Private funeral services and burial are 10:30am on Tuesday, March 30. Those wishing to attend the service virtually may access the Zoom webinar livestream at the link below:

Zoom Webinar Livestream (no interactive feature, no password required)
Tuesday, March 30, 2021 10:30 AM Eastern Time

Please click the link below to join the webinar:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87596014848


Community Leader and Former Princeton Township Mayor Phyllis Marchand:

January 3, 1940- March 25, 2021

Phyllis Marchand, former Princeton Township elected official for a record breaking 22 years (1987-2009), former mayor for 14 of those years,  former marathon runner (16 NYC Marathons, two Boston, one, Philadelphia), former book indexer of The Woodrow Wilson Papers edited by Princeton University Professor Arthur Link,  and never former but forever friend for life to thousands of people, died at home on Thursday, March 25, 2021.

She was 81 years old and lived every minute of her life with exuberance, flair, dignity, perseverance, and dedication to helping family, friends, and countless people she never knew. She survived more than 15 years of cancer treatment for her CTCL lymphoma, non Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and lymphoma, because there were just too many things to do for others, too many events to attend. Dubbed “mayor for life” and known for her inability to leave any event, Phyllis finally said goodbye in the presence of her immediate family, her much loved husband of 57 years Lucien Simon “Sy” Marchand, and her three children, Michael, Deborah, and Sarah.

The New York City native and graduate of Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY, Phyllis Marchand, nee Steinberg,  was born on January 3, 1940. Her  father was a millinery manufacturer and owned a company in Manhattan. ‘Phyllis’ and ‘Charlotte’ (the name of Phyllis’s mother as well as one of her grandchildren)  hats were two of their labels. He was also a big sports fan, especially for the New York Giants baseball team, and he got Phyllis hooked on her love of baseball. It was also because of her Manhattan-based youth that she developed her passion for  live theater and movies.Growing up in New York City offered her a cultural and social education, as well as a self sufficiency, that she carried with her her entire life.

After graduation as an English major and with a teaching certificate, she worked in Manhattan in the publishing industry and then met, fell in love with and married Sy Marchand, who worked for D. Van Nostrand Publishing in Princeton

She first set foot on Princeton soil in 1966 and then proceeded to leave an indelible footprint as a local government mover and shaker and omnipresent community volunteer and advocate. She credited the Princeton YWCA Newcomers Club for welcoming her to town and giving her the social footing that allowed her to thrive.

At the time of her death she was chair of D&R Greenway Board of Trustees and maintained active roles in several other Princeton area organizations where she over the years had held leadership offices. These included: Princeton YWCA (especially the Breast Cancer Resource Center and the Newcomers’ Club); McCarter Theatre; HomeFront; Planned Parenthood; Coalition for Peace Action; D & R Canal Commission; Princeton-Pettoranello Sister City Foundation; New Jersey League of Municipalities (particularly its Women in Government Committee); Mercer Council for Alcohol and Drug Addiction; Corner House; Princeton Garden Theatre; Jewish Center of Princeton; Cancer Care;  and the Lymphoma Research Foundation. Not one to accept passively a negative in her life, she turned her health challenges into a proactive research and communications role among organizations supporting those with lymphoma.

Her son noted that his mother’s advocacy for and “exceptional commitment to” land preservation, both as mayor and a D&R Greenway board member, was particularly valued in this last year of her life. The pandemic made people appreciate more passionately than ever before the tracts of land she helped to protect and preserve and the hiking trails she helped create.

“Going back to the late 1990s when we worked together to protect Greenway Meadows and the land that is now home to the Johnson Education Center, Phyllis has been extraordinary in her commitment to land preservation,” said D&R Greenway President & CEO Linda Mead.

In May 2020, when interviewed by her granddaughter Estelle for a school StoryCorps project, Phyllis noted that her most treasured accomplishment in life was that of being a mother and grandmother. And she certainly lived her life by the advice that she gave Estelle in that interview:  “seize the moment, follow your passions, don’t give into excuses about it ‘not being a good time’ ….You may never find that opportunity again,” said Phyllis.

In addition to “seizing  each day,” she often told friends and family that she considered “everyday as a gift to live life to the fullest.” In spite of her multiple commitments to community causes and the members of her family, she still found time to indulge in playing bridge, going to the movies, seeing as many NY Mets baseball games in person and on television as possible, and sharing her coffee chip ice cream with friends.

For more information about her remarkable life see: http://www.towntopics.com/wordpress/2013/02/13/running-for-office-or-running-marathons-phyllis-marchand-is-an-active-participant/

She is survived by: her three children, Michael (Beth) of Olympia Washington; Deborah (David Goldman) of Haddonfield, New Jersey; and Sarah (David Lefkowitz) Darien, Connecticut; as well as her eight grandchildren, Gabriel, Charlotte, Maxwell, Estelle, Alexander, Miles, Oliver and Genevieve.

To honor the life of Phyllis Marchand, donations may be made to the following:

Marchand Espir Family Holocaust Education Fund at the Princeton Jewish Center (Holocaust education programs to ensure that the events of the Holocaust will not be forgotten or repeated)

https://secure.acceptiva.com/?cst=f6262a

D&R Greeenway

(Preserve and care for land and inspire a conservation ethic)

https://secure.donationpay.org/drgreenway/

Homefront

(Help to end homelessness in central New Jersey) https://www.homefrontnj.org/donate/

Under the arrangements of Orlands Ewing Memorial Chapel, there will be a family only graveside service on Tuesday, March 30, 2021. A celebration of her life will be held at a later date.