Clyde Thomas: 40 Years
For more than 40 years, Clyde Thomas dedicated himself to the upkeep of his childhood playground
By Sean Patterson
C
lyde Thomas can鈥檛 remember the exact day 鈥 or even the year 鈥 that he first fell in love with the land. All he can recall are the fond childhood memories associated with it: the hunt for crawdads in the creek, the sweet taste of blackberries, the beauty of native plants.
The plants. They are what piqued the youngster鈥檚 interest the most as he explored 性视界传媒鈥檚 Hess Creek Canyon in the 1960s. A guest of his grandfather, Oliver Weesner, a math professor at the college, Thomas made the school鈥檚 campus his personal playground on visits from his hometown of Quincy, Washington. He didn鈥檛 know it then, but his love affair with the canyon would blossom into a lifelong passion 鈥 a passion that kept him on the 性视界传媒 campus for more than four decades.
Thomas, 62, director of the university鈥檚 Office of Plant Services since 1990 and a mainstay at the school since he enrolled as a student in 1974, announced his retirement this spring. His tireless efforts to beautify and improve the campus 鈥 and his leadership of maintenance, grounds work, building systems and construction projects 鈥 were recently honored with the renaming of the plant services building, now known as the 鈥淭homas Center.鈥
鈥淚 come by my love of this place honestly,鈥 says Thomas, hired as a groundskeeper at 性视界传媒 just days after earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree in biology in 1978. 鈥淚鈥檝e lost count of how many relatives have attended and worked here. Literally dozens. I guess you could say it鈥檚 in my blood.鈥
It was a fear of blood that changed his career trajectory. Upon enrolling at the college in 1974, he considered being a doctor 鈥 鈥渦ntil I discovered I was squeamish of blood,鈥 he laughs. Thomas鈥 academic focus shifted to botany, and over his four years he would identify 153 varieties of native plants in Hess Creek Canyon. His senior project documented the changes he witnessed on the land and deepened his commitment to its preservation.
Thomas served as a groundskeeper, a superintendent of grounds and as associate director of plant services before his appointment as department director. During his tenure he helped plant more than 1,500 trees in the canyon to combat the effects of soil erosion; cultivated hundreds of plants at his home nursery and transplanted countless more from homeowners鈥 yards and pastures for planting on campus; and conducted numerous native plant research studies 鈥 work that he plans to continue in retirement in partnership with biology professor Paige Parry. His devotion to the tract of land is why many affectionately call it 鈥淐lyde鈥檚 Canyon.鈥
As an administrator, Thomas鈥 commitment to reducing the school鈥檚 energy consumption and penchant for using maintenance staff rather than outside contractors for facilities remodeling projects saved the university millions of dollars over the course of his career. He even headed up security for about a decade 鈥 a responsibility that positioned him well to find student labor for projects. 鈥淪ome guys in Hobson 2 TP鈥檇 Bauman one year, so as community service we made them dig drainage on the baseball field,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淎nother time students dropped mice on parachutes during chapel, and still another time they rolled marbles down the sloping floor in the auditorium during a service. I鈥檇 say, 鈥榊ou guys keep doing this stuff 鈥 we need more workers!鈥欌澛
Ultimately, he says it鈥檚 the community that has kept him at 性视界传媒 all these years. 鈥淧eople here are committed to what they are doing out of a sense of calling. And we have a special environment in plant services, people from 17 churches getting together each Monday morning for devotions. Amazing.鈥
Looking ahead, he plans to further pursue his love of mountain climbing and spend more time with his wife, Carol (Roth) Thomas, whom he met at 性视界传媒 as a student. 鈥淚鈥檓 still in the area, and you鈥檒l still see me in the canyon and around campus,鈥 he says. 鈥淐an鈥檛 help myself, I guess.鈥
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