~ IN MEMORY ~
Navy veteran, PAA/DL Capt. Robert Joseph
Rigney Jr.
October 17, 1933 ~ April 4, 2024
We note the passing of retired Pan Am/Delta
pilot Captain Robert Joseph Rigney Jr, age 90.
Captain Rigney joined Pan American 01-04-1965 and retired with Delta Air
Lines.
Obituary information is available online at
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/legacyremembers/robert-rigney-obituary?id=54860014
PCN memorial site
Robert Rigney Obituary
Robert Joseph Rigney, Jr. died peacefully at
age 90 on April 4, 2024 in Monterey, California. He died after a short illness,
having lived with Alzheimer's for several years.
He was born October 17, 1933 to Helen Wall
and Robert Joseph Rigney in Chicago. From that date on he held a few things
dear: his Chicago roots, the Catholic faith, basketball, and friends and
family.
He grew up in Chicago's Oak Park
neighborhood, which he never let anyone forget, surrounded by four siblings and
a large circle of Irish-American aunts, uncles and cousins.
Bob, or "Fish" as he was known to
his school friends, graduated from his beloved Fenwick High School in 1951. As
a sharp-elbowed point guard, he helped his basketball team win the Chicago City
Championships in his senior year. In 1955, he earned a degree in philosophy
from Loyola University in Chicago. In 1956, Bob was drafted into the military
and became a naval aviator, mainly flying reconnaissance planes over the
Pacific Ocean.
In 1965, Bob left the U.S. Navy and embarked
on a nearly four-decade long career as a pilot for Pan American and Delta
Airlines. During a flight to Guatemala, he fell for Pan Am crewmember, Hansi de
Petra. The two married at the Carmel Mission Basilica in 1970.
Bob and Hansi had their first date on a
layover in Honolulu at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel restaurant. For the next 55
years they shared a love for travel, music and even the same birthday. Together
they had four children.
The flying life took Bob to many corners of
the world, where he collected stories, mementos and life-long friends. He lived
in Sausalito, Carmel, Hong Kong, Berlin, and Carmel again.
While living in Berlin, Bob "flew the
corridors" that connected West Berlin and West Germany. He was an
enthusiastic ring-leader among the close-knit Pan Am community. He often
returned to Kitzbühel, Austria for skiing. On November 9th, 1989, he scaled the
Berlin Wall to witness history being made.
In 1992, Bob and his family moved back to
Carmel, where he's lived ever since. He never went long without a phone call to
a friend from Chicago, the Navy, the airlines or anyone he just met.
Bob and Hansi kept traveling through the
years. He kept up with Hansi's marathons by organizing their travel all over
the globe and meeting regularly with his group of former Pan Am pilots in
Berlin who liked to call themselves "the Lost Battalion."
He could recite countless poems, limericks,
puns, jokes and riddles – many of which were collected in small pocket
notebooks.
In Bob's later years, he volunteered as a
docent at the Carmel Mission Basilica. He was also a familiar face at the
Monterey Sports Center, where he often spent more time gabbing than exercising.
Bob is survived by his sons Robert Finn
Rigney of Berlin; Peter Rigney of Berlin, John Rigney of El Cerrito, and
daughter Kathleen Dietrich of Davis. He has five grandchildren.
The family wishes to thank Rosa Taufahema
for her steadfast caretaking during Bob's final two years.
Bob lived for and through his friends. One
life-long friend, Dr. Philip Held, has done remarkable work to study and
address the issue of kidney transplant wait-times. Those who wish to honor Bob
can make a donation to the National Kidney Donation Organization at
https://www.nkdo.org/greatestgift/. Or in keeping with his style, call an old
friend to reminisce about the good times.
A memorial service will be held at a later
date.
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