Submit your thoughts as a graduating senior
Mar
28
2024
Obituaries

Sigalia Cannon

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Sigalia Cannon

Sigalia Cannon

Sigalia Cannon died June 12, three days before her 78th birthday. She has had cancer for the past four-and-a-half years, but until the last few months, she lived her normal life. The cancer accelerated enormously in the last weeks, and she died in her sleep during her first night in hospice care.

Sigalia (Cordelia Dostrovsky) was born in Hertford, UK, but she lived in Aberystwyth and Bangor up to the age of seven. Her parents had been students in London, but evacuated to Wales because of the war. Her father was born in Russia, but grew up in Jerusalem; her mother was born in England, but grew up in Paris. 

The family, now living in Toronto with newborn brother Jonathan, moved to Israel in 1948. Except for a year in Long Island, N.Y., Sigalia had her pre-college education there, and she served in the Israeli military as a weather forecaster. (This was before the Six-Day War, when a fair solution with the Palestinians still seemed possible.) After her military service, she came to the U.S. and went to college at Vassar, then to graduate school at Princeton where she got a Ph.D. in the history of science. 

It was at Princeton that she met me, her husband of 51 years. We spent a decade in academia, mostly in Boston and New York. She taught history of science at Worcester Polytechnic Institute and then at Barnard College.

But she wanted to buy a house, and didn’t find academia congenial. We bought one in Yellow Springs and spent vacations renovating and renting it. That was the beginning. We moved to Yellow Springs in 1977, bought another house and renovated it, also helping my parents with their apartment business. Sigalia and I worked together in several domains: She played piano, and we performed together at the Dayton Art Institute and other places; we published a book on 17th-century history of science with Springer-Verlag; we traveled, mostly in France; we built our house together; we’ve worked on establishing a forest near town; we’ve done dog training, getting AKC titles. Most Sundays, she’s painted with Sherraid Scott, one exhibit being “Shared Views” at the Arts Council. 

Needless to say: She’ll be missed.

Topics:

4 Responses to “Sigalia Cannon”

  1. Karen Cornelius says:

    John, I just now read this obituary for Sigalia. I am SO sorry! I have tried to get back into contact with you both for several years; and if you prefer not, I will understand.

  2. Sam Antonette says:

    Sigalia, RIP. John, so, sorry for your loss.
    As a former tenant, I am grateful for every single
    interaction I ever had with Sigalia. She’ll be
    missed by those who knew her, but it is a loss
    for the entire community.

  3. Corey Slavitt says:

    Sigalia was wonderfully kind and supportive of me and my dog Zoey’s training efforts at the Dayton Dog Training Club some years ago. I recall her sweet Akita, whom I think was named Doobie (or something like that!) It was a marvelous bonus that Sigalia was also a Yellow Springs neighbor, and that I had worked with her sister-in-law Susan Amir Cannon at Antioch College in the 1970s, and that I rented from Vernon and Phyllis Cannon. Miss you Sigalia! Wishing her family and dear ones peace of mind and heart.

  4. Mary Savage from Dayton Dog Training Club says:

    May Sigalia Rest In Peace. I’ll always remember her.

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com