• Date Of Birth: October 21, 1940
  • Date Of Death: June 4, 2017
  • State: Michigan

Peter passed away Sunday, June 4, 2017, at the age of 76 from pneumonia as a complication of dementia. Pete was born October 21, 1940, in Evanston, Illinois to Maurice, an immigrant from Cornwall, and Helen (Anderson) Thomas, whose parents immigrated from Sweden. Determined that Pete and his sister Linne receive the education they never did, Pete graduated in 1962 from Lawrence University and was inducted into the Lawrence University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1996.

He married Patricia Webb on December 29, 1962. Pete served in the U.S. Air Force from 1962 to 1965, stationed in Germany, where his son Bill was born. Pete and Pat made lifelong friends there and ‘sampled’ German culture, which included swiping an official Lowenbrau Lion from the Munich Oktoberfest. Their daughters, Anne and Sarah, were later born in Appleton, Wisconsin, and in 1972 they settled in Kalamazoo.

Pete loved people. He could always charm the awkward guest at a party and show up at a moment’s notice to sub for tennis, golf, and ‘paddle’. He organized fishing and camping trips adeptly and knew when to pour someone another drink.

Pete believed in community action and social justice and volunteered for arts organizations, environmental groups, community organizations, and even as a soccer coach. One of his favorite places was the Kalamazoo YMCA, especially near the end. And Pete loved art, music, and beauty with deep, ineffable joy. He was the perfect audience–intelligent, appreciative, and enthusiastic.

Pete was a fun, hands-on father and grandfather who never met a baby he wouldn’t hold. Children adored him, none more than his four granddaughters, Jillian, Bridget, Leigh, and Jane. Pete and Pat were married for 54 years. It was always clear, even when things got hard, that Dad always cherished and respected Pat; and it was the same for his children. He always told them that he loved them and was proud of them.

Despite the trials of dementia, Pete maintained so much of his kindness, his helpfulness, and his curiosity, and he tried to protect his family from his illness. His granddaughters always brought out the best in him and saw little of his decline. In his honor, his family donated his brain to the CTE Center at Boston University, which studies traumatic brain injury in professional and amateur athletes due to concussions.

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