Hannah Lomele Captures Jagoda Scholarship
Jake and Mary Jagoda were integral members of the Huntington community, growing up, socializing and attending school here and developing many close relationships over the years. When they both perished in the most tragic of circumstances it was not only heartbreaking for their family, but for their friends, classmates, teammates, teachers and coaches, too.
Following the twin tragedies, the Jagoda family created a scholarship that is awarded annually at Huntington High School in memory of Jake and Mary, who shared a special passion for living, learning and history.
Scholarship applicants must demonstrate academic excellence with an emphasis on history courses; indicate an intention to declare a college major in history or a related field; obtain the recommendation of a social studies teacher and submit a “History Is My Passion” essay.
This year’s recipient of the Jagoda scholarship is Hannah Lomele, a member of Huntington High School’s Class of 2014. The teenager plans to study written arts at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson in Dutchess County, New York.
“Hannah is a mature, hardworking individual,” said Bernadette Walsh, Huntington High School’s college counselor. “Academically, she has chosen high caliber courses throughout her high school career. Her list of honors and Advanced Placement classes is impressive, but what is even more impressive is her determination to grasp this advanced information at the highest level possible. Hannah has learned how to learn, a lesson she will take with her as far as she chooses to travel in education and in life. Reading a minimum of two books per week of outside reading, as well as several intensive writing courses, including one at Oxford University, has developed not only Hannah’s vocabulary, but also her forward, progressive way of thinking.”
Huntington’s Chairperson of Humanities Joseph Leavy and social studies teacher Camille Tedeschi presented the Jagoda scholarship to Ms. Lomele during the high school’s senior academic awards night held earlier this month.
“Academically, Hannah is outstanding,” Mrs. Walsh said. “Personally, she is a gem. Hannah has great potential and a tenacity to succeed. However, that is only the beginning. She is a leader, a caring and sensitive individual and a well-disciplined young woman.”
Ms. Lomele participated in a credit bearing career internship with social studies teacher Camille Tedeschi in a Global History Honors class. “Hannah is unique and extremely talented,” Ms. Tedeschi said. “It made my day to have her with me during fifth period each day. The students in the class looked up to her and her accomplishments in school and in her life as a traveler. She would share travel stories with the class and many of those were of us together in places I would teach about to the class.”
Ms. Lomele also completed an intern project for Ms. Tedeschi that aligned to the art portfolios that the teacher has each of her students keep. “For each unit of study, they analyze a variety of pieces of artwork that demonstrate the specific historical time period and topic,” Ms. Tedeschi explained. “Hannah created an art portfolio as her final assignment in addition to being our class curator and providing the students with specific pieces of art to view and analyze based upon her creativity and love for history.”
Killed at WTC on 9/11
A huge fan of the History Channel, Jake Jagoda attended elementary school in the Huntington School District and starred on the tennis team at J. Taylor Finley Junior High School before graduating from Chaminade High School in 1995.
Mr. Jagoda was killed in the terrorist attack on One World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 when hijackers flew an airplane into the north tower. He was 24 years old.
The ebullient Mr. Jagoda, who always seemed to have a twinkle in his eye, was in his second month of working as a trader on the 105th floor for TradeSpark, a subsidiary of Cantor Fitzgerald, one of the world’s premier financial services firms.
Known for his sometimes dry sense of humor and sensitive side, Mr. Jagoda loved the sea. He started fishing when he was four years old and was given his first boat when he was 12. He mastered all aspects of the sport and began working on the James Joseph, a charter boat that sailed out of Huntington, when he was 13. When fishing season ended, he worked on a lobster boat. He could fly-fish, ice fish, deep-sea fish and trap lobsters. Classmates nicknamed him “Captain Jake.”
Following a stint studying at Jacksonville College, the articulate Mr. Jagoda earned his undergraduate degree in historical studies at SUNY Empire State College. After obtaining his college degree he worked as a tackle salesman during the week and on the James Jospeh on the weekends. When he saw the need to work a more “regular job,” a friend helped him land the position with Cantor Fitzgerald.
Fateful Kayaking Excursion
The Jagoda family was devastated again just two years later when Mary Jagoda presumably drowned while kayaking in the fog with a friend off Cape Cod in October 2003. She was 20 years old and in her junior year at Brandeis University, where she was studying American history and journalism. She had plans to study abroad in Glasgow, the largest city in Scotland.
A member of Huntington’s Class of 2001, the shy, dark-eyed Ms. Jagoda was initially on the Brandeis swimming and diving team before later deciding to play on the university’s field hockey squad.
During her years at Huntington High School, Ms. Jagoda earned strong grades and was very involved in the extracurricular club and athletics programs. She was a member of the National Honor Society and the National French Honor Society.
Jake and Mary Jagoda were very close. When Jake was killed on September 11, 2001 it hit Mary hard, but while she struggled to go on, she was able to earn fine grades at Brandeis. She intended to dedicate her senior thesis to her brother. Following her freshman and sophomore years of college she enjoyed working during the summer months for an advertising agency in Manhattan
“Jake was my hero,” Mary Jagoda said in an online tribute. “He gave me my strength and my sense of humor. No one could tell a story like Jake. He had his timing perfected. He would hold out smiling until the perfect moment. There was always a punch line, but you never knew when it was coming, so I learned to listen carefully and constantly anticipate the joke. Often I would laugh too early, Jake would wait for the perfect moment and then slowly a sly grin would creep across his face. Usually I was on the floor laughing by then. I never could have imagined that such a gentle soul would die so early. Jake I miss you very much. I can only promise you that I won’t let your spirit or your laugh die with you. I’m working on the sly smile.”
Incredibly, a third Jagoda sibling also passed away tragically. Louis Jagoda lived only 19 days in 1982. Parents Louis and Anna May Jagoda brought their second child home from the hospital in what they thought was good health, but a previously unknown kidney blockage claimed his life.