New Hampshire
Notable New Hampshire Deaths: Longtime Waterville Valley Town Administrator
InDepthNH.org scans the websites of New Hampshire funeral homes each week and selects at random some of our friends, relatives and neighbors to feature in this column. The people listed here passed away during the previous weeks and have some public or charitable connection to their community. InDepthNH.org is now offering obituaries through the Legacy.com service. We view this as part of our public service mission. Click here or on the Obituaries tab at the top of our home page to learn more. And if you know of someone from New Hampshire who should be featured in this column, please send your suggestions to NancyWestNews@gmail.com.
Phyllis M. (Ghidoni) Baker, 94, of Goshen, died Sept. 2, 2025. She served as Goshen town clerk and tax collector from 1961 to 1998, running the office out of her home for many years. She was a notary public and justice of the peace, conducting weddings at her house. Her husband served on the fire department for 50 years, and she answered emergency calls at their home, then would call firefighters by telephone to respond to the station. (Newton-Bartlett Funeral Home)
Walter Alexander Buchan, 83, of Exeter, died Sept. 3, 2025. He was a dentist in Nashua for more than five decades, in private practice. He earned a fellowship with the Academy of General Dentistry. (Remick & Gendron Funeral Home-Crematory)
Richard A. Cardner, 83, of Londonderry, died Sept. 4, 2025. He taught for the U.S. Department of Defense in Germany before becoming a guidance counselor at Salem High School in 1973. He was a driver’s education instructor and taught critical thinking courses through the New Hampshire higher education system. He was a founder of the Londonderry Dollar for Scholars chapter. (Carrier Family Funeral Home)
Mark Decoteau, 64, of Thornton, died Sept. 6, 2025. He was the longtime town manager of Waterville Valley. He graduated from West Point in 1983 and served as a U.S. Army officer. His oldest son Marc P. Decoteau was a U.S. Army soldier who was killed in military action in Afghanistan in 2010. Mark served in Lubec, Maine, as well as Farmington and Rochester, before he became town manager of Waterville Valley in 2001, staying for 24 years. (Mayhew Funeral Home)
Dana A. Hamel, 94, of Tuftonboro and North Palm Beach, Fla., died Sept. 4, 2025. He and his family have been benefactors of the University of New Hampshire, where the Hamel Center for Undergraduate Research, the Hamel Student Recreation Center, and the Hamel Honors and Scholars College were named for him and his family. He has also funded several scholarships. He was an officer in the U.S. Army’s Quartermaster Corps, then worked for Dow Chemical and Valtek Plastics Company before starting his own company with a friend in 1964. The Penn Corporation was a consumer products company in Princeton, N.J., where he served as chairman until the company’s sale in 1987. (Lord Funeral Home)
Dr. Wassfy Michael Hanna, 92, of Rye, died Sept. 2, 2025. After completing his medical training in Egypt, he moved to the United States in the early 1960s and for 57 years dedicated his work to Seacoast Mental Health Center in Portsmouth. He was medical director and also maintained a private practice in Portsmouth as a psychiatrist. (Remick & Gendron Funeral Home)
Newton Henry Kershaw Jr., 79, of Londonderry, died Sept. 5, 2025. He was an attorney who began his legal career at Devine, Millimet & Branch, P.A. in Manchester, where he specialized in ERISA law. In 1978, he founded The Legal Clinics in New Hampshire, which he ran for a decade before returning to Devine Millimet. He was president of the Brain Injury Association of New Hampshire, president of the board of the Moore Center, and was a board member of the Krempels Foundation. (Lambert Funeral Home & Crematory)
Paul W. Kiah, 85, of Melvin Village, died Aug. 29, 2025. In 1960, he was a page for John F. Kennedy at the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. He attended U.S. Army Aviation flight school in Fort Rucker, Ala., and joined the 82nd Airborne Aviation Battalion. He worked for the Gillette Company in Boston as a sales administrator and was promoted to an information system analyst in th.e president’s office. He and his family moved to Meredith in 1972 and purchased The Mug restaurant with two of his brothers-in-law. He became a Realtor with Nash Realty for 27 years. He was a member of the Meredith Kiwanis, Lions, VFW, and a director of the Meredith Chamber of Commerce. (Mayhew Funeral Home)
Richard W. Long, 78, of Laconia, died Sept. 7, 2025. He served in the U.S. Army National Guard from 1969 to 1974. He was executive vice president and teasurer at Laconia Savings Bank, where he was employed for 36 years. He was a Belknap County Commissioner and served on the Victory Lane Committee at N.H. International Speedway. He was a member of the Belknap County Sportsman Club, Lions Club, Belmont Rotary, Morning Star Lodge, Ammonoosuc Valley Fish & Game Club and the Bektash Shriners. (Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services)
James Lester Loomis, 75, of Dover, died Sept. 6, 2025. He was co-founder in 1989 of Portsmouth-based Bottomline Technologies, which grew into a global leader in electronic payment systems. As vice president and CFO, he helped guide the company to become publicly traded on the NASDAQ Exchange. He served on the board of directors from 2000 to 2016. He served on the board of the Nashua Boys and Girls Club and supported United Way initiatives through Nashua Corporation. In 2011, he and his wife Anne received the UNH Foundation’s Hubbard Family Award for Service to Philanthropy in recognition of their dedication. He was an avid supporter and volunteer for Northeast Passage. (Tasker Funeral Service)
Stanley G. Maksalla, 79, of Hooksett, died Sept. 5, 2025. He was a Certified Public Accountant licensed in New Hampshire and Maryland and had more than 45 years of experience in the public and private sectors. He owned a local accounting firm in New Hampshire acquired by McCafferty and Company of Nashua. He was a region controller for a publicly held company for nine years, as well as a manager and owner of several other businesses, including Anton’s Restaurant in Manchester, which he owned with his late wife Mary Anne. He was a chairman of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce and a founding incorporator of the Nashua Police Athletic League. (Legacy.com)
Marie Hassett Mellin, 78, of Nashua, died Sept. 6, 2025. She taught at Nashua High School where she was instrumental in establishing the Advanced Placement History program. She was named New Hampshire Social Studies Teacher of the Year award in 2005. She retired in 2005. (Rochette Funeral Home & Cremation Services)
Captain Edward Charles Webster, U.S. Navy (Retired), 88, of Berlin, died Sept 9, 2025. He was supervisor of shipbuilding at Bath Iron Works in Maine, where he oversaw the construction and commissioning of key U.S. Navy frigates, including USS Klakring (FFG-42), Samuel B. Roberts (FFG-58) USS Robert G. Bradley (FFG-49). He was commanding officer of the U.S. Naval Base in Subic Bay in the Philippines. He worked after retiring from the Navy as a manager for VSE Corporation for 31 years. (Bryant Funeral Home & Crematory)
WORDS OF WISDOM: “Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns.” – George Eliot, pen name of novelist Mary Ann Evans, Nov. 22, 1819, to Dec. 22, 1880
New Hampshire
David M. Parr
Screenshot
David M. Parr, 63, of Merrimack NH passed away on Wednesday, January 7th, 2026 at the Community Hospice House in Merrimack after a long battle with cancer.
He was born in Nashua, NH on September 26th, 1962, one of six children to the late Albert and Pauline (Fish) Parr. He was raised in Nashua and was a graduate of Nashua High School, Class of 1981.
David spent his entire career working in sales for several building products companies. In his free time, he enjoyed working around his house perfecting his lawn and yard, fly fishing, camping with a great campfire and stories, hiking, backpacking, watching the Bruins and Patriots, and following politics. Most of all he loved raising and spending time with his children with his wife and constantly sharing his dad jokes to make them laugh. He was so proud of both Brendan and Shannon and the amazing adults they became.
Along with his parents, he was pre-deceased by an infant brother, Michael Parr and a brother-in-law, Robert LeBrun.
He will be forever loved and remembered by his wife of 31 years, Lorraine (Plante) Parr; two children, Brendan Parr and his fiancée Anna Conte, and Shannon Parr; five siblings, Susan Cole-Kelly, Debra Murphy, Bonnie and her husband Patrick Mihealsick, Lauren LeBrun and Dan Parr and his wife Darcey along with numerous nieces and nephews.
Visitation hours will be held at the Rivet Funeral Home, 425 Daniel Webster Highway, Merrimack NH on Friday, January 16th, 2026 from 5 – 7 PM. A Memorial Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at Our Lady of Mercy Church, 16 Baboosic Lake Road, Merrimack on Saturday, January 17th at 9 AM. Burial will follow at Last Rest Cemetery.
Kindly visit rivetfuneralhome.com to leave an online condolence for the family.
New Hampshire
High number of NH households lack emergency savings – Valley News
A broken furnace, medical bill, or car repair could quickly become a financial crisis if it were to happen in any one of over 120,000 New Hampshire households with very little savings. An analysis recently published by the Urban Institute found that nearly one in four New Hampshire households lacked at least $2,000 in non-retirement savings in 2022, representing a basic financial cushion for weathering emergencies. According to the analysis, about 23% of New Hampshire households did not have non-retirement savings, such as money in a checking or savings account, totaling more than $2,000 in 2022. That figure rose to 30% for Granite Staters in rural northern and western New Hampshire, 32% for Manchester residents, and 31% for Granite Staters of color statewide.
The Urban Institute published this analysis in November 2025 using the latest consistently available data for each type of financial well-being measured. A previous version of the analysis, published in 2022, found about 26 percent of New Hampshire households lacked $2,000 in emergency savings in 2019, although the $2,000 threshold was not adjusted for inflation between those two years. The researchers also measured overall wealth, income relative to key expenses, and certain other metrics.
Unpaid debt
Researchers at the Urban Institute also found that about 16% of Granite Staters had some form of debt that was at least 60 days past due in 2023. Two percent of all residents specifically had delinquent student loan debts.
Housing expenses
About 87% of all households with less than $50,000 in annual income, which was about one in four New Hampshire households in 2023, paid more than 30% of their incomes for their housing costs, such as rent or mortgage payments, utilities, property taxes, and insurance costs. For Granite Staters of color, about 96% of households with these lower incomes were cost-burdened, or paying at least 30% of income, by housing costs.
This percentage varied for different areas within the state as well. While about 78% of all residents with lower incomes in Coos, Grafton and Sullivan counties combined were cost-burdened by housing, about 95% of Manchester residents and 91% of Strafford County and northern Rockingham County residents were cost-burdened in this manner.
Utility costs
About one in five New Hampshire households paid more than 10% of household income solely on utility costs, including electricity, water, gas, and heating fuels. While the lowest percentage of households facing these utility costs were near Nashua and a few other relatively urban parts of the state, about 46% of households in Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan counties, and 41% in eastern central New Hampshire encompassing Carroll and Belknap counties, paid more than 10% in utility costs.
Access to emergency savings varies throughout New Hampshire
Savings can be difficult to accumulate for a variety of reasons, and the primary factors include income and expenses. Both lower incomes and higher expenses make saving more difficult, while their opposites enable more opportunities to set money aside for a time of need. Some of the variations in savings across New Hampshire could be rooted in both factors.
The approximately 23% of Granite State households without at least $2,000 in savings during 2022 represents about 129,600 households of the estimated 557,200 in New Hampshire that year. In Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan Counties, which include the two counties (Coos and Sullivan) with the highest poverty rates in the state, about 30% of households lacked that level of savings. Coos County also had a median household income that was only slightly more than half of Rockingham County in southeastern New Hampshire. The cost of buying a house has also increased fastest in rural parts of New Hampshire, although the overall cost is still lower than in southeastern New Hampshire.
In Manchester, where 32% of households did not have at least $2,000 in emergency savings (the highest rate of the measured areas in the state) in 2022, the cost of renting the median two-bedroom apartment increased 31% from 2020 to 2024 to $1,838 per month. Median household income, at about $77,000, was below the statewide median of about $95,600 during the 2019 to 2023 period. Increasing costs, particularly regional housing costs, likely made saving very difficult for households in Manchester and elsewhere, particularly the families that are more likely to see incomes fall short of expenses than ten years ago.
Wealth is a critical factor and difficult to measure
Most common measures of financial well-being are based on income. Income is often measured through surveys and tax returns, and income from employment is also reported by businesses and other employers. As a result, income is more commonly measured than wealth. Income measures the money coming into a household in a given time period, while wealth measures the assets owned by the members of a household.
Wealth provides a form of economic security that promotes resilience, including the ability to weather a job loss or an unexpected expense, such as a car repair or medical costs from an illness. Even a higher income does not provide the security of having a substantial amount of money in a bank account, as that income could change, or new costs could appear, relatively quickly. Wealth provides a financial cushion that can be critical for individuals and families in times of need.
Local data difficult to access
While national measures provide insights into wealth and wealth inequality, which has risen substantially over the last six decades, local data are much harder to collect than data about the income of residents in states and counties. Researchers at the Urban Institute used publicly-available data and collaborated with a major credit bureau, employing anonymized data, to get a sample of about 10 million people nationwide. They also utilized models to understand the likely conditions facing people in less-populated areas and in smaller population groups when the sample sizes themselves were too small to create reliable estimates.
These data and methods allowed the Urban Institute researchers to estimate the percentage of households that had less than $2,000 in their bank accounts, stocks, mutual funds, and other non-retirement assets. However, the data were not granular enough to allow for consistent town- or county-level analyses in New Hampshire. The data were organized by regions of the state (and country) with a total of 100,000 people or more. While data for Manchester can be separated from the rest of the state with this strategy, every other city or town is combined with at least one other community in these data.
Different than other surveys
This methodology is notably different from a commonly-cited national-level survey conducted by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board’s Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking, which asks U.S. residents nationwide a series of questions. These questions include asking about the methods the individual would use to pay for an unexpected $400 expense.
The latest survey indicates that 37% of U.S. adults would not have paid for an unexpected $400 expense with cash, savings, or a credit card to be paid off by the end of the month. While that indicates more than one in three U.S. adults do not have the savings to easily cover this expense, 13% said they would be unable to pay it by any means; others indicated they would carry a balance on a credit card, borrow money from a friend, family member, bank, or payday lender, or sell something to help pay for the expense. That suggests many adults would not spend their bank account down to zero, perhaps to preserve some wealth cushion for other unexpected expenses or to avoid fees.
While these survey data offer key insights and annual updates allowing for helpful comparisons over time, the Urban Institute’s methods seek to measure the actual balances in household accounts. The Urban Institute’s data also provide insights into the financial resilience of New Hampshire residents specifically.
Financial situations fragile for many Granite State families
Without $2,000 in savings, a Granite Stater could quickly spend their liquid assets to pay for an unexpected car repair, needed fixes for a house or an appliance, the deductible on their health insurance after an injury or illness but before coverage begins, losing a job, or other factors that could effectively require immediate, unforeseen costs. That would potentially lead to debt that could be difficult to pay off, unpaid bills, or forgone health or housing needs.
Housing, utility, health care, and child care costs have increased across New Hampshire. These rising costs have made building emergency savings increasingly difficult. With nearly one in four New Hampshire households in this fragile situation, small changes in physical or financial well-being, expenses facing families, public policy, or the economy overall could have big impacts on many Granite Staters.
The New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute is sharing these articles with the partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. NHFPI is an independent nonprofit organization that explores, develops and promotes public policies that foster economic opportunity and prosperity for all New Hampshire residents. For more information visit nhfpi.org. These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information visit collaborativenh.org.
New Hampshire
5-year-old injured in New Year’s day Manchester, New Hampshire apartment building fire dies
The child who was injured during a New Year’s Day apartment building fire in Manchester, New Hampshire has died, the New Hampshire State Fire Marshal announced on Saturday.
The 5-year-old girl had been found unresponsive in a fourth-floor bedroom by firefighters. She was rushed to a Boston hospital in critical condition and passed on Wednesday. The Massachusetts Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has performed an autopsy to determine her cause of death.
The fire began just 30 minutes after midnight on Union Street. The flames raged on the third and fourth floors before spreading to the roof. One man was killed in the fire. He was identified as 70-year-old Thomas J. Casey, and his cause of death was determined to be smoke inhalation, according to the medical examiner.
One woman was rushed to a Boston hospital in critical condition. Five other people received serious injuries and were hospitalized. All the victims have since been discharged, according to the fire marshal.
Residents could be seen waiting in windows and on balconies for firefighters to rescue them.
“I kicked into high gear. I got my family rallied up. My son, my daughter, my wife. And I tried to find a way to get down safely off of one of the railings by trying to slide down one of the poles. But that didn’t work out,” said resident Jonathan Barrett.
Fire investigators believe the fire is not suspicious and started in a third-floor bedroom. The building did not have a sprinkler system but did have an operational fire alarm, the fire marshal said.
Around 10 families were displaced by the fire and are receiving help from the Red Cross. Around 50 people lived in the building.
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