Anthony of Padua Church in Litchfield, Conn., where the family lives, and volunteered at the Litchfield Association of Retarded Citizens. 1 passion was the Red Sox, although his father and brothers Charles, 21, and William, 18, are died-in-the-wool Yankee fans. 28, 2004, when it crashed during takeoff in light snow and freezing. memorial page for Edward Bright Teddy Ebersol (), Find a Grave Memorial ID 225803674, citing Saint Anthony Cemetery. He also was a prize-winning poet, having won a medal at a national poetry convention for a humorous poem he wrote. Teddy Ebersol was aboard a chartered Canadair CL-601 Challenger jet with his father and older brother, Charlie, on Nov. The son of NBC Sports Chairman Dick Ebersol and actress Susan Saint James, he was killed tragically in a plane crash in Montrose, Colorado. ![]() Teddy had a strong singing voice and loved karaoke. Teddy, a freshman at The Gunnery, a tony private school in Washington, Conn., had a “wonderfully quirky” sense of humor that led him to say things that were silly and profound at the same time, the family said.įor example, at an eighth-grade graduation ceremony, he said, “I follow therefore I lead.” His brother, Charles, and his father survived. Teddy Ebersols Red Sox Fields at Lederman Park was developed by a new civic and philanthropic partnership of three non-profit groups - The Red Sox Foundation, Hill House, and The Esplanade Association - in cooperation with The Executive Office of Environmental Affairs and the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. Susan and Dick's youngest child, 14-year-old Teddy, died in that crash along with two crew members. The family penned an emotional tribute to Edward Bright “Teddy” Ebersol, tragically killed Sunday in a charter plane crash near Telluride, Colo. Ebersol was seriously injured when his plane crashed in Colorado over Thanksgiving weekend. Inspired by a founding gift from Red Sox Chairman Tom Werner, the fields are named after an avid young Red Sox fan, Teddy Ebersol, who died in a plane crash in. The 14-year-old son of NBC Sports chief Dick Ebersol was a precocious prize-winning poet who equally loved the Boston Red Sox and discussing politics, his heartbroken family said yesterday.
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