FAIRMONT — Andrea Catalano has never met John Greynolds.
But he instantly became her hero.
Andrea, 21, is a college student from Canada who was heading to Myrtle Beach with a friend when she stopped at Brady’s Exxon for gas Monday evening. Her classes at Laurentran University don’t begin until September.
But when she stopped at the Days Inn Hotel in Flatwoods an hour or so later on the trip south, Andrea discovered she didn’t have her wallet. A wallet that not only contained all of her important cards, but $700 in vacation money that she had saved up over the summer.
“She called me around 8 and was crying and hysterical,” her father Bill Catalano, from Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, told the Times West Virginian in a telephone call yesterday. “She was in a panic.
“She knew she had filled up near Fairmont at an Exxon station, but that’s about all,” Catalano said, noting his daughter had no idea what she had done with her wallet.
This is a time when fathers are supposed to come to the rescue, and Bill Catalano responded in splendid fashion.
From his home some 200 miles north of Toronto, Canada, he began checking for Exxon stations in the Fairmont area and later in the evening was able to track down John Greynolds, an employee of Brady’s Exxon, after 10 p.m.
“While he was on the phone, he looked all over the station area,” Catalano said, “but he couldn’t find any wallet.”
But Greynolds wasn’t finished looking.
Later in the evening, he went out onto the road that connects Route 73 with Interstate 79. And it didn’t take him very long to find Andrea’s wallet, still lying in the road where it apparently had fallen off the car.
At 5 a.m., Greynolds called Catalano in Canada to tell him the good news.
“He called and told me what had happened — that he had gone out onto the road and found the wallet,” Catalano said. “What good news that was.”
He said he called his daughter a short time later and she returned to Brady’s to pick up the wallet —intact with all her cards and the money.
But Greynolds’ shift was already over. He wasn’t there when Andrea first stopped and lost her wallet. And he wasn’t there when she returned to retrieve it.
“With the new border regulations,” the father said, “even getting home would have been difficult. All of her important papers were missing. She had nothing.”
Catalano said he knows many people from Canada stop in the Summersville and Flatwoods areas overnight en route to the Carolina coast.
“I think I will recommend that people make Fairmont their night stop and fill up at Brady’s Exxon,” he said.
E-mail John Veasey at jcveasey@timeswv.com.
Local News
Canadian student finds hero in Fairmont
Brady’s Exxon’s John Greynolds recovers wallet with $700, important cards
- Local News
-
-
A brighter day
Sitting on a pink polka blanket with pink bows tied around her ears, Pebbles the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel brightens up the day of a patient at the Arbors at Fairmont nursing home.
“I always had a dog,” said Max — who preferred that his last name not be used — to Pebbles’ human, Sharon Spevock. -
‘New heights’ NASA’s mission
The NASA Independent Verification & Validation Facility in Fairmont has accomplished a lot over the years, but also has a long way to go, said Gregory Blaney.
Partnerships will allow the agency to continue to move forward. -
Man indicted on 14 counts of sexual abuse
A Mannington man has been indicted by the Marion County grand jury on 14 counts of sexual abuse.
James Edward Carpenter, 34, of 100 Parkview Drive, Apt. 101, Mannington, is charged with four counts of first-degree sexual abuse and 10 counts of sexual abuse by parent, guardian or custodian. -
BB&T to remain a part of Farmington community
Thanks to community members who made their voices heard, the BB&T branch in Farmington is staying open for business.
The office was full of excitement and hugs Wednesday as employees and community members celebrated the news that this location will continue to service clients. -
Expanded airport hangar space sought
Benedum Airport Authority members representing Marion and Harrison counties met Wednesday at the North Central West Virginia Airport for their monthly meeting to discuss plans to build and expand hangar availability.
-
FSHS student works to start scholarship fund
A bright smile on Kelly Horton’s face could have fooled anyone on Wednesday morning.
In front of the Marion County Commission, the Fairmont Senior High School junior kept a strong composure as she explained why she needed help with her senior project. -
It’s an emergency
A Dalmatian was on a mission. And he was in a hurry.
In a fire truck, the Dalmatian, Patches, rushed into Monongah Elementary on Tuesday morning while students looked on in amusement. -
CVB, MCPARC moving to new homes
The Convention & Visitors Bureau of Marion County and the Marion County Parks and Recreation Commission are excited to have a new place to call home.
On Monday, both organizations began simultaneously moving into their new offices in the visitor center building directly off Interstate 79 Exit 136 at 1000 Cole St., Pleasant Valley. -
Ministers Run still looking for local control
Following two meetings in different locations Tuesday, the Ministers Run Water Association is still looking for a way to keep its utility in local hands.
Last week, the state Public Service Commission held a hearing in Grant Town. -
Man indicted for forgery, uttering, other crimes
A Fairmont man charged with forgery, uttering and other crimes is one of 23 people named in indictments handed down by the Marion County Grand Jury in its second day of deliberations Tuesday.
Jeremy Nathan Ferraro, 31, Fairmont, was indicted on forgery; uttering; obtaining money, property or services by false pretenses; and domestic battery, third offense. - More Local News Headlines
-





