Who knows just why the Princeton freshman football coach drove hours to Camillus, population 1,200, in upstate New York to spend 10 minutes with Bill and then two hours with his parents, but he did and he certainly was not sorry. Bill was a football and basketball star at Princeton, and had his grades been better, he might have been a varsity baseball player as well. In some ways, Bill lived a charmed life. 

He retired at age 49 as head of marketing for the company that produced Bubble Wrap, having joined it when it was not much of anything and left when it was in the big leagues. 

He went on working but without remuneration, helping turn his beloved Clayton, N.Y., on the St. Lawrence Seaway into a tourist destination. He created the largest freshwater wooden-boat museum in the world — it was not much more than a small shipyard when he took over. Using some of his own property, he opened a vista in the town to the river. He was instrumental in river conservation and in reviving the old opera house. 

Bill died peacefully March 28, 2019. He was predeceased by his wife, Sissy, and is survived by his three sons and their families. Bill’s son Brian had this to say of him: “He was a good guy. He opened his heart to everyone he met.”

Class Year: 
Undergraduate Class of 1957