Elderly man with white hair and beard wearing glasses and a red plaid shirt, smiling outdoors with a blurry natural landscape in the background.

Born May 13, 1945

Toledo, Ohio

Died March 19, 2024

South Strafford, Vermont

Details of services

A celebration of life will be held on June 29th 2024, additional details will be released to the website beforehand.


Chip Hedler passed away in his home in South Strafford, Vermont, on March 19th, 2024. He is survived by his wife, Maria Cabri, his stepchildren Cedar Davidson and Gioia Cabri, and his siblings Susan, Martin, and Alan Hedler. He was born in Toledo, Ohio, on May 13, 1945, to Doris Sing and Richard Hedler. He initially attended the University of Toledo, but was was drafted and served as a medic in Vietnam. After the war, he became very involved in a YMCA camp in northern Michigan as a counselor, where he became a sailor and all-around outdoors person, as well as a folk singer and guitar player. He later enrolled in Oberlin College, where he never quite finished due to anti-war activities and the general turbulence of the era. He eventually wound up graduating from Antioch New England with a degree in Outdoor Education and a certification in Elementary Education.

Chip was a veteran of Vermont’s one room school houses, having taught in Danville and Walden, and then eventually in Vermont’s last one room school house, the Elmore School. Chip held various teaching positions over the years, but eventually settled at Rumney Memorial School in Middlesex VT, where he taught at for over 20 years. He was fortunate to have a role in the school where his many skills could be applied; a typical school day Chip might replace a wireless base, teach a keyboarding lesson, show students how to use a miter saw, and then see students safely onto the bus at the end of the day.

The Civil Rights Movement and social unrest which he lived through influenced his unceasing desire that the school–its personnel, practices, policies, and written materials-be models of fairness and equity. Chip was always forgiving of error, his own and others, and very understanding of the well-intentioned mistake in any form–a lesson, a line of code, a misunderstood remark, or an administrative decision. In moments of reflection, he quoted one of his favorite teachers — “We all do things in the best wrong way we know how.” After retiring from full time teaching at Rumney, he joined the Newton School in his town of Strafford, where he quickly became a valued member of the school community.

Along the way, Chip became an accomplished guitarist and was well-known and loved among the traditional music community in northern New England. He was a founding member, rhythm section, and caller for the Nips (or the Parsnips), a northern Vermont contra dance band. He was a member of two local bands, Cuckoo’s Nest and Blind Squirrel, who played for many a contra dance in Tracy Hall and elsewhere around the Upper Valley. He was valued for his deep appreciation for the roots of New England dancing, as well as his ability to anchor any band and anchor the dancers’ feet to the beat.

During his 24 years living in Strafford he enjoyed backcountry skiing and hiking with his wife Maria. An avid cyclist, he would regularly ride his vintage and lovingly restored 1959 Gemigniani road bicycle up to 100 miles around the Connecticut river valley. He was a steady and inspiring mentor for Cedar and Gioia during their formative years. A night owl himself, he could be relied on for late night homework help and sound life advice.

A website to share photos, memories, or anything else about Chip can be found at: https://sites.google.com/view/rememberingchiphedler