George Paul Roniger Obituary

George Paul Roniger

February 14, 1937 - June 22, 2024

George Paul Roniger Obituary

George Paul Roniger passed away on June 22 while receiving hospice care at Greenwich

Hospital in Greenwich, CT, at the age of 87. He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Suzanne

(Sue) Roniger, daughters Lori Roniger and Amber (Lisa) Roniger, son-in-law Nathan Hays, and

grandchildren Pita and Judy Elhauge-Roniger. He is predeceased by his parents Egon and

Gisele Roniger.

Born in Vienna, George left Austria with his family at age 2 fleeing the Nazis, his father going

ahead in 1938 to get settled in New York City before George and his mom arrived in 1939 after

having spent Kristallnacht in Vienna. While in Vienna, his aunt would take him on errands with

her, as she was less likely to get hassled by police that way. Having been living a working

class/middle class life in Vienna, with his father a traveling salesman and his mother a legal

secretary before she was forced to quit working while pregnant, George’s family settled in

Williamsburg, Brooklyn, as poor refugees not knowing English. Other family members from

Vienna joined them in New York, some with harrowing escape stories.

George grew up surrounded by Jewish German-speaking family and friends, many of them

“aunts” who were his mother’s sisters or family-like friends and their husbands who had

recently fled Austria or Germany. George and his family enjoyed his mother’s Eastern European

cooking, including goulash and chocolate kugelhupf cake.

In New York, George’s father initially worked as a janitor for a bank, and his parents worked in

factories and eventually ran one, although not very successfully. While George’s childhood was

not the most fun, as his parents struggled with economic concerns, George enjoyed playing

stickball in the streets in his neighborhoods. After living in successively less terrible

apartments, when George was a teenager, his parents were able to buy a home in a new

housing development in Bayside, Queens, where other Jewish families were moving.


George excelled in school, graduating from the Stuyvesant High School, the academically-

focused public magnet school, at age 16. He went on to earn an undergraduate degree in


economics from Queens College at age 20, and completed all doctorate coursework in

economics but his dissertation by age 24 from Columbia University (finishing his dissertation in

his early 30s).

George enjoyed music, and as a teenager played piano and accordion in a band in the Catskills

over the summer. While attending Columbia, a friend set him up on a blind date with Sue, who

found him to be adventurous and different from the other men she had dated. Around 16

months later, they got married in January, went skiing in Vermont for their honeymoon, and

moved to Easton, PA, where George got a job as an economics professor at Lafayette College

and Sue was able to finish her final semester of college as the first female student there.

After that, they lived in the Washington, DC, area, where George worked for government

organizations, including the Committee for Economic Development. They returned to the New

York City area when George was offered a job at Citibank. George and Sue then bought a

house in Larchmont, where they lived for more than 50 years and raised their kids. At Citibank,

George worked in areas including public and community affairs and was involved in programs

designed to improve the financial health of New York City.

As an adult, George enjoyed traveling around the world, including in Asia, Africa, and Latin

America, camping, visiting National Parks, and skiing with his wife and their kids and

grandkids. George found joy in hiking and being surrounded by nature. One of his favorite

places was Chamonix mountain in the Alps, where he recently talked about wishing he could

be. As a father, he enjoyed coaching the soccer teams of his kids, making blintzes for breakfast

when at home, and making blueberry pancakes when camping and blueberry picking with his

kids at Acadia National Park in Maine. George and Sue prioritized giving their kids educational,


camp, and travel opportunities that weren’t available to themselves while growing up in poor

immigrant families.

George was an active member of the neighborhood Larchmont Gardens Association, for which

he served as president. He also held various Mamaroneck town board positions. George and

Sue remained as long as they physically could in their beloved home, which was at the top of a

hill with many stairs leading to the front door and surrounded by trees and a small woods,

moving to the Osborn Assisted Living nearby in Rye last year.

Maintaining contact with old friends was important to George, and he was an avid researcher

of Roniger genealogy, finding and connecting with Ronigers around the world. He was a

longtime member of Larchmont Temple and enjoyed the social aspects of being part of Jewish

community. In recent decades, he was also a member of multiple groups for retired and older

men.

George died only a week and a half after his grandkids visited from San Francisco and he

listened to his grandkid play jazz piano on one of the Osborn pianos. His wife, daughters, other

family members, and friends spent time with him on his last day, when he appeared not that

conscious, letting him know that he was loved and cared for and it was OK to let go, as he was

tired from going to the hospital multiple times over the past year and suffering from declining

health. He will be missed by the many people whose lives he has touched.

A funeral will be held on Wednesday, June 26, at 11 a.m. at Larchmont Temple. The service will

be available via livestream through this link. Interment will follow immediately at Mt. Eden

Cemetery (20 Commerce St., Hawthorne, NY).

The family will observe shiva at Sue’s home (101 Theall Road, Apt. 1400, Rye, NY) on

Wednesday, June 26, and Thursday, June 27, with a Minyan Service held on Wednesday at 6

p.m.

Condolences to the family may be sent to Sue’s home.

May George’s memory be a blessing.

George Paul Roniger passed away on June 22 while receiving hospice care at Greenwich

Hospital in Greenwich, CT, at the age of 87. He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Suzanne

(Sue) Roniger, daughters Lori Roniger and Amber (Lisa) Roniger, son-in-law Nathan Hays, and

grandchildren Pita and Judy Elhauge-Roni

Events

Interment

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

12:30 am

Mt. Eden Cemetery

20 Commerce Street Hawthorne, NY 10532

Interment

Funeral Service

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

11:00 am

Larchmont Temple

75 Larchmont Ave. Larchmont, NY 10538

Funeral Service

Final Resting Place

Mt. Eden Cemetery

20 Commerce Street Hawthorne, NY 10532