Editor's note: CNN.com is listing the full names of children only when their parents have spoken publicly.
(CNN) -- The 26 people killed by a gunman at a Newtown, Connecticut, elementary school Friday included six women who worked there and 20 students. Of the 12 girls and eight boys shot to death inside Sandy Hook Elementary School, 16 were 6 years old, while the other four turned 7 in just the last few months, according to an official list of the victims released by state police Saturday.
The victims included:
Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung, 47
Hochsprung, who became
Sandy Hook Elementary School's principal two years ago, was "really nice
and very fun, but she was also very much a tough lady in the right sort
of sense," friend Tom Prunty said. And the students loved her. "Even
little kids know when someone cares about them, and that was her,"
Prunty said.
"I never saw her without a smile," said Aimee Seaver, mother of a first-grader.
Hochsprung lived in Woodbury, Connecticut, with her husband, two daughters and three stepdaughters.
Newtown school murders: World reacts
The longtime career
educator majored in special education for her bachelor's and master's
degrees in the 1990s and had just entered the Ph.D. program at Esteves
School of Education at the Sage Colleges in New York last summer.
Hochsprung led a school district's strategic planning panel and was the
recipient of a national school grant.
Her accomplishments
included overseeing the installation of a new security system requiring
every visitor to ring the front entrance's doorbell after the school
doors locked at 9:30 a.m.
Mary Sherlach, 56
Sherlach, Sandy Hook
Elementary's school psychologist, was with Hochsprung when they heard a
"pop, pop, pop" sound around 9:30 a.m., a parent with both women at the
time told CNN. Sherlach was shot to death after heading into the hall to
find out what was happening.
"I ... am always ready to assist in problem-solving, intervention and prevention," Sherlach wrote on her website.
Sherlach earned her
undergraduate degree in psychology at SUNY Cortland and a master's
degree at Southern Connecticut State University. She worked as a
rehabilitation assistant at a group home for disabled adults and as a
community mental health placement specialist before becoming a school
psychologist. She worked in three Connecticut school systems before
moving to Sandy Hook Elementary in 1994. During her time in Newtown,
Sherlach kept busy as a member of numerous groups such as the district
conflict resolution committee, safe school climate committee, crisis
intervention team and student instructional team.
Sherlach and her husband
for more than three decades lived in Trumbull, Connecticut, and,
together, they were "proud parents" of two daughters in their late 20s.
Her website listed her interests as gardening, reading and going to the
theater.
Lauren Rousseau, 30
Rousseau, a permanent
substitute teacher at Sandy Hook Elementary, "wanted to be a teacher
from before she even went to kindergarten," her mother said in a written
statement Saturday. "We will miss her terribly and will take comfort
knowing that she had achieved that dream," Teresa Rousseau said.
She grew up in Danbury,
Connecticut, and earned a bachelor's degree from the University of
Connecticut and a master's degree in elementary education from the
University of Bridgeport.
Rousseau "worked as a
substitute teacher in Danbury, New Milford and Newtown before she was
hired in November as a permanent substitute teacher at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown," her mother's statement said.
Victoria Soto, 27
Soto, a first grade
teacher at Sandy Hook Elementary, moved her students away from the
classroom door when she heard gunfire, which students initially "thought
were hammers falling," according to the father of one of her students.
Her students were huddled behind her in a corner of the classroom, her family said.
"That's when the gunman
burst in, did not say a word, no facial expressions, and proceeded to
shoot their teacher," said Robert Licata, whose 6-year-old son Aiden
escaped by running past the shooter.
"She instinctively went
into action when a monster came into her classroom and tried to protect
the kids that she loved so much," her cousin, James Wiltsie, said. "We
just want the public to know that Vicki was a hero."
While Soto had no
children of her own, she did love her dog. The black lab Roxie spent
Saturday wondering around Soto's apartment, apparently looking for her,
relatives said.
Emilie Parker, 6
Emilie "was the type of
person who could light up a room," her father told reporters Saturday.
His oldest daughter was "bright, creative and very loving," and "always
willing to try new things other than food," Robbie Parker said.
"Emilie Alice Parker was
the sweetest little girl I've ever known," her aunt, Jill Cottle
Garrett, said. The family is devastated that "someone so beautiful and
perfect is no longer going to be in our lives and for no reason,"
Garrett said.
"My daugher Emilie would
be one of the first ones to be standing up and giving her love and
support to all of those victims, because that is the type of person she
is," her father said. She was "an exceptional artist and she always
carried around her markers and pencils so she never missed an
opportunity to draw a picture or make a card for someone."
She placed one of her cards in the casket at the funeral of her grandfather, who recently died in an accident, Parker said.
Emilie's "laughter was infectious," he said. "This world is a better place because she has been in it."
Her father, who works as
a physician's assistant in the newborn unit at the Danbury hospital,
said his last conversation with his daughter was in Portuguese, a
language he was teaching her.
"She said that she loved me and I gave her a kiss and I was out the door," he said.
Emilie was a mentor to
her two younger sisters -- ages 3 and 4 -- and "they looked to her when
they needed comfort," her father said.
A Facebook page was
created to collect donations to help pay expenses to take Emilie back to
her native Utah for burial, her aunt said.
Other victims
Rachel Davino, 29; Anne
Marie Murphy, 25; Charlotte, 6; Daniel, 7; Olivia, 6; Josephine, 7; Ana,
6; Dylan, 6; Madeleine, 6; Catherine, 6; Chase, 7; Jesse, 6; James, 6;
Grace, 7; Anne Marie Murphy, 52; Jack, 6; Noah, 6; Caroline, 6; Jessica,
6; Avielle, 6; Benjamin, 6; Allison, 6.
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