Service and volunteerism marked the life of Walter Eavey.
“I get the satisfaction of doing for others and helping them out,” he once told the Sun and News of his service. “That’s the best way to describe why I do it.”
Eavey, who served for 20 years on the Thornapple Township board as a trustee and was a volunteer firefighter for the Middleville Fire Department and Thornapple Township Emergency Services for more than 40 years, died at his home Sunday. He was 87.
“I considered Walt a mentor and friend,” said Catherine Getty, Thornapple Area Parks and Recreation program director and Thornapple Township zoning administrator. “He lived out his value of service in everything he did for his family, friends, country and community. He will continue to be my Hometown Hero.”
Getty and Eavey's daughter, Sherri Hall, nominated Eavey to be the recipient of the Thornapple Area Enrichment Foundation's Hometown Hero award in 2017 for his service to the community.
“Some heroes are made in a split second, swooping in to save a pedestrian from an oncoming car or a victim from a burning building. Others, like Walt Eavey, are made a little at a time over a lifetime of service to their community,” Getty and Hall wrote in their nomination letter.
“Raising a hand when there is a call to volunteer, enlisting in the military, serving their small-town volunteer fire department, attending hours of evening meetings to help manage their township government, honoring veterans and residents by caring for the local cemetery, serving hot-dogs to Little League players after a big game, or just keeping the light on at the lighthouse and sharing their passion for history with visitors from near and far.”
Jean Gallup, a former reporter for the Sun and News, knew Eavey for 30 years.
“I never saw him not smiling. He never got upset with anyone,” Gallup said. “I don't know anybody that could say a bad word about him.”
A native of Grand Rapids, Eavey graduated from Thornapple Kellogg High School in 1952, then served his country in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. After the war, he returned to the Middleville area and began raising a family with his wife, Margaret (commonly known as “Mike”), whom he married in 1954.
While raising his family and working, first at Geukes Meats and later as a tool and die maker, Eavey found time to serve the community. In 1956, he became a volunteer firefighter for what was then the Middleville Fire Department. He served that department and its successor, Thornapple Township Emergency Services, as a firefighter, first responder and service photographer, until 2004.
Eavey was first elected to the Thornapple Township board in 1996 and stayed on the board until 2016, when he decided not to seek re-election. While on the board, he took an active interest in the care of Mt. Hope and Parmalee cemeteries, particularly the graves of veterans who were buried there. Eavey made sure each fall, that each veteran's grave was marked with a military marker. He also led service projects to clean and repair damaged headstones of veterans' graves, Getty said.
For his dedication to local veterans, the Middleville Veterans Committee named Eavey its Veteran of the Year in 2015.
In addition, Eavey was instrumental in the formation of the TAPRC, a partnership of the township, the village of Middleville and Thornapple Kellogg Schools.
“I would like to nominate Mr. Eavey because of his kindness, warmth, humor and for being a good-natured fixture at many, many community events,” Kathleen Baird wrote in her nomination of Eavey for the 2017 Hometown Hero Award.
Eavey also was known in the community for his mobile collection of antique corn shellers and grinders, with which he showed children what farm life was like in the past. A member of the Barry County Antique Tractor Club, his Farmall tractor was a regular presence at the Barry County Fair, Getty said.
Eavey's other community involvement included serving as an American Red Cross volunteer, serving as president of the Middleville Community Food Pantry for 30 years, serving the Barry County Cares Board for 30 years, and also as a longtime member of the Lions Club.
In retirement, Eavey and his wife were volunteer lighthouse keepers for eight years, most notably at the Big Sable lighthouse in Ludington. They also were volunteers for the National Parks Service for three years at the Casa Grande Ruins Monument in Arizona.
Eavey is survived by his wife; children: Connie (Rick) Hicks, Alan (Val) Eavey, Timothy Eavey and Sherri (Tim) Hall; seven grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren, and brother, Richard (Joanne) Eavey.
Graveside services with military honors were held Wednesday at Mt. Hope Cemetery.