Skip to main content

Arthur P. Dodge, 78

Thu, 09/24/2020 - 09:31

Arthur P. Dodge of East Hampton and Crystal River, Fla., a descendant of a 1661 English buyer of Block Island, died of complications of Covid-19 at home here on Sept. 11. He was 78 and had been in declining health since a bout with the virus earlier this year.

Mr. Dodge, who, among other distinctions, was a son of a survivor of the Titanic, Washington Dodge, loved rock 'n' roll and made an onstage appearance in 2002 with the band Supertramp in Hyde Park, London, as a prop, "the man under the umbrella." His wife, Maria Nina Dolecka, wrote that he "knew all the background singers' words to any doo-wop song" and that his favorite group was the Rolling Stones.

He was a lifelong golfer who belonged to the Maidstone Club and the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club. He had five holes in one, with two in one year, at those venues as well as at Bethpage Black. He continued to play even after his first stroke, in 2002, often saying, "I hit that one really well," his wife wrote.

Mr. Dodge was also "an auto racing enthusiast," his wife said, who raced his green 1961 Mini Cooper S at legendary tracks like the Bridgehampton Race Circuit, Lime Rock in Connecticut, and Watkins Glen upstate.

Arthur Parrish Dodge was born in Manhattan on Feb. 10, 1942, to the former Helen Manning Brown and Washington Dodge. He grew up there, attending the Buckley School, and graduated from Choate in Connecticut, after which he continued his studies at Yale, where he earned a bachelor's degree in economics, and the University of California at Berkeley, where he earned a master's degree, also in economics.

He began his career at PepsiCo, then became a stockbroker in the mid-1970s, working for various firms including Paine Webber, Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, and UBS.

Mr. Dodge spent summers in Amagansett with his parents, sailing in Gardiner's Bay at the Devon Yacht Club, where, his wife wrote, "one of his formative experiences, when he was about 12 years old, was spending an afternoon playing with a dolphin."

He was a descendant of Trustrum, or Tristram, Dodge, one of the original 17 buyers of Block Island, and also of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt.

Mr. Dodge was married first to Marie-Therese Duryea of Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., known in the family as "the wife-in-law," and they had a daughter, Cornelia Therese Dodge of Jacksonville, Fla. They both survive.

He married Ms. Dolecka, originally of Bristol, England, with whom he had worked, on Oct. 3, 1970; she survives. They moved here full time in the early 1980s, after which he became active in the community as a member of the Rotary Club, a trustee of the Eleanor Whitmore Early Childhood Center (called the East Hampton Day Care Center at the time), and treasurer of the East Hampton Town Republican Committee.

As well as his wife, ex-wife, and daughter, two grandsons, Michael Dodge Pagano of Washington, Mich., and Daley Dodge Pagano of East Hampton, survive, as do four nephews, one niece, and several cousins.

Mr. Dodge had three half brothers and a half sister from his parents' previous marriages: Herbert Hale and Helen Kinnan Holmes of Manhattan from his mother's side, and Jonathan Dodge of Eugene, Ore., and Kent Dodge of North Carolina, all of whom died before him.

He was always positive, said Ms. Dolecka, and "well known for his idiosyncratic dry wit and tenacious determination. He had many and varied friendships, and often said that, like humorist Will Rogers, he had never met a man he didn't like."

Mr. Dodge was cremated. The dispersal of his ashes is to be decided later. 

Villages

Lighthouse Weekend and Other Montauk Fun

At the Montauk Lighthouse, a national historic landmark, the Third New York Regiment will show off their Revolutionary War uniforms and accouterments, and the Kings of the Coast Pirates will perform. Downtown, the Montauk Artists Association is holding its second art show and sale of the summer.

Aug 15, 2025

Item of the Week: Frederica Gallatin on the Beach

This East Hampton Star archive snapshot of Frederica Gallatin (1913-2003) on the beach at the Maidstone Club depicts what a beach day in the 1930s would look like for young women in the summer colony.

Aug 14, 2025

Gosman’s Honors a Cancer Triumph

Service was paused at Gosman’s Topside, Inlet Cafe, and Clam Bar restaurants on Friday afternoon so the blessing of good health for Kate Hobbes could be celebrated by the tight-knit staff.

Aug 14, 2025

 

Your support for The East Hampton Star helps us deliver the news, arts, and community information you need. Whether you are an online subscriber, get the paper in the mail, delivered to your door in Manhattan, or are just passing through, every reader counts. We value you for being part of The Star family.

Your subscription to The Star does more than get you great arts, news, sports, and outdoors stories. It makes everything we do possible.