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A KP legend, Rhys Wood, passes on
By Hugh McMillan
KP News
Rhys Wood epitomized the sort of
person of whom Tom Brokaw wrote in his book, “The
Greatest Generation.” Before his 86 years ended, he’d
lived through the Great Depression. He didn’t recognize
it as anything horrid: “It was just what fate had dished
up and you lived with it,” he’d say. He served in World
War II behind the lines in the Japanese-occupied
Philippines and three times escaped prisoner of war
status at their hands to continue leading a group of
guerrillas who caused the occupiers great discomfort.
Honorably discharged at war’s end,
he resumed his teacher’s career and, in the course of
teaching in the Clover Park School District, met and
surreptitiously dated his soon to be wife, Ruth Bilden,
a fellow teacher. School policy forbade opposite-sex
teachers to fraternize. His undercover guerrilla work
had prepared him well for this bit of subterfuge.

The memorial service
of Rhys Wood is attended by a large
crowd of friends, family, and community members.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
He and Ruth became man and wife
shortly before the Army called him back to duty in March
of ’51 to serve in the Korean “police action.”
Thereafter, he chose to make the Army his career and,
with Ruth, served in various locations, including
Germany. They were blessed with the births of John, Donn,
Elise, Sally and Brian during this period. In 1967, the
family settled on property on Vaughn Bay, where Rhys and
family designed and built their waterfront home. The
kids grew up there before going their separate ways to
produce grandchildren and great grandchildren who were
the delights of Rhys’ and Ruth’s lives. As the children
grew and attended local schools, Rhys supported the
family with the proceeds of his ingenuity and hard work
as owner-operator of his own construction firm.
It was common knowledge that
“everyone knows Rhys Wood” and when asked, “Who is this
guy?” virtually any local would respond, “If we had an
election, he’d be our mayor.” He began most mornings
after retiring from the construction business with what
he called “my coffee bunch” at the Huckleberry Inn in
Key Center, where they “solved all the world’s
problems.”
He was everywhere. If he learned of
someone hard on their luck and needing help of whatever
kind, Wood was there in no time to help put on a roof,
make sure the mud in a driveway was covered with crushed
rock, mysteriously provide firewood for those who had
none, repair or have repaired a vehicle for someone in
need, drive someone to the doctor, and on and on. He was
a natural to be a founding and longtime member of the
Board of Directors for the KP Food Bank, which
ultimately became the KP Community Services/Senior
Center and Food Bank.
He became a charter member of the
KP Lions Club when it was formed in 1983, served as its
president, and was a comically demanding tail twister
for the club as he extracted coins from the members to
fund the club’s efforts in behalf of the community. “We
serve!” he would proclaim. “That’s our international
motto!” he’d say and produce an application for
membership for anyone who was within hearing.
He was also a charter member of the
old VFW Post 4990, helping organize the group’s
community-supportive projects, and after the demise of
the post, he continued on with the KP Veterans
Institute. He was an active member of the Elks Club and
the Gig Harbor Eagles Aerie and part of the foundation
of the Citizens Against Crime organization.
“It’s my sound system,” he’d
declare, “and I’ll say whatever I want,” as he served as
the moderator for the annual KP Pioneer Day parade,
calling everyone moving by the microphone by their first
names; he knew everyone and everyone knew him and they
were all fair game for his humorous roasting as they
passed by to the laughter of all attending.
The same sound system and Wood’s
same humorously acerbic commentary accompanied the
annual Old Timers’ Day logging show at the Longbranch
Improvement Club, as his daughter — whom he called his
“son Sally” —provided him the vital statistics of the
competitions.
Over the years, well over 100
friends sought out, and were rewarded by, Wood, who
performed eulogies for their departed loved ones. In
every case, he spent hours and hours researching the
deceased’s life to ensure his talk was warm, accurate,
personal and sincerely spoken.
For several of the KP Lions’
sponsored Citizens of the Year dinners, Wood and fellow
Lion Frank Geary worked in the heat of the KP Civic
Center kitchen preparing the dinner in much the fashion
of Julia Childs — taking a sip or two of the “seasoning”
as they proceeded. And Wood was justifiably proud of the
sauce he prepared from his personal recipe for the
club’s then-annual spaghetti dinners.
Because Lions Club members are not
eligible for nomination as Citizens of the Year, and
because so many thought Wood should be so honored, his
daughter Elise colluded with the Lions to stage a bogus
“auction” in the Longbranch Improvement Club once and
lured her dad into the affair, having convinced him that
he should auction off some item of his choosing. Upon
entering the room, he was almost dumb-struck to see a
banner stretching the length of the stage, proclaiming,
“Citizen of the Millennium, Rhys Wood.” Elise said,
“It’s the only time I can remember Dad being at a loss
for words.”
Well over 200 friends gathered in
the Key Peninsula Civic Center on a sun-swept
mid-September Saturday to pay their respects to the man
who had dedicated so much of his life to his country and
his community. The ceremony was not sad. It was a
testimonial to a man who had lived life to the fullest
and shared it with so many in great good humor and
encouragement. A life well lived. He went to join his
loved wife, Ruth, who passed on just 18 days before.
Following the ceremony, many gathered for graveside
services at the Vaughn Cemetery.
The family fulfilled Rhys’ request
by asking that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made to
the KP Community Services and Food Bank, the KP Lions
Club, or the KPVI.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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