R.I.P. Barb Mahoney

Notes written by Dan Young, '66

Yet another participant in The Lewis & Clark expedition has completed the trek.

Her brother Jay informed me this morning that Barbara Mahoney (BK, SMM, NP, Dept of State) passed Sunday morning, December 7, 2025 at her assisted living residence in D.C.

Barbara was a remarkable woman who spoke several languages, and as a Nurse Practitioner, was a primary health care provider on the Four Corners Native Reservation as well an entire County around Cape Hateras. She then went on to multiple overseas postings for the Department of State, and even adopted an abandoned Romanian girl.

One heck of a trek ... and always on her own terms.

Her Brother does not anticipate a memorial service until Spring


Obituary Passed away peacefully on December 7, 2025, at the age of 77, following a lengthy, and courageous fight with Alzheimer’s Disease.

She was predeceased by her husband, John Bosco; her mother, Susan M. Mahoney; and her father, John F. Mahoney. Barbara is survived by her daughter, Simona Mahoney; her brothers, Michael (Betty) Mahoney and Jay (Laura Humphrey) Mahoney; and her nieces and nephews, Benjamin (Sadey) Mahoney, Katie (R.J.) Duford, Patrick Mahoney, Cullen Mahoney, and Ethan (Cierra Benson) Mahoney. She is also survived by numerous cousins, cherished childhood friends, and many friends and colleagues from her distinguished career with the U.S. Foreign Service Corps.

Barbara was an adventurer and a trailblazer. Following in her mother’s footsteps, she devoted her life to health care and public service, beginning her career as a nurse after graduating from D’Youville University with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. She went on to earn advanced degrees in Nursing Education from Boston College and certification as a Nurse Practitioner through the University of Denver and the University of Colorado.

Her professional journey reflected both courage and deep commitment. Barbara served as a nurse practitioner in Telluride, Colorado, where she also spun “stacks of wax” as a weekend disc jockey for a local radio station. Later, she worked as a nursing professor at the Navajo Nation technical school for registered nurses. Following her work on the Navajo Reservation in Arizona and New Mexico, she spent several years as a Family Nurse Practitioner at a health clinic on the Outer Banks of North Carolina.

Barbara’s guiding desire to blend adventure and service ultimately led her to the U.S. Department of State Foreign Service Corps, where she enjoyed a remarkable 23-year career. She served in U.S. embassies around the world as a Family Nurse Practitioner, providing health care to ambassadors, embassy staff and their families, and the occasional Marine guard. Her postings took her to Burkina Faso, Romania, Senegal, Japan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Colombia, and more than a few countries in-between. Her Foreign Service career culminated in a three-year assignment at the State Department in Washington, D.C., during which she experienced firsthand the events surrounding the September 11th terrorist attack on the Pentagon.

Barbara will be remembered for her independence, intelligence, generosity of spirit, and unwavering dedication to helping others wherever she was called to serve. That sense of selflessness led her to adopt her beloved daughter, Simona, from a Romanian orphanage, and also served as the foundation of her 16-year marriage to her husband, John, with whom she shared a love of competitive ballroom dancing, before his untimely death in 2021.

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