Colonia mourns Charles Shaughnessy, tireless volunteer and activist

by Sergio Bichao on Jun 1st | Email

Charles Shaughnessy in 2008. (Staff file photo)

If everyone followed Charles Shaughnessy’s lead, the world might be a better place. That’s what people who knew the longtime Colonia resident say about the man who was involved in dozens of service organizations and dedicated his life to helping his community.

Despite a list of ailments, Shaughnessy worked tirelessly up to his last months to combat graffiti and litter in his neighborhood, help children and people in need and foster a sense of pride in the Colonia section of the township. He was 74 when he died Tuesday, May 25, at JFK Medical Center in Edison.

“Charlie was at the top of the list. He was one of a kind.” said Colonia Senior Citizens president George Vassiliades, who volunteered with Shaughnessy and served with him on the now inactive Inman Avenue Merchants Association.

Shaughnessy's greatest contribution was starting the semi-annual Inman Avenue Cleanup in 1988. Each April and September, Shaughnessy enlisted about 50 adults and even more local students and scouts to pick up litter and plant flowers in the heart of Colonia.

"We've been doing this for so long I always wonder what it would be like if we didn't do this," Shaughnessy said this April.

Mayor John E. McCormac, a Colonia resident who knew Shaughnessy for 20 years, said he had no doubt “someone will continue the effort" Shaughnessy started.

“We have a lot of people in Woodbridge who take community involvement to a new level, but Charlie was one of a kind,” McCormac said. “It seems that almost everything that happened in the town had Charlie’s involvement somehow.”

"It makes me feel good and vibrant when I'm doing something to make our community better," Shaughnessy told the Home News Tribune in 2008. "I just feel I have to contribute. The township can't do it all."

Shaughnessy recalled how he got the idea for the cleanup project one day as he walked with a friend, picking up every can and bottle he came across.

"I don't want everyone to be as nutty as me, but if everybody did something, the world would be a better place. A lot of people just hang out and complain, but I believe you should do something to make things better."

James Leathem, who knew Shaughnessy through the St. John Vianney Church’s Council of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, and the church’s Pro-Life committee, said his friend “took a lot of pride” in Colonia “because it was his town. Everything was community based for him.”

“He was larger than life,” Councilwoman Brenda Yori Velasco of Colonia said. “His commitment was to making a better community, not self-aggrandizement.”

His daughter, Maureen Crowley, 40, of Flemington, said what she cherishes most were the private moments when her father wasn’t wearing his community activist hat.

“He was charming and could fill a room with laughter and make everyone feel at ease with his personality. I always admired that since I was a little girl,” she said Tuesday.

Shaughnessy in 1990 helped start the tradition of lighting a Christmas tree at Evergreen Senior Center.

He was past president of the American Irish Association of Woodbridge and co-chair of Woodbridge River Watch. He was part of the Woodbridge Adopt-A-Park Program and Graffiti Busters, the Woodbridge Democratic Club and the Woodbridge Environmental Commission.

He lent his time to Woodbridge’s Tooling Around the Township, which helps seniors and disabled residents make home repairs, and participated in the county’s Adopt-a-Road and Clean Communities organizations.

He volunteered at the NJ Veterans Memorial Home in Menlo Park and at Camp PACE for autistic students in Middlesex County.

He was the director of the Kiddie Keep-Well Camp at Roosevelt Park in Edison and worked as a township code enforcement officer and truant officer.

Surviving are his wife of 47 years, Margaret, two sons, a daughter and seven grandchildren

Funeral services will be 9:15 a.m. Wednesday at Gosselin Funeral Home, 660 New Dover Rd., Edison, followed by a 10:15 Mass at St. Francis Cathedral, Metuchen, and burial at St. Gertrude's Cemetery, Colonia.