April 25, 2024

Kris Kristofferson by Fans, for Fans

In appreciation of the Silver Tongued Devil

Welcome & Where to Start?

1 min read

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Hi, Kristofferson fan

This site is for you. Look around. Click the top menus, browse by category or use the search button on the left side or top right. (Looks like a looking glass) Type in anything & see what we have. 

We got weary of reading recycled information about Kris, & figured us fans could do better. I confronted my fear of technology & jumped in. This site is by fans, for fans. It’s your content.  If you want to know more about me, click here. We’d like to hear from you – to share stories, show off memorabilia and swap opinions. 

Jump in with us. Subscribe, bookmark the site, support our advertisers. We’ll never spam you, ever.  Tell us about yourself, as much or as little as you like. Join us on Facebook

Drop us a few lines by commenting or email.  I will reply when I log in next. Don’t be shy. Spot errors? Tell us, we’ll fix them.  Anything missing? Write it. If it fits, we’ll post it. 

Kris has some of the best & most diverse group of fans ever. This is for you.

Kind regards,

D

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35 thoughts on “Welcome & Where to Start?

  1. My sister,Jackie, and I have long (really long) been fans of yours. Your music has given us much pleasure in the good years and comfort in the not so good years. Jackie has been diagnosed with MS and has vision and mobility issues. On her bucket list is to get your autograph on the blue jean jacket she was wearing when she attended the first Willie Nelson picnic in Austin. Willie Nelson autographed her jacket there and her dream has been to add your signature to the jacket. We will be attending your show at the Golden Nugget in Lake Charles in November. Would be eternally grateful if we could get the jacket to you to sign. Would swap some Texas barbecue for the favor! Know this is a long shot but had to try for my little sister. Thanks for listening!

    1. Hi. Kris seldom does autographs after gigs these days just due to the sheer physical pressure of being on the road. Perhaps keep an eye out for one of the guys in the band & see if they are able to assist at all.

      Enjoy the concert 🙂 It will be great!

  2. Oh my. Was googling A Star is Born since the new release of the movie w/Bradley Cooper. and going down the rabbit hole, it lead me to look at the trailer for A Star is Born w/Kris. Saw it, loved it back in the day. I’m a boomer. Then looking up stats in Kris, realized he is touring. Got tix to his tour in Cherokee. Can’t wait.

    1. Hi Vicki 🙂 Some things are for a reason – Funny how they work out! Great you have tickets. Take a camera if you think of it, & tell us about the gig if you think of us?

    1. Hi Bella,
      The only chance we get to give anything to Kris Kristofferson is if a fan can hand it someone at the door, & hope that he gets it. Still, you never know – Maybe one of his team happen across our site. We live in hope that the man sees it himself someday – Though he doesn’t use computers nor does he go online himself.

      Best wishes,
      Donna
      PS: Keep on writing. The world needs more artists.

  3. I have a song that I want to give to Kris, I wrote it fer my Mama. I don’t want anything fer it, jus hearing em sing it will be enough. Thank you.

  4. Dude my Dad was real deal cowboy. I got stories to tell and sumbody needs to make sum good cowboy movies. My email is queenvillage [email protected] idk how to start this process but probably write a book first i guess

    1. Talk to willie an clint about it old west isnt popular anymore but i got documents to back my stories

      1. Hi Katleen. Thank you for your comment. If I do get the chance to pass it on to Kris I will do so. Have you considered writing a story or script? It sounds like you have exciting tales to share 🙂 Best wishes, Donna

  5. Hi Betty, sorry for the delay in replying. It has got a lot harder to meet Kris before or after a gig than it used to be. They can be quite tiring, and Kris often spends most – if not all – of the gig time on stage alone these days. That said, if you get there early and keep an eye out for his bus, there is a chance that this might be possible, but it really is just a chance I am afraid.

    I hope you have a lovely evening. The gigs are quite intimate and if you take a cd that you don’t mind risking, there might be someone at one of the stalls that may be able to help and try to get you an autograph.

    Let us know how you enjoy the gig if you get a chance?

    Kris’ official website is kriskristofferson.com. This space is where us fans hang out 🙂

  6. Hi, I’ve been a fan of Kris forever. I’ve seen Johnny ,Willie, & Waylon so seeing Kris is on my bucket list.im61 and finely have tickets to see him in Robinsonville MS on May 12th. I’m from Petal MS and only get to go to concerts in MS, I’ve been a single parent from 82 until 2003 when I remarried so I was limited on things I could afford. My Sweet Daughter is still home with us she’s on a 12 year old level and will always be home with us and is excited to come to the concert. We would realy love to be able to get a photo and autograph with Kris if at all possible. I’ve seen all his movies and have most of his Cd’s. Do you think it would be possiable for us to do that. Also how do i join his fan club ive looked on line which is how i saw this.Thank you

  7. Donna,

    Reference your Leonard Peltier info and your “As always, if anything needs correcting, adding or removing – Just let me know”…..

    Here’s letting you know that a lot of your claims need correcting, adding or removing, as evidenced by the actual court records, sworn testimony (including the Aquash murder trials), and these factual quotes concerning an unrepentant double murdering cop-killer and masterful con-man:

    “This story is true.”
    Leonard Peltier, assuring his supporters that a mysterious Mr. X shot the FBI agents, as depicted in Robert Redford’s thoroughly discredited documentary, Incident at Oglala.

    “Peter, you put my life in jeopardy and you put the lives my family in jeopardy by putting that bull—t in your books. Why didn’t you call me and ask me if it was true?”
    Dean Butler, chastising Peter Matthiessen for promoting Peltier’s sworn alibi, Mr. X, in his book, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse. Peltier’s lawyer, Mike Kuzma, publicly admitted that the X story was “concocted” as are all of Peltier’s alibis. Note: The stand-in who played “Mr. X” in Peltier’s video (as seen on 60 Minutes) has been exposed as AIM member and “Mt Rushmore bomber,” David Hill.

    “I seen Joe when he pulled it out of the trunk and I looked at him when he put it on, and he gave me a smile.”
    Leonard Peltier, standing over the bodies of Jack Coler and Ronald Williams, moments after their heads were blown off, commenting on Joe Stuntz wearing Jack Coler’s green FBI jacket taken from his car trunk, as quoted from, In the Spirit of Crazy Horse.

    “I didn’t think nothing about it at the time: all I could think of was, We got to get out of here!”
    Leonard Peltier, reacting to Joe Stuntz wearing Jack Coler’s jacket, quote from In the Spirit of Crazy Horse. Peltier could hear the chatter over the FBI car radio from other agents who were racing to the scene and attempting to re-establish contact with Agent Williams in response to his calls for help. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that Peltier initially opened fire on the agents because he mistakenly thought they were there to arrest him. Peltier also feared that the agents would discover his armed encampment where numerous weapons, boxes of ammo, bomb-making materials, and several hand grenades lay hidden in the trees.

    Mark Potter: “Did you fire at those agents, Coler and Williams?
    Leonard Peltier: “I shot in their direction, yes.”
    CNN interview, Oct 1999. Later in the interview, Peltier admits for the first time on camera that he left his firing position near a large tree and stood over the two dead agents moments after they were both shot in the head at point-blank range.

    “…I can’t tell the system I was shooting at their police officers that were trying to arrest me. They’ll hold that against me. I’ve got to be careful about that stuff.”
    Leonard Peltier, 1995 interview with Native journalist Richard LaCourse, admitting that he mistakenly believed the FBI agents were there to arrest him. Peltier was a wanted fugitive for the attempted murder of a police officer in Wisconsin. Agents Coler and Williams were looking for someone else when Peltier opened fire on their FBI cars, apparently recognizing the vehicles from the day before when the agents had visited the same compound in the same cars.

    “When all is said and done, however, a few simple but very important facts remain. The casing introduced into evidence in fact had been extracted from the Wichita AR-15. This point was not disputed.”
    Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, Feb 1986, finding of fact that a shell casing found at the murder scene was ejected from the AR-15 assault rifle carried by Leonard Peltier. Over a hundred shell casings, all matched to Peltier’s weapon, were found in the area where he was seen shooting and over a hundred bullet holes were found in the FBI cars.

    “The record as a whole leaves no doubt that the jury accepted the government’s theory that Peltier had personally killed the two agents, after they were seriously wounded, by shooting them at point blank range with an AR-15 rifle ….The critical evidence in support of this theory was a casing from a .223 caliber Remington cartridge recovered from the trunk of [the car of one of the murdered agents] …The district court, agreeing with the government’s theory … sentenced Peltier to two consecutive life sentences.”
    United States v. Peltier, 800 F.2d 772, 772-73 (8th Cir. 1986), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 822, 108 S. Ct. 84, 98 L. Ed. 2d 46 (1987)

    “The motherf—er was begging for his life but I shot him anyway.”
    Sworn testimony attributed to Leonard Peltier, boasting in the Marlon Brando motor home about shooting Ronald Williams, as heard by Dennis Banks, Ka-Mook Banks, Bernie Lafferty, and (soon-to-be-murdered) Anna Mae Pictou Aquash. According to the autopsy report, Ronald Williams died with his right hand held up in front of his face; there were powder burns on his fingers.

    “The circumstantial evidence presented at the extradition hearing, taken alone [without the Poor Bear affidavits], constituted sufficient evidence to justify Mr. Peltier’s committal on the two murder charges.”
    Anne McLellen, Canadian Minister of Justice, in a letter to Attorney General Janet Reno, October 12, 1999, affirming that Peltier was lawfully extradited to the US to stand trial for murder.

    “The two witnesses testified outside the presence of the jury that after their testimony at trial, they had been threatened by Peltier himself that if they did not return to court and testify that their earlier testimony had been induced by F.B.I. threats, their lives would be in danger.”
    United States v. Peltier, 585 F. 2d 314, U.S. App. Decision September 14, 1978.

    “There is no doubt that in June 1975 Leonard Peltier put a loaded gun in my mother’s mouth during one of her interrogations and that six months later, other members and leaders of the American Indian Movement carried out my mother’s torture, rape and murder. Leonard knows a lot about the people involved but even today, after all these years, he refuses to cooperate in the on-going murder investigation.”
    Denise Maloney, daughter of AIM murder victim Anna Mae Pictou Aquash (Mi’kmaq)

    “This story that the government admitted they don’t know who shot the agents comes from an out-of-context comment attributed to prosecutor Lynn Crooks. Let me tell you something. I know Lynn Crooks, and there is no one on the planet more convinced of Peltier’s guilt than Lynn Crooks.”
    John M. Trimbach, American Indian Mafia

    “… the greater probability is that you yourself fired the fatal shots… It would be unjust to treat the slaying of these F.B.I. agents, while they lay wounded and helpless, as if your actions had been part of a gun battle. Neither the state of relations between Native American militants and law enforcement at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation prior to June 26, 1975, nor the exchanges of gunfire between individuals at the Jumping Bull Compound and the law enforcement agents who arrived there during the hours after Agents Coler and Williams were murdered, explains or mitigates the crimes you committed…Your release on parole would promote disrespect for the law in contravention of 18 U.S.C….”
    Leonard Peltier’s 1999 Parole Board, commenting on his aiding and abetting conviction.

    “But in the end, while crossing back and forth over the issue of ‘without doubt,’ and crossing back again to wonder, it simply took a delegation of people who were tired of all the deceptions, lies and dangers to step forward and tell me the truth. ‘Peltier was responsible for the close range execution of the agents…’ and that was the end of that.“
    Native journalist Paul DeMain, April 2, 2007, writing about “people who have agonized for years, grandfathers and grandmothers, AIM activists, Pipe carriers and others who have carried a heavy unhealthy burden within them that has taken its toll.”

    “For me it’s something very heroic that he’s done. He’s putting himself at risk, seriously at risk. I will say this: that this brother is a very strong brother. He is not a cold-blooded murderer. He is not a bad person, he’s very kind, generous and sincere.”
    Leonard Peltier, 1991 Darrin Wood interview, describing the man who executed Ronald Williams and Jack Coler.

    “I never thought my commitment would mean sacrificing like this, but I was willing to do so nonetheless. And really, if necessary, I’d do it all over again, because it was the right thing to do.”
    Message from the “Bernie Madoff of political prisoners,” 2/6/2010.

    Parole may be granted when the offender’s “…release would not depreciate the seriousness of the offense.”
    DOJ policy statement on parole that explains why inmate Peltier has never qualified for parole.

    Peltier’s latest ploy (fooling President Obama into thinking that he is a victim of the “system”) didn’t work either. In his sworn petition for clemency to the president, Peltier claims he ran in the direction of “women and children” after, as he also claims in his book, waking up to the smell of pancakes and the sound of gunfire in his tent a quarter mile from the murder scene. Peltier had hoped the president was unaware that the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals established that the gunfire actually started when Peltier emerged from his Suburban van and opened fire on agents Williams and Coler.

    What sort of consideration is due an unrepentant cop killer who lies to the president? Peltier’s worst enemy has always been the truth, encouraged by Amnesty International’s dishonest accounting of the murders and the urban legends spread by virtue merchants of the Left. Somebody please clue in the venerable Mr. K!

    1. Dear James, many thanks for taking the time to respond. I think the best way forward is to let your response speak for itself. Thank you for caring enough to take the time to write this.
      Peace,
      Donna

  8. I have listened to your song why me Lord tonight I listened to it again and it touched me so deep I have now turned myself over to the Lord just wanted to say thank you

  9. Hello. I am the grandmother Cheryl that has the 13 year old grandson David that prior comment from nanci ward was speaking of. We did go to the concert in shipshiwana on May 20th. Was lucky enough that a very special person was able to arrange for my grandson to meet Kris. He was not only able to meet him, he got to hug him, shake his hand, and talk with him for a few. I will forever be thankful that this person was able to make this happen for my grandson. Prior to him even finding out I was taking him to the concert he had sat down and wrote Kris a six page letter and put two pictures in it that we sent away to the fan club. This week we received one of the pictures back with a little note written on it. The other picture I am hoping that they kept it with the six page letter he wrote him. He also got something signed by him when he met him. Hopefully the letter he wrote him will actually find its way into his hands so that he will be able to read it.. My grandson signs the song Convoy quite often for the kids and teachers at his school.. He loves everything about Kris. He also realizes that he was lucky enough to get to meet one of country music’s greatest icons. Some thing he will never forget.

    1. Hi Cheryl, lovely to hear from you. I am so pleased your evening went off so well and that David had some special time with Kris. Every gig is so special in its own way and artists, just like us, surely have days when they just feel more upbeat and invincible than others. Children are special too, & I enjoy hearing about young fans 🙂 Thanks for taking the time to share with us …. Kind regards, Donna

  10. Good morning all ! Well, Kris came and he performed wonderfully . By now , he has more than likely setup camp at his next stop in Boston, MA. but my comments are all about his time spent briefly in the city of Keene, New Hampshire.
    The Colonial Theatre is a reasonably sized venue of some antiquity and was well packed last night. Once seated, I noticed the stage immediately and saw a single mike stand and a few monitors present which indicated that he would in fact be doing a solo act tonight. No band this time and my question as to why he has backed off playing “Under The Gun” was answered. As he himself was quoted as saying, “Playing with the band is more fun”, I also knew that “Under The Gun” was a piece best played with the band ! He could no doubt perform it “unplugged” but I believe it would have lost a bit of the energy in the translation. After all, it is a bit of a kick butt number when played with the band.
    Needless to say, Kris still nailed it as expected ! This gifted performer is still a force to be reckoned with even at 80 years of age and clearly, there is no slowing down for him.
    His age has only enhanced his performance in that his songs seemed to have taken on new meanings at time. His gritty voice is etched with experience, wisdom and soul that can only be authenticated by one who has actually been there. Like a tired, stubborn old warrior, he keeps marching on. I was amazed how Kris could stand in one spot for an hour straight while pounding out his songs one after the other with only a brief “Thank you” after each one. I was half expecting him to at least be sitting on a stool while he performed but this is one ol soldier who stands at attention for his audience. Someone in the audience shouted out “Thank you for your service” which was met with approval from the audience as well and I thought, yeah, in more ways than one !
    What was particularly sweet was how during several songs , the audience could be heard singing along some of the lines with him in a gentle, supporting way which just seemed to add a nice touch of “unofficial” backup for him. They did not overwhelm or distract from Kris’s performance but added that special feeling of adoration for the artist.
    If there was any disappointment on my part, it was only that his dialog with the audience was somewhat limited as I have always been a fan of simply listening to him speak and tell stories of his past. He did manage to share one with us that made everyone laugh. He certainly does have a gift for story telling as well 🙂
    All things said, Kris has once again proven his talents to be varied and exceptional and “inspiring” to at the very least, myself.
    Thank you Kris, from the bottom of my heart and God Bless you…. You old “Son of a bitch” !

  11. Good afternoon, Donna and many thanks for your timely response ! I must say I was pleasantly surprised 🙂 So…. it’s not my imagination that “Under The Gun” has been on the back burner of his set list, hmmmm.. I agree with you on it making a comeback and hope it happens soon ! I will be seeing him play at the Colonial Theatre in Keene, New Hampshire Tuesday night (May 2) and will post you some notes on the performance which I am sure will be exceptional as always !

  12. Good afternoon, Donna ! Just had a question regarding Kris’s song lineup for the tour he is currently undertaking. I rarely hear or see his song “Under The Gun” mentioned and thought how appropriate it would be for him to perform that one more often now than ever before. Or perhaps he is still playing that one and I am simply not aware of it ? Could be, seeing how many things seem to go by me these days 🙂 Anyway, nice site you all got here and I wish you the best in it’s future and all that you do, Thanks, Donna

    1. Hello Bill, great to hear from you. The last setlist I have seen is from 8 April, & you are right – Under the Gun is not on it. I am sure some accommodation had to be made for the band, but I fully agree that this powerful song is more relevant today than ever before. I will certainly keep an eye open as I am expecting it to make a comeback. Thank you so much for your kind words about the site 🙂 Hope to catch up with you again soon. PS: Well spotted on the song……

  13. Hi kris,
    My name is Nanci and I work with a wonderful women Cheryl who is a nurse and grandmother as I. Cheryl is taking her grandson “David “,to us concert at Shipshewana on may 20th,2017. This little boy is 13 and absolutely loves u. I am so excited for them to have this opertunity truly believe god is helping to make this happen because it was just a fluke she came accross ur concert in time to go. Her grandson even dressed up as u for a school thing. His favorite movie is “convoy “and he would be so over the moon if u could sing it a small part of it . I personally have always loved you may god bless u and ur family.just thought I would let u know that u still rock with a new generation. Thank you for your time I know you are extremely busy. If you could just drop me a couple of words letting me know you did read this.i won’t feel so foolish.

    1. Hi Nanci,
      Thank you for your kind message. This is a fan site, but I will try to pass this on should the opportunity arise. I cannot promise more than that, but I really hope you have a great time at the concert. Drop us a line & let us know how it went if you have the time?

  14. I’m new here, but not to Kris. Saw him in Minneapolis Saturday, Jan. 14. Is there a place I can post my review?

    1. Hi Paul, and welcome. I am sorry for the delayed reply, I have had some health issues but am back in the saddle. Your review would be most welcome. I am sure we can put it under Latest news 🙂

      If you would like to email it me at [email protected] I will get it posted. I look forward to reading it.

      Great to hear from you,

      Regards,

      Donna

  15. Much like you, technology is more than a bit mystifying to me also. That being said I want to first thank you for a great kindness you paid my friends and I many years ago when you invited all of us back stage after your performance at the New York Philharmonic. It was a very unique experience sharing a bottle of Teacher’s Scotch and talking baseball with Al Kooper till the sun came up. Thank you.

    Fast forward to the present and the real reason why I’m writing. Right now Kris one of my oldest buddies and one of your oldest fans is struggling for his life in a rehab center in NY . It’s not Possum Kris it’s C. M. Sorry to be so cryptic. I hope you can make the connection. His condition is grave. He’s very weak, and sure could use a word of encouragement from someone who, like him, also possess as deep an appreciation for the written word as you do. So if your amenable, and if your schedule allows, I’d be happy to provide contact information but only through regular mail or via my email. He’s a fiercely private person that would probably get very annoyed with me for doing this and would go postal on me if your relationship with him ever became public. Our old friend is a lot of things, however cooperative is not one of them.

    Maybe this will make it a bit clearer as to whom I referring to. One night when you and your band were performing at Max’s Kansas City in NYC. He, in a wheelchair, and I attended the performance. When we arrived the doorman ask our names. By coincidence our friend and a NYC police officer that suffer a gun shot wound, which rendered him a paraplegic, shared the same last name. Thinking he was that officer they ushered us to a table right in front of the stage. You and Donny arrived with the rest of band and came by our table, and for a few minutes we all chatted it up, you only pausing to take the time to pose for pictures with one pretty girl after another. Then the manger came storming up waving his finger in our friend’s face saying he was no cop and demanded we give up our front row seats. You told him that we were to stay where we were and to set up another front row table to accommodate the wounded officer. Thanks again . We followed you around a lot back in those days Kris. The Saratoga paper once referred to us not as your groupies back as your dirties.

    Hoping this all somehow makes some sense

    Hatch

    1. Dear Hatch,

      Thank you so very much for sharing your memories of happier times. The rest of your message was both troubling and touching. I am not in direct contact with Kris at all, but I have taken the liberty of forwarding your words to his manager who is.

      I am not able to make any promises other than that this will be forwarded tonight, but I wish you the best of luck & truly hope that the current situation improves.

      Kind regards,

      Donna

      1. Hi Donna,

        Thank you for forwarding my post to Kris’s manager. Unfortunately, since my 10/05 posting our old friend Cuddy passed away. He was a major fan of Kris’s work and most proud to have known him.

        Just a few words about the sad events of the eleventh of November 2016,

        This past Friday my fifty year friendship with Cuddy Murray came almost literally full circle back to the very spot where it had begun. From the window of the restaurant where the celebration of his life brought together so many of his closest friends, I could easily see the place where our happy, often befuddling, and sometimes cantankerous association had commenced.

        In true Darwinian fashion it actually crawled out of the water, and up on to the sand to begin a fifty year evolution that took the both of us from a casual introduction on a summer’s day, to achieving the status of crabby old buddies.

        Fifty years ago a Good Samaritan towed us in after a disastrous sailing journey on a Styrofoam vessel that barely qualified as a boat. It was basically an over grown deli coffee cup that would easily get swamped in anything other than dead calm seas and could actually dissolve in an oil slick if it were to encounter one.. Our Savior could not take the boat all the way into the shore so we had to swim the last sixty or seventy yards to the beach. I asked Cuddy if he could make it in from there. He mumbled something that sounded like yes and jumped in. Then the rest of us jumped in after him. But no sooner did he hit the water when it became obvious that he was having trouble. I called over to him, “are you OK”? He answered “a, I don’t think so” and slipped out of sight under the water. I managed to get over to him and get him back up to the surface and then eventually back on shore.

        It’s an old story that’s been told many times over the years, and always with varying degrees of accuracy. But the eleventh of November 2016 caused me to look back at that day, fifty years past, a little differently, It occurred to me at the reception that if I were to add my fifty years of friendship with Cuddy to, lets say Paul’s fifty plus years and then that to Jasper’s or to Jerry Lapre’ or Pasca’s or Neil’s or Moose’s (don’t forget what I told you Moose) or the Caddies. Or all the people in the Landing that knew him, or all those from that old rundown bar by the railroad tracks, who called him friend. I’m sure that in a matter of minutes you could easily come up with a figure far in excess of several millennia of friendship that everyone at the reception shared with this one good man.

        A couple of stories come to mind, that for me, define what it was to be a friend of Cuddy’s.

        Many years ago Bill Tull, Cuddy and I were attending, our equally old friend Jerry Lapre’s wedding in Colorado. We were all together in a van being driven by Tom, a friend of Jerry’s from Virginia. Billy and Cuddy wound up getting into a loud argument, over what, I couldn’t tell you. After listening to the two of them go at it for several miles, Tom, nervously leans over to me and asked “what do you think would happen if those two had guns”? It wasn’t always easy to be Cuddy’s friend.

        When my Father lay dying in Glen Cove hospital I was sitting at his bed side holding his hand for the last hours of his life. When the final moments of his existence drained out of him I got up to go tell the nurses that he was gone. I can’t tell you how alone I felt at that moment. How much I needed someone to be with me. My father’s room was one door away from the elevator and as I stepped out into the hallway it’s doors opened and who do you think came rolling out. Take a guess. It wasn’t always easy to be Cuddy’s friend but it was always worth it.

        My old friend loved many things. He was a loving man. He loved the English language. The written word was very important to him. He loved his old dog Deutsa. He lived and died on every pitch with his beloved Yankees. He loved all his Nieces and Nephews. But for his brother Paul, his sister Susan Murray and the Clara Barton of our time Jane Murray. For those three he held a very special and very deep affection like no other.

        So if you should find yourself in the company of friends of Cuddy’s. Or even if your alone. Raise a glass in toast. To Gerald T. Murray, aka Frank Allen, aka Coach, aka CUDDY. You brought us joy. Well done old friend. Well done.

        Hatch

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