| Alvin
Donald Wyland, 77, of Williamsburg, died Friday, February
25 of heart failure at the Tucson Heart Hospital in Arizona.
Funeral services: 10:30 A.M. Saturday, March 5, 2005 at
the First Presbyterian Church, Williamsburg with Rev. James
Stewart officiating. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery,
Williamsburg, with military honors. Friends may call from
4 to 8 P.M. Friday, March 4, 2005 at the church. Memorials
may be contributed to the American Heart Association or
the American Cancer Society in Alvin’s name. Kloster Funeral
Home, Marengo is in charge of arrangements.
Alvin
was born in Kensington, Kansas on May 27, 1927 to John Donald
Wyland and Marie Ann Norden Wyland. He attended primary
school through 8th grade in Almena, Kansas. In 1941 his
family moved to San Gabriel, California, in Los Angeles
County. From there they moved to Fresno where Alvin was
graduated from Fresno High School in June 1945. In February
1945, while World War Two was still in progress, he enlisted
in the U.S. Coast Guard. At that time the Coast Guard was
an arm of the U.S. Navy. For training, Alvin was temporarily
assigned to the U.S. Navy destroyer USS Haynsworth, DD700.
Following that, he was assigned to the U.S. Coast Guard
Cutter Sebago, similar to a navy destroyer, where he served
until discharged in May 1946.
On
August 27,1955 Alvin and Bonnie Lou Menzmer were married
in Fresno. Alvin was graduated from the University of California
at Berkeley in 1957 with a B.S. in Engineering. After graduation
Alvin accepted employment with General Electric Company.
In
April of 1980 Alvin and Bonnie were involved in an automobile
accident; Bonnie did not survive. On February 12, 1983 he
married Loretta Williams at the First Presbyterian Church
in Williamsburg. Alvin practiced engineering for 33 years
as a design engineer, retiring in 1990 from Amana Refrigeration,
Inc. in Amana, Iowa.
As
a young boy, Alvin took a five-dollar airplane ride at a
local carnival after which he developed a love of airplanes,
flight, and the skies that remained a part of him all his
life. He kept and flew many small airplanes over the years
and between 1970 and 1990, worked meticulously to build
his own Starduster Too, an open-cockpit biplane, which he
enjoyed flying for several years. Throughout his career
and in retirement, he published technical and magazine articles
and received ten patents for a variety of inventions. Alvin
enjoyed Ham radio, painting, music, astronomy, historical
and scientific reading, wildlife, thunderstorms, and time
with his family. He was a loving husband, father, and grandfather
who remained involved and dedicated to the members of his
family every day of his life.
Surviving
Alvin are his wife Loretta; his three daughters, Lisa Marie
Wyland of Silver Springs, MD, Nancy Gayle Newkirk and husband
Ramon of Solon, IA, Janet Wyland Grondin and husband Patrick
of Fairfax, VA; two stepchildren, Scott Dwight Williams
and wife Robin of Williamsburg, IA, Peggy Swick and husband
Bill of Cedar Rapids, IA; a brother, David Carl Wyland and
wife Kathy of Morgan Hill, CA, and a sister, Jessie Marie
Johnson of Sweet Home, OR. Alvin had eight grandchildren:
Alex and Miles Newkirk, Joseph and Donald Grondin, Jennifer
and Shanna Williams, and Michael and Katherine Swick, and
a host of nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by
his wife Bonnie, a newborn son, Donald Scott Wyland, mother
and father Marie and John Wyland, and his sister Alice Marie
Grundt.
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