Carrying on a Century-Long Family Tradition Volunteering for the Red Cross
By Clarice Nassif Ransom, Volunteer
Volunteer: Joe Cattaneo
Resides: McLean, Virginia
Profession: Retired President of the Glass Packaging
Institute and part-time consultant
Length of Volunteer Service: 3 years and counting
Length of Employment with the American Red Cross: 12 years,
early in his career
Joe Cattaneo is carrying on a century-long family tradition
of volunteering for the Red Cross, which dates back to World War I and spans
two nations, the United States and Italy.
Joe’s maternal grandmother served as a volunteer for the Red
Cross during World War I in Italy and Joe’s mother followed in those footsteps,
serving as a volunteer during World War II, in Italy. She married Joe’s American father in Rome and
settled down in St Louis, Missouri.
“I was influenced by my mother to donate my time to help
others in need, as she did so in words and by her actions working for the
Visiting Nurses Association late in life,” said Joe.
Some of Joe’s fondest keepsakes are his grandmother’s Red
Cross identification card from Italy and a Red Cross celebrity cookbook, which
has recipes from celebrated actors from the early 1900’s, such as Al Jolson,
Harry Houdini, Douglas Fairbanks, Lillian Russell, Mary Pickford, and Sophie
Tucker. The cookbook was dedicated to the American Red Cross and the Actor’s Fund.
Joe thinks the proceeds of the cookbook went to both organizations. The
cookbook was acquired by Joe’s great uncle, who was a mess sergeant during
World War I. Joe inherited the cookbook from his great uncle, who kept it in a
special chest along with military medals and memorabilia.
So, Joe could not help but step up and be part of the American
Red Cross organization, first, as a part-time employee in college during the
Vietnam War era, later as a full-time employee, and now, as a volunteer,
post-retirement.
“I started working part-time for the American Red Cross when
I was in college,” says Joe. “The father of one of my fraternity brothers was
the Assistant Director of the Service to Military Families Department
at the St. Louis Bi-State Chapter. At that time, during the Vietnam War, I
started doing casework – interviewing local families of military personnel
stationed overseas and helping them to learn how to handle a budget and live
without a spouse. Sometimes, we would deliver messages to service members from
their families, such as the birth of a baby or an illness of a family member.”
Joe eventually landed a full-time permanent job with the
American Red Cross where he worked for 12 years in three states – Wisconsin,
Illinois, and Ohio, doing everything from serving as a field representative, to
chapter management, and deputy division manager.
“Some of my most memorable times working for the American
Red Cross was when I was a field representative in Illinois,” said Joe. “I
worked statewide with various small chapters and organizations. I would speak
about the Red Cross at various functions such as the Kiwanis and Rotary clubs
and conduct audits of different chapters. I remember that one small chapter
kept all their financial records in a shoe box – of course, this was all before
computers.”
Joe also reminisced about the people whose lives he was able
to touch working for the Red Cross.
“During the post-Vietnam era, refugees were relocating to
the United States, many settling first at military installations before
assimilating into communities. The American Red Cross would offer night courses
to teach the refugees English. We also provided job placement for them. I even
hosted a party at my apartment where we had folks attend not only from Vietnam,
but also from Korea, Cambodia, and Eastern Europe. Everyone brought a dish from
their homeland and it was a delicious potluck. One of the fellows was a tailor
and made me a suit as a gift.”
Joe then became a Red Cross chapter manager in Wisconsin,
where he was a community leader, promoting the Red Cross.
“I had a monthly radio show,” said Joe. “I would talk about
blood drives and their locations, swimming and safety courses we were offering,
and I would recruit volunteers. It was a great way to promote the Red Cross.”
After leaving the Red Cross as an employee, Joe became a
partner in an Ohio advertising firm for nine years, then moved to the
Washington, D.C. area to become Vice President of Marketing for the Glass
Packaging Institute, one of his former clients, and eventually President of the
Glass Packaging Institute where he retired in 2012, after a 20-year career with
the trade association.
“I was looking at doing something on a voluntary basis for
my community after I retired, so I contacted the American Red Cross in
Fairfax,” said Joe. “I started volunteering as a Community Leader for the Red
Cross, representing the Red Cross at exhibits and attending various community
meetings and fundraising activities. I was then referred to be the head of volunteer services to participate on
their volunteer intake screening team. In volunteer intake, we screen people
who are interested in volunteering – we are sort of like matchmakers. We gauge
their level of interest, and what they want to do, and find them volunteer
opportunities that fit their backgrounds and our needs.”
In
January alone, there were 400 volunteer applicants for the Red
Cross in the National Capital Region that needed to be screened for the right
volunteer opportunity. The time commitment is flexible and the
ways to help out are endless – from blood donor services, to disaster relief, to
community engagement, to a home fire campaign, to helping out at military
hospitals and installations. Their volunteer opportunities are endless.
“We always welcome volunteers,” said Joe. “For me,
volunteering for the American Red Cross completes my life as it is now. When I
do this, I feel active. I get to interact with young like-minded people, and I look
forward to it every day. It is not like a job, that can sometimes get tedious.
There is always someone to help, someone whose life you can make better helping
through volunteer service.”
When Joe is not volunteering for the American Red Cross, he
is helping out many other organizations, including heading up a food bank,
helping to tutor kids, and providing help for the homeless. He is also a music
aficionado who once played piano, trumpet, guitar, and was in a band in high
school. He also enjoys symphonies, operas, theater and sports.
“I am a St. Louis Cardinal fan forever,” concluded Joe.
Joe Cattaneo is one of the most special folks I've had the privilege to know in Red Cross. Smart, funny and hardworking. Every night we ask each other: Will Joe be here tomorrow??
ReplyDeleteVolunteering is a very noble deed. Time spent is the most sincere thing you can give to others.
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