HUDSON FALLS – Vivian Mitchell Prindl, 107, a longtime resident of Hudson Falls, passed away peacefully on February 2, 2019 at her home, surrounded by loving friends and family.
Born on October 31, 1911, in Detroit, Michigan, she was the second of three children born to the late Mildred (Hotchkiss) and Robert Mitchell.
After graduating from high school in 1930 she attended a business high school studying short hand and typing, earning money for tuition to attend Kalamazoo College, graduating in 1935.
She met her future husband on a train traveling to Arizona. She was living and working there and he was working on his master’s degree at the University of Arizona. They married in August of 1938 in Detroit, Michigan.
Vivian and Frank then settled in Decatur, Illinois, where they started their family. They welcomed a son, Andreas in 1939 and a daughter, Patricia, in 1941.
In 1944 they moved to
Lexington, Kentucky where Frank taught at the university and Vivian became an elementary school
teacher. They lived in Germany from 1957-59 where her husband was Cultural
Affairs Officer at the U S Embassy and she taught kindergarten.
In 1961 the Prindl’s moved to Hudson Falls, NY, after Frank was chosen to be
one of the founders of Adirondack Community College. Vivian soon accepted a
position at Sanford Street School in Glens Falls, where she taught third grade
for 16 years, retired and then returned as a part time volunteer for an
additional 25 years, taking time off to travel.
In 1999, at the age of 88 she inquired about becoming a volunteer teacher and resident grandmother at the Kurn Hattin School in Westminster, VT. In exchange for housing and meals she taught reading and crafts to students in grades 1st to 8th for several weeks in the spring and fall for the next 16 years, officially retiring in 2015. In the 70 plus years of teaching, she has enriched the lives of thousands of children.
In 2004, in recognition of years of volunteer work, she received Yankee Magazine’s Barn Raiser Award. In 2009, she was recognized as the most senior volunteer in the Northeast and was awarded with the Community MVP Award sponsored by the New England Patriots football team. Tom Brady, Patriot quarterback, personally awarded the engraved wooden football trophy and a $1500 check for Kurn Hattin School to her
Every year, since 1950, she has spent her summers at the family cottage in Sutton Bay, Michigan. This past summer, she was invited to speak at the Traverse City District Library to a group interested in her secrets of living a long and productive life. It well attended and covered by the local TV station, and the Traverse City Mayor presented her with the key to the city in recognition her lifelong volunteerism and dedication to teaching.
In addition to teaching, she enjoyed reading and traveling. She traveled
all over the world, visiting her family and friends in England, California,
Japan and took a 105-day cruise around the world, volunteering in the ship’s
library. She was especially proud of her trips to Indonesia and the
Philippines under the auspices of the International Book Project. She also
visited Brunei, where she stayed with an influential Muslim family learning
about their culture and beliefs.
She was an avid Scrabble player, and would usually win every game,
Always willing to
learn and give of herself, she recently was accepted to participate in a
longevity study, (for those over the age of 105) sponsored by the Boston
University Medical Center, in Boston, Mass.
She is survived by her son Andreas Prindl, of Princeton, NJ and Angouleme,
France, granddaughter Karin Prindl, of
San Francisco, California, grandson Chris Prindl and his wife Susie and their
children, Meaghan, Joseph, Martha and Elspeth of Truro, England and many, many
friends both near and far.
The Vivian Prindl Outreach Prize is awarded annually by the Trinity College of Music in London, England and a scholarship fund has been established in her name at Wayne State University in Michigan.
Friends may call on Wednesday, February 6, 2019, from 3 to 5 p.m., at the Carleton Funeral Home, Inc., 68 Main Street in Hudson Falls.
Her Funeral Mass will be celebrated 11 a.m. on Thursday, at St. Michael the Archangel Church in South Glens Falls.
Burial with be in the spring at St Michael’s Cemetery, Suttons Bay, Michigan.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations be made to New England Kurn Hattin Home, Box 127, Westminster, VT 05158.
Thinking of all of Mrs. Prindl’s family and friends.
I can barely express how much I’ll miss her.
She changed my life, forever.
Peace dear friend.
Love,
Susan Odgers & Tom Mair
I am so very glad I was blessed to cross paths in this life with Mrs. Prindl – several years ago I did some typing for her and got to read all about her traveling adventures. The last time I saw her was on the celebration of her 100th birthday. She was an amazing woman and one to emulate. My sympathy to all of her beautiful family for your loss.
So many memories of a great lady! Glad she will be at St. Michaels. Our condolences to the Prindl family.
Klaus and Linda Reichel.
So sorry to hear of the passing of this phenomenal woman.
She was a very selfless individual who gave of herself to all!
I am blessed to call Mrs. Prindl my friend. I met her when she was 88 years young and started volunteering in my classroom at Kurn Hattin. She was an inspiration to everyone. I’ll always remember her words at her 100th birthday party with the children, “whatever you do in life, be kind.” Well said my friend…..
Where to begin? I remember Vivian and Frank (Dr. and Mrs. Prindl to me) from their earliest days at ACC when they were close friends of my parents, Bob (the college’s founding President) and Judith Eisenhart. After Frank’s death, Vivian and my mother remained very close — when Vivian was in the area and not gadding about the world! — until my mother’s death in 2001. My husband and I are lucky to have spent time with her grandson Chris and wife Susie when they lived near us in the Poconos, and we visited them in England soon after their move (when they had only ONE child!), where Chris remains an accomplished potter and teacher. Vivian’s passing after such a distinguished life brings all of us back to recognition of those elemental virtues of love, commitment to knowledge, curiosity, and generosity of spirit that give our existence meaning and create beauty. I can still hear her voice . . .
What a wonderful life she lived and so many lives she touched.
Ms. Prindl was my 3rd grade teacher in 1963, prior to my family relocating. I recall crying and her comforting me. She had each student send me a letter following our move, which I still have somewhere to this day.
Thank you Ms. Prindl for your kindness and teachings. May you Rest In Peace. You certainly deserve it. To the family ~ what a treasure you had. My deepest condolences. ❤️