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Gary C. Barnaby
Gary C. Barnaby was b. December 30, 1950 in
Stoneham, MA, d. June 18, 2011 in Edgewater Florida.
He was the son of Frank Barnaby
b. on January 7, 1922 (Volume 14, Page 26) in Medford,
Massachusetts and d. December 5, 1985 in Hyannis, Barnstable
County, Massachusetts and Theresa Rita Feola
b. on May 8, 1921 in Boston, Suffolk County Massachusetts and d.
at 52 years old on October 22, 1973 in Wareham, MA.
He was married to Diane Raymond on March 24,
1984.
Obituary:
GARY CURTIS BARNABY, 60 died
June 18, 2011 at his home in Edgewater, Florida.
He was born in Stoneham, Massachusetts and was the son of the late
Frank D. and Theresa (Feola) Barnaby. He was the beloved husband
of Diane Raymond.
He graduated from Bourne High School in
1969 where he enjoyed automobile mechanics. He was a
veteran during the Vietnam War and was stationed in Germany.
After an honorable discharge he worked in Massachusetts being
licensed in heavy equipment. He subsequently moved to
Edgewater, Florida and opened his own Small Engine Repair
Service and Rental business. He built a replica 1902 Model
T Ford from a golf cart and registered it
20 years ago. One of the first battery operated automobiles in
Florida. He enjoyed tinkering with engines, fishing and dabbled
in CB equipment. In fact, he loved working with his imagination
building things with his hands. He also loved sci-fi
movies and series. His favorites were Battlestar
Gallactica and Dr. Who.
He was a loving brother and will be
greatly missed by his ten siblings: Daniel F. Barnaby of
Plymouth, MA; Theresa G. Chisholm of Antwerp, NY; Dennis R.
Barnaby of Tewsbury, MA; Donald P. Barnaby of Melbourne, FL;
Edward A. Barnaby of Lake Placid, FL; Victoria M. Furness of
Freetown, MA; Diane C. Bender-Gary of Sherman, ME; John S.
Barnaby of Island Falls, ME; Debra A. Nugent of Oxford, ME; and
Jeffrey A. Barnaby of Melbourne, Fl.
A memorial service will be held at St.
Peter’s Church on the Canal, Buzzards Bay, MA on July 13, 2011
at 5:00 - 7:00 PM, with service starting at 6:00 pm.
Gary had is picture in the newspaper in
Daytona in 1992, for building a car. Below is the article
in the newspaper and the article read as follows:
Article Reads:
By Mark J. Johnson, associate editor
Most Southeast Volusia residents look at
the remains of an old golf cart and a pile of crap metal and see
an old golf cart and a piece of scrap, but not Gary Barnaby.
For Barnaby, that golf cart and scrap metal
represent ready transportation for his wife, but not just any
transportation: a replica of a 1909 Model A. Ford.
“This was just something I wanted to do,”
Barnaby said as he shows off his creation. Next I want to build
a Model A truck.”
The 44-year-old Edgewater resident said the
root of his creation came when a friend gave him a set of
drawings of a Model A.
After looking over the plans, he said, he
decided he wanted to build a replica of Henry Ford’s classic, so
he went into the back yard and started there.
“I had an old golf cart and some scrap
iron,” He said. “I used the drive train from the golf cart for
the engine, but the rest of it I built myself.”
The wheels of the replica, Barnaby said,
came from some motorcycle wheels he purchased at a junk shop.
The car has real kerosene lamps as decorative headlights, paint
cans are the housing for the real headlight and the plastic cap
off a spray paint can is the horn button.
The four-seater uses six golf-cart
batteries as its power source, as a suspension made from the
leaf springs of an old golf cart and the wheel hubs from a
discarded trailer.
“I just improvised with things I had around
the yard to make something functional,” he said. “It took me
about three months to build it. The hardest part was getting it
registered as a legal vehicle.”
Barnaby said he doesn’t look at the car and
see anything particularly special about it or his ability to
create it.
He said it is nothing more than a working
example of what a person can do if they put their mind to it.
“Most people don’t realize they have the ability to do something
like this,” he said. “You don’t have to have any special skill,
you just have to want to do it.
“Anyone who is good with their hands and
uses common sense could have done it.” He said.
However, when you look at the replica, one
can quickly see there is something special here.
Barnaby said he has always been skilled
with his hands and mechanical things, but he was never formally
trained. Most of his knowledge, he said, comes from years
working in the construction industry.
“I also worked for a golf cart company,” he
said.
Barnaby said his wife, Diane, uses the car
to get to and from the market, but while it will travel up to 20
mph, it isn’t something she takes on the open road.
“I drive it along the back roads to get to
Winn Dixie”, she said. “I have had a lot of people stop and ask
me about it. Where we got it and what can it do.”
He said in today’s society, where the
government’s permission is seemingly needed to do almost
anything, his car represents the independence that is available
if a person wants to grab it.
“More and more the government tells you
what to do or that you have to be licenses to do this and that.
A person should not be restricted by the government or public
opinion,”, he said. “You should be restricted only by what you
want.”
Barnaby moved to Edgewater about eight
years ago from Massachusetts.
Resources for Gary C. Barnaby:
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High School Picture Bourne High School, 1969
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Throughout the years.
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Marriage
picture with Diane Raymond, 1984 -
Gary's Car he built 1994 -
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Gary with Car in Newspaper. 1992 -
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Picture
of entire family taken in 1964
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