Obituary: Raymond M. Leliaert Sr.
Sept. 17, 1921 - April
14, 2003
Raymond M. Leliaert Sr., 81, of Garwood
Circle, South Bend, Ind.,
died after an illness at 3:45 p.m.
Monday, April 14, in his home.
Mr. Leliaert
was born Sept.
17, 1921, in Grinnell, Iowa,
to Martha (VanDenBossche) and Gustave
Leliaert. He lived in South Bend
his entire life. Mr. Leliaert was preceded in death
by his parents; two brothers, Robert and James; and by a great-grandson,
Samuel Van Meter.
On March
10, 1945, in South Bend,
he married Lois M. Zubler, who survives. Mr. Leliaert is also survived by six daughters, Karen J.
(Thomas) Van Meter of South Bend, Mary M. Rader of Mishawaka, Diane E.
Webster of Huntsville, Ala., Martha J. (Thomas) Daufenbach
of Portage, Mich., Judy L. (John) Kenney of South Bend and Barbara M.
(Joseph) Echard of South Bend; three sons, Raymond
M. Jr. (Diane) of South Bend, Mark A. (Mindy) of Salinas, Calif., and
Christopher J. (Judy) of Schererville, Ind.; 27 grandchildren, Andrew Leliaert, Emily Leliaert, Susan
Leliaert, Kyle Leliaert,
Joseph Leliaert, Kregg
(Julie) Van Meter, Colleen (Abraham) Toul, Michelle
(Leonardo) Sanchez, Ashley (Kathleen) Rader, Melanie (Willie) Mitchell,
Patrick Rader, Sara Webster, Elise Webster, Matthew Daufenbach,
Janel Daufenbach, Larry Daufenbach, Meredith Daufenbach,
John Daufenbach, Cameron Leliaert,
Lindsey Leliaert, Kelsey Leliaert,
Michael Kenney, Alex Kenney, Katie Kenney, Timothy Kenney, Mark Echard and Rose Echard; and by
eight great-grandchildren, Kayla Toul, John Van
Meter, John Day, Noah Mitchell, Nicholas Mitchell, Austin Rader, Bailey Rader
and Christian Rader.
Mr. Leliaert
was an exemplary tenor, a distinguished inventor, a lifelong community
volunteer and, of course, a loving and much-beloved husband, father,
grandfather and friend. He taught his family and friends to understand the world
in scientific, practical and spiritual ways.
He apprenticed in the
family's commercial painting business before enlisting in the Navy at the
start of World War II. As an aviation mechanic at Glenview Naval Air Station
near Chicago, he
was nominated for officer training. Mr. Leliaert
was assigned to midshipman school (V-12 program) at the University of Notre
Dame in his hometown. After earning his commission, he served on the aircraft
carrier USS Windham Bay, participating in the liberation of the Philippines.
During midshipman school, he met Lois Zubler during
a USO dance at the Palais Royale.
They were married shortly before he departed to the Pacific Theater. During
this time, his boyhood training as a tenor earned him widespread recognition
while he sang with the Notre Dame Glee Club, the United States Navy Band and
at weddings and social events. At the end of the war, Mr. Leliaert
set aside his promising singing career to complete an engineering degree at
Notre Dame. Wheelabrator Corp., where he had worked briefly before the war,
provided him with a nightshift job in the Mishawaka
plant. He attended Notre Dame during the day, graduating in 1949 at the top
of the School of Engineering
class, while working full-time at night.
As a full-fledged engineer
at Wheelabrator, he became a problem-solver and soon began developing
innovative techniques in the foundry industry and related businesses. His
role as a lone researcher grew over the next three decades into an
industry-leading Research and Development Department with a staff of
engineers and technicians and, eventually, a separate building at the
Wheelabrator complex in Mishawaka.
He was known affectionately among his co-workers as "Dr. Leliaert" because of his incredible knowledge in the
metal-cleaning industry. His more than 40 patents in highly technical fields
involving metal, plastic and rubber cleaning and in air
pollution control have resulted in higher-quality, more reliable
products ranging from automobile engines and kitchen faucets and a cleaner,
safer environment. The American Foundrymen Society,
one of the many industry associations in which he was an active participant,
recognized Mr. Leliaert's 44 years of achievement
with its highest honor, the Award for Scientific Achievement. During his
career, the Notre Dame School of Engineering frequently called him back to
lecture succeeding generations of engineers.
Mr. Leliaert's
other memberships included the Knights of Columbus 4th Degree, the
Wheelabrator Retirees Club, the American Legion, the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers, the American Society of Metals, the American Ceramics
Society, the Shot Peening Society, the Boy Scouts
of America, the St. Vincent dePaul Society, St. John
the Baptist Catholic Church and Little Flower Catholic Church.
Mr. Leliaert's
innovative spirit extended to the world around him. He volunteered with
numerous organizations, giving generously of his time but always shunning
personal recognition. Some of these activities included the school boards of St.
John the Baptist and Holy
Cross Schools,
the St. John the Baptist Parish
Council, the St. Vincent de Paul Society and St.
Joseph Regional Medical
Center, where he was selected
volunteer of the year several times even when declining health limited his
mobility. His commitment to his community was a trait that he taught through
example and praise to his children and grandchildren. He also strived to
solve problems in unexpected ways. When Wheelabrator struggled in the 1960s
to come to grips with the civil rights movement, Mr. Leliaert
quietly and effectively became the behind-the-scenes conscience for a
corporation whose executives created opportunities for all employees.
Stricken with Parkinson's disease for more than a decade, he confidently
tried to do what so many scientists could not - figure out the ailment he
insisted was "invented by the Devil" so that others might be cured.
Mr. Leliaert's
guidance to his ever-growing family continued into his final days. As his
long struggle with debilitating illness eroded his body and mind, his spirit
endured as his children and grandchildren returned home to pray, sing and
recollect the countless joys of a family nurtured by his patient, always wise
guidance. For nearly a week, he continued to teach us that a life lived so
well is only one step toward a joyful eternity.
Services for Mr. Leliaert will be at 10:30
a.m. today in Little Flower Catholic Church. Friends may call
after 9 a.m. today in the church.
Burial will be at Highland Cemetery.
The Kaniewski Funeral Home
is in charge of arrangements.
The family asks that, in
lieu of flowers, memorial contributions be made to Hospice of St. Joseph
County or to the Christ Child Society.
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