

He attributed his cooking skills (“man cook meat,” said with a Tarzan swagger) to watching a cranky chef while working a split shift at Porky’s restaurant at age 14.
#Tasker funeral home obituaries how to#
He taught his daughter how to shingle a roof (with help with some friends) and that she could fix or make almost anything. His daughter lovingly referred to him as the Walking Encyclopedia.Īrthur dealt handily with plumbing, electrical, construction & carpentry matters. His retentive memory could call up virtually every meal eaten in every trattoria in every hill town in Italy. He spoke French and Italian and liked good food, good drink-especially Balvenie whiskey-and good design. He could talk to virtually anybody about something and was a good storyteller. A fifth-generation Greenporter, he was featured in Andrea Cotes’ “Port of Views” historical show in Mitchell Park in 2015.Īrthur was a nurturer, with boundless curiosity and a virtually bottomless “idiot’s ditty bag,” as he called it, and which had a capacious side pocket for risque limericks. He was a member of Peconic Landing’s Buildings & Grounds Committee, serving two terms as Chair. He served on the Greenport Village Zoning Board of Appeals, was a reasonably frequent, perhaps not always gladly welcomed, speaker/contributor to discussions of Village Board issues. In recent years he enjoyed growing, eating and sharing oysters he raised in front of his Sandy Beach cottage in conjunction with Cornell’s SPAT program. They traveled widely in Europe, as well as to Egypt and Jordan just before the Arab Spring, the Galapagos, Canada and throughout the United States.Īrthur was an avid fly fisher and was active in the Nature Conservancy and the Peconic Land Trust, including the Project Committee. In retirement Arthur and his wife of 40 years, Lucia (Staniels), owned and operated a joint exhibit for American children’s book publishers at the annual Bologna Children’s Book Fair in Italy. He practiced with a corporate firm, subsequently in partnership with a Cardozo classmate and as a solo practitioner. At the age of 49 he decided to go to law school: “It was the family business, but I got interested long after my father would have paid for it.” He graduated magna cum laude from The Benjamin Cardozo School of Law in 1992. Thereafter he worked in industrial marketing at Allied Chemical in Morristown NJ and at the World Gold Council in New York City as International Industrial Marketing Director promoting gold usage in industry and dentistry. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and often said he enjoyed “a complete undergraduate experience” - that did not include the Dean’s List.Īfter graduation Arthur joined Texas Instruments in Attleboro MA, where he worked on a team building nuclear reactors for Admiral Hyman Rickover’s Navy.
#Tasker funeral home obituaries full#
Justice, New York State Supreme Court (d 1987).Īrthur attended the Greenport Schools, graduating as Valedictorian in 1957.Īt Cornell University (’61), he earned a Bachelor of Metallurgical Engineering degree on a full scholarship from Grumman.

He was born in the same hospital on October 29, 1939, a few minutes before his twin, John Tasker (d 2016) to Madeline Iacovino, homemaker and a founder of the Greenport Shakespeare Club (d 1977) and Henry Tasker, attorney Suffolk County D.A. Tasker died at Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital, Greenport NY, on November 8, 2020.
