Fred J. Bryan, of Walworth, our dear father, passed away peacefully in his sleep early on Thanksgiving morning, Nov. 28, 2019, hours before he was to host his family at a holiday dinner at Big Foot Country Club.
He loved throwing his annual party, but this year it was not to be. He so enjoyed getting together with family and friends, watching the little ones romping around, checking in with his three kids, six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He was immensely proud of all of us.
Dad was born in Portland, Michigan to Minnie and Charles Bryan. Minnie was an English teacher and Charles was a high school principal, so dad was expected to work hard in school. He graduated in 1940 from Melvindale High School as class valedictorian and senior class president; he received an academic scholarship to the University of Michigan. Dad played basketball, ice hockey and football. He even won the campus heavyweight wrestling championship, all while taking a rigorous academic load.
He joined the US Navy in 1942, attending Columbia University Midshipman’s School in spring of 1944. He served on a Fletcher class destroyer in the South Pacific from 1944 to 1946. Dad attended Naval radar training school in Pearl Harbor and was discharged from the Navy in 1946.
Dad returned to the University of Michigan and was awarded two degrees in 1947: a bachelor’s in Chemical Engineering and a bachelor’s in Mathematical Engineering.
He worked as a chemist and field engineer at Udylite Corporation from 1947 to 1951. He was transferred to Chicago in 1949. He also worked as a salesman for Wagner Brothers selling electroplating equipment and chemicals.
In 1951, Dad married June Canny who was a recent graduate from the nurses’ training program at Calumet Hospital. They had five children and settled in Palos Park, Ill., where they lived for 25 years. Dad started Surface Metal Company in 1955 and then bought Mercury Finishing from 3M in 1970 with his business partner Harold Gleason. He started a metal recovery plant in Joliet, Illinois in 1970, recovering copper from waste printed circuit etchants. Dad loved to solve problems and built a reputation of being knowledgeable and honest. He was always looking for new and interesting ventures, and some were more successful than others. For a time he was active in the USGA Trotting Association, racing up to 10 trotting horses. He also opened a diner called the “Jim Dandy.” That failed business gave him a lifelong appreciation of the difficulty of the restaurant business.
In 1970 Dad started a dairy farm in Walworth and began to think about getting out of the Chicago area. He sold his Chicago businesses and relocated to the Walworth area where he and June built a home on a beautiful parcel of land. In 1977, he and John Svabec opened Capron Manufacturing where dad was president until his retirement.
Dad lost his wife June in 2009, their daughter Ruth in 2004, and their son Jim in 2014. He is survived by his children, Pam Haese (Gary, deceased), Patrick and Elizabeth; six grandchildren, Beth (Brian) Swain, Bryan (Danielle) Haese, Tom (Maya) Haese, Dan (Liz) Quist, Maggie (Adam) Brown, and Joe Quist; and seven beautiful great-grandchildren. He is further survived by Dolly Swain, his loving companion of the past eight years.
We will miss you forever, Dad.
The family received friends on Thursday, Dec. 5 from 10 a.m. until the time of service at 11:30 a.m. at Toynton’s Walworth Funeral Home, 328 Kenosha St., Walworth. A lunch reception was to follow at a separate location.
i am so sorry for your loss i just talked to Fred a shot while ago i stopped to let him know i was done baling hay in back he always had stories to talk about very interesting man again my deepest sympathy
i am so sorry for your loss i just talked to Fred a short while ago i stopped to let him know i was done baling hay in back he always had stories to talk about very interesting man again my deepest sympathy