Palmer St Ives Shannon, 74, died at his home on January 31, after  complications from lung disease.   Shannon was born on March 6, 1931, in New York City, the son of  Palmer and Kenyon Grayble Shannon. His family relocated to Rye,  N.Y., and he graduated from Rye High School in 1949. He went on  to study electrical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of  Technology.   He served in the US Air Force as a staff sergeant from 1951 to  1953 in St John’s, Newfoundland, and served for two years in the  New York Air National Guard. He furthered his education by  attending classes at Columbia University while working for NBC’s  The Today Show.   Shannon’s first entrepreneurial venture was that of an electrical  contractor in Greenwich, Conn. Throughout his career he possessed  an unrelenting belief in the benefits of independent employment  and hard work. In midlife he turned to the audio/visual industry  and created Show Management, Inc, which facilitated expert trade  show production for many Fortune 500 companies.   Shannon evolved into a well-rounded intellectual, joining the  Young Republicans in Greenwich as well as the local theater. As  member of the Actors Equity, Palmer offered his skills and  talents to nonprofit organizations such as Connecticut Playmakers  in Greenwich and the Sterling Barn Theater Group in nearby  Stamford. In these venues, Shannon did it all: acting, directing,  producing, lighting and audio set design.   He married for the second time in 1973 to Jocelyn Budington Ginn  of Old Greenwich, Conn. With Joy’s vision for owning her own  antiques business and Palmer’s aptitude for running a business,  they formed Shannon Antiques in 1980.   They relocated to Cape Elizabeth in 1997, where they ran their  business and attended shows up and down the East Coast. Palmer  became treasurer of the Maine Antiques Dealer Association (MADA),  and Palmer and Joy were embraced by the Cape Elizabeth community  enjoying bridge, theater, gourmet cooking and entertaining  friends.   Nancy Glazer, president of MADA, said of Palmer, “In his lifetime  Palmer wore many hats; he was the ultimate volunteer, the person  who was willing to pitch in anywhere and everywhere. And he did.  That never changed… He was our ‘go-to-guy.’ The thing that was  so very fine was that Palmer did all this with bottomless good  humor and grace, never making us feel he was burdened by our  demands for information or support.”   She continued, “He was a master of improv and a consummate joke  teller, a devoted husband and dad and a special person to those  of us lucky enough to call him friend.”   He was a beloved man who impressed acquaintances and everyone he  encountered with his dry wit, intelligence and humor. His  improvisations at the dinner table and endless stream of jokes  will long be remembered and deeply missed.   Palmer had also appeared recently in a local television  commercial shown in Maine, according to show manager Linda  Turner. “The news of his passing saddened me as I not only knew  him as an exhibitor and dealer, but also as a neighbor as he  lived in the next town over. I will dearly miss him,” she said,  “not only for our chance encounters at the hardware store or the  gas station, but I will also miss his presence at the antiques  shows.”   These sentiments were echoed by Nancy Prince a fellow dealer and  board member who served with Palmer for two years. “He was a  great asset as treasurer of the board. He and Joy always had  beautiful stock and booths. Palmer was available to help out with  anything, anywhere. As an electrician, his former profession, he  was the standby person to solve electrical problems – something  he did at the Wilton shows and at MADA’s show.”   Neville Lewis, who owns the Barometer Shop and also serves on  MADA’s board, echoed others when we spoke. “Such a nice, likeable  and knowledgeable man. He just took on a job and did it, without  fanfare. He could accomplish anything, and he did.”   Marilyn Gould, the manager of the Wilton shows, agreed. “He and  Joy always had the booth near the overhead doors so if any  electrical problems came up he would take care of them. He was a  wonderful, dear person; his death is a tremendous loss – both as  a dealer and a friend.”   He is survived by and is deeply missed by his wife Joy, and his  adored family: daughter Lisa Shannon and granddaughter Nicole of  Maryland, daughter Anne Thompson of Virginia, and three  stepchildren, David, Lauren and Tracy Ginn of Maine. He is also  survived by his devoted Maine Coon cat, Moose, his buddy.   A memorial service celebrating Palmer Shannon’s life will be held  in Cape Elizabeth in the spring.   In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial donations be  made to the American Lung Association, 61 Broadway, New York NY  10006.   Arrangements are by the Hobbs Funeral Home, 230 Cottage Road,  South Portland, Maine.
 
    



 
						