Fair
46°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Raising Adam Lanza

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 2)

But close friends said that picture is unfair and that, in their eyes, Nancy was trying to do right by Adam.

“Her life revolved around caring for Adam. She loved to hang out with her friends at the bar and she loved to travel and she took time out for herself but her children and her family came first,” said a friend from Newtown, John Bergquist.

Nancy Jean Champion was born in Salem, Mass., on Sept. 6, 1960. She was the daughter of Donald Champion, an airline pilot and his wife, Dorothy, who worked many years as a nurse at a local elementary school. Together with her sister and two brothers, she grew up on the family’s farm in Kingston, N.H. — a homestead that dates to the 1700s — tending animals and working the soil.

“She told me that as a farm girl, she learned how to butcher animals,” said Marvin LaFontaine, a Kingston resident who met Nancy Lanza when their sons were in the Cub Scouts. “She was comfortable with raising livestock and then butchering them. Not that it was fun, but that’s what they ate. It wasn’t for sport, it wasn’t fun; it was their food.”

She would later meet Peter Lanza; the two married on June, 6, 1981.

The newlyweds built their own home on the family’s Kingston farmland. While Peter went to college to become an accountant, Nancy was the breadwinner, working in the new accounts division of John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Boston’s financial district, an hour’s drive away.

Nancy Lanza would later tell a New Hampshire law enforcement official, who spoke to The Courant on the condition of anonymity, that in the early 1980s she had been assaulted on the Boston Common, a daytime attack in front of onlookers.

The official said that some time later, Nancy went to the Kingston Police Department to notify them that she was afraid her attacker would victimize her at her home. The law enforcement official could not recall the name of the assailant and The Courant and “Frontline” were not able to locate court records related to the case.

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all