an eight-week course in Swahili, he taught English in Tanzania from 1965 to 1967. While in Africa, he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro and went on a photographic safari with his future wife, Carole Brady. They were married in 1968.
After the Peace Corps, he moved to Philadelphia to take a job teaching sixth grade at Pratt Arnold Elementary School. He was there from 1967 until 1981, when he joined Shawmont Elementary School. He retired in 2000. He was a substitute teacher at Shawmont until being diagnosed with bladder cancer in December.
Mr. Boynton coached youth baseball and football in Roxborough and Andorra and at Germantown Academy. In the 1990s, he was commissioner of the 21st Ward Junior Baseball League in Roxborough. In 1999, he led students on Outward Bound excursions and whale-watch cruises in Massachusetts and Connecticut.
Mr. Boynton was something of a celebrity in Roxborough, Conshohocken and Chestnut Hill, where his wife worked on local weeklies, including the Roxborough Review, and wrote an occasional lifestyle column centered on shenanigans of "the Husband."
In addition to his wife, Mr. Boynton is survived by a son, Frank J.; two grandchildren; and two sisters.
Friends may visit at 7 tonight and at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Koller Funeral Home, 6835 Ridge Ave., Roxborough. A service will follow at 11. Burial will be private.
Donations may be sent to the Philadelphia Zoo Development Office, 3400 W. Girard Ave., Philadelphia 19104.
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Story Source: The Philadelphia Inquirer
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Tanzania; Obituaries
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