Cover photo for Janet Foy's Obituary
Janet Foy Profile Photo
1934 Janet 2020

Janet Foy

September 18, 1934 — February 23, 2020

Janet O’Neill Foy, a family therapist and community activist in New York’s Hudson Valley who raised six sons, died Feb. 23, 2020, in Danville, Vermont, after a long battle with cancer. She was 85.

She kept a house in Danville, a mile from her first-born's 297-acre farm, but spent much of her life in Peekskill, N.Y., where she ran a marriage and family counseling practice for 38 years until her death.

Ms. Foy, who fought two bouts of breast cancer in 10 years, died suddenly in bed, surrounded by family members at a place she spent her happiest moments, a cottage on 16 acres of pasture and sugar-maple forest.

To her friends and family, Ms. Foy was an Eleanor Roosevelt-styled advocate for the less fortunate. She led the campaign to establish a homeless shelter in Peekskill after learning that a man froze to death on a city street in a blizzard. The Jan Peek House opened in 1988 with the support of the Peekskill Area Pastors’ Association, of which Ms. Foy was a board member. She organized a chaplain’s program at New York-Presbyterian Hudson Valley Hospital. Ms. Foy successfully lobbied the New York state Legislature to license the practice of family therapy as a way to make mental-health treatment more widely available.

Ms. Foy was a pastoral counselor for returning missionaries of Maryknoll Fathers & Brothers of Ossining, N.Y. She counseled veterans of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as part of her regular practice.

Even as her health was declining, she refused to stop working or give up 300-mile commutes between the Hudson Valley and northern Vermont. The day after she died in Vermont, a patient showed at her Peekskill office for an appointment.
She was a patron of Broadway shows, a piano teacher in a neighborhood of Rochester, N.Y., and an organ player at Catholic masses. She was a lifelong figure skater and cherished long walks and bicycle rides with friends. She loved to put on a dinner party, and held one the night before she died. She was a frugal spender, born in the Great Depression. She left few possessions.

Janet Marie O’Neill was born Sept. 18, 1934, in Chicago to Gerald O’Neill, a public schoolteacher with a law degree, and Margaret “Babe” O’Neill, a homemaker. A brother, Gerald Thomas O’Neill of Barrington, Ill., died before her.

Ms. Foy received a bachelor of arts degree in music at Marycrest College in Davenport, Iowa, in 1956; a master’s degree in counseling and psychology at the Downers Grove, Illinois, campus of George Williams College in 1972, and a doctorate in education at University of Rochester in 1977.

Ms. Foy married F. Peter Foy, a Xerox executive, in 1956. In quick succession, she produced half a dozen so-called “Foy boys” in eight years. Peter Foy died in 1992. After their divorce in 1981, Ms. Foy lived independently for much of her remaining life.

Survivors are Vincent Foy, who produces grass-fed beef in Danville; Paul Foy, a writer at Eagle Point Resort, Utah; Gregory Foy, a private-equity investor of Hingham, Mass.; David Foy, an accountant of Quincy, Mass.; Bernard Foy, a government scientist of Santa Fe, N.M.; Justin Foy, a radio producer in Woodstock, N.Y.;  seven grandchildren and one great-grandson.

There will be no calling hours or funeral. Friends and family members will gather on the Vermont farm on Memorial Day to celebrate her life. Instead of flowers, friends can send memories or untold stories to Vincent Foy, 565 McDowell Rd, Danville VT 05828

To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Janet Foy, please visit our flower store.

Guestbook

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the
Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Service map data © OpenStreetMap contributors

Send Flowers

Send Flowers

Plant A Tree

Plant A Tree