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BORN

1923

DIED

2020

FUNERAL HOME

Jardine Funeral Home

8 Princes' Street West

Fenelon Falls, Ontario

Lloyd LEADBEATER Obituary

LLOYD LEADBEATER Lloyd Leadbeater was born March 9, 1923 in Toronto. He died of natural causes May 15, 2020 after a full and rewarding life. He was predeceased by his high school sweetheart Jo (Josephine Mary), his wife of 66 years who died December 2, 2009; his brother Arthur and sister Gladys. Lloyd was the proud father of Murray (Lucinda), Dale, and Eric (Cheryl); grandfather of Meghan, Ian, Paul, Sean, Christopher, Jason and Riane; and great grandfather to a flock of ten great grandchildren. In his youth he was a football and hockey player, and cyclist. As his life progressed, he became a tool and die maker, business man, pioneer and innovator in the plastics industry and the long-time President of Toronto Plastics ("The future is plastics my son!"). He took up flying out of Buttonville Airport until Jo made him quit. A shy man, he took on teaching at George Brown College and oversaw the installation of an injection molding machine at the Ontario Science Centre. He was an experienced outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman and bulldozer owner and operator at Harcourt Park, the location of the family cottage since 1961. In addition to serving on the Board of Directors of the cottager's association for 41 years and President for 37, Lloyd built bridges, installed culverts, led nature walks, removed beaver dams and pulled hapless cottagers out of the ditch on countless occasions. His was the genius behind the building of the Community Centre that now bears his name. His passion for the area drew him to Dysart Municipal Council where he served as a councillor and Deputy Reeve for a total of 12 years ensuring that cottagers in the Park were fairly represented. In 2005, Lloyd and Dale with Murray's skills, built an energy efficient home near Raven Lake outside of Kirkfield. Here he applied his knowledge of technology, re-designing systems, master-minding projects and welcoming guests. He maintained the property with his tractor, chainsaw and self-designed shrub-puller and even built deluxe bat houses into his 98th year. He contributed to the restoration of the Museum in Kirkfield while serving on the Board of the Kirkfield and District Historical Society. Lloyd's love of the natural world led him first to Pickering Naturalists, then to the Kawartha Field Naturalists and the Couchiching Conservancy where he was an active member, making many new friends. Lloyd's contributions are further detailed in: " Canadian Inventors and Innovators 1885 to 1950: Pioneering Plastics by Donald W. Emmerson (1978); " Canadian Plastics Pioneers 1950-2000 by Kara Kuryllowicz (2017); " Harcourt Park, Fifty Years of Stewardship and Beyond by J. Alan Wargo (2010); and, " Member's Interview with Lloyd Leadbeater by John Bick, in Heron's Watch (2020) available at kawarthafieldnaturalists.org Above all, Lloyd was a family man who cherished his wife Jo and their ever-growing family. Three weeks prior to his death, Lloyd was operating his Kubota tractor and changing the oil in his ride-on lawnmower. His was a life well lived - right until the end. Heartfelt thanks to all who cared for Lloyd, including Heather Benson and June Combden, the faithful Paramed nurses and the outstanding nurses and doctors at Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay. The family would appreciate donations to the hospital or to Couchiching Conservancy http://www.couchichingconserv.ca in remembrance of Lloyd. An opportunity to share via video-conferencing is coming, and when we are safe again, a big party! On line or video condolences, video or online donations please visit www.jardinefuneralhome.com

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by The Globe and Mail from May 19 to May 23, 2020.

Memories and Condolences
for Lloyd LEADBEATER

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19 Entries

Lloyd's photo of Dredge #4-Skagway, Yukon.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Clutches and brakes of Dredge #4, Skagway, Yukon-photo by Lloyd

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Doe feeding fawn- video'd by Lloyd.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd nd friends on Balsam Lake boat ride.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd, Arthur and geologist John Ford.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd and other happy CKL Flora workers.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd and Dale enjoying one of Brian's lunches.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd inspecting plant while Ellie mounts.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd at Elliot Falls dam near Coboconk.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd and Brian watching for shrike and bluebirds in the shade at Ron Reid's old place

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd 'shooting' a Savannah Sparrow on Wylie Rd.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd and Brian inside the cottage, Harcourt Park.

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Lloyd leading us through the forest at Harcourt Park

Anne Barbour

May 26, 2020

Anne and Brian Barbour

May 26, 2020

It's very difficult to believe that our friend and neighbour, Lloyd Leadbeater is gone. We want to offer Dale, Murray, Eric and all other family members our deepest condolences at this sad time. However, I started thinking about times Brian and I have spent with Lloyd and decided that sharing some memories with everyone would be the best way to remember him.

Lloyd and Dale have been our friends and neighbours for about 15 years. We both built houses in Kawartha Lakes at the same time, and met when we all joined the Kawartha Field Naturalists' Club. Brian, a tool and die-maker, and Lloyd a plastics mould-maker, could actually talk for hours while Dale and I had our heads in the business of pressing plants and writing about them. Brian will certainly miss those sessions with Lloyd. Actually, the last time we saw Lloyd was only days before he went in the hospital. He was putzing with his lawn tractor in the garage. Brian and I came to drop something off for Dale and, following social distancing directives, held up a sign that said We miss you Dale and Lloyd!! While I chatted with Dale, Brian and Lloyd discussed issues of the day. On the way home, Brian said how amazed he was that Lloyd was right up to date on all of the politics and medical news of Canada, the U.S. and the world. Lloyd was sharp as a tack to the very end.

Lloyd had always talked with pride about Harcourt Park, so when he invited us for a drive up there in 2013, we accepted. It was a beautiful fall day and Dale was at work. Why shouldn't the retired folk go for a drive? By the time we arrived, it was already lunch time, so Lloyd treated us to lunch at the local restaurant in Gooderham. It was like dining with a celebrity because he couldn't take a bite without someone coming over to say how nice it was to see him. After that, he toured us around the Park, taking us to trails he loved, the bridge he and others had installed, and even showed us the very spot where Speckled Trout were spawning.

Spring beckons all local birders to Wylie Road in Carden, and Lloyd, Brian and I were among them. Usually in the spring, we would go out together, with Lloyd driving, of course. He was a big man and his own vehicle was large and comfy for him. Often, we would just pull over so he could bird from the window, but Lloyd would bring his scope and pull it out at certain spots to get better views of the Bobolinks, Meadowlarks and Upland Sandpipers. In the accompanying picture, Lloyd is shooting' a Savanna Sparrow with his camera on a tripod. The other photo shows Lloyd and Brian standing in the shade at the gate of the property that used to belong to Ron Reid and Janet Grand. One time, Lloyd took us to see the nesting Great Blue Herons on Shrike Rd. I'm so glad that he did, because the rookery is no longer there.

When the CKL Flora Project began, Lloyd helped guide us forward as a member of the Planning Committee. He also performed a very important job involving the plant presses. He searched out a supplier for the to inch foam that was needed, bought it and then cut it all into the appropriate rectangles for the presses. The ROM Herbarium required us to use foam in order to produce superior pressed specimens. Lloyd knew all about plant specimens at the ROM as he and Jo had gone there weekly for years, after he retired, in order to find and document the specimens from Durham Co.
Sometimes, when Dale was at work, I needed to go out in the field to check on a plant and collect a specimen. So, who would I ask to accompany me? Lloyd of course, as he was always willing and most-often available. One place we went together was the Elliot Falls dam just north of Coboconk on Hwy 35. I needed to collect a sunflower from the patch that were growing there, and Lloyd was game to explore the area around the dam. He took my picture with the sunflowers, and I took his picture by the dam. Always interested in mechanical or engineering projects, Lloyd enjoyed reading the posted specs. Interestingly, Lloyd told me that this dam had produced electricity for the cement company that used to be across Raven Lake, near where he and Dale now lived.

The plant-mounting process went on for years, and Lloyd came over to our house periodically to see what was going on, to meet and chat with some of the volunteer KFN members and students from Sir Sanford Fleming College working on mounting the plants and to stay for lunch and enjoy some of Brian's fine soup.

Never one to turn down a good boat ride with friends, Lloyd came with us more than once on our pontoon boat to explore Balsam Lake, enjoy a picnic lunch at the lock at Rosedale, and the shoreline of Indian Point Provincial Park. In this picture he is in the back with Dan Bone, behind Anna and Jane, looking for water and shorebirds, mink, otters, or an exciting plant! (Just kidding about the plant that's what I always looked for.)

Unless he wasn't feeling well, Lloyd regularly attended the Kawartha Field Naturalists' meetings. One speaker, John Ford, presented a talk on local geology then took us out into the field on a gorgeous fall day in 2016. Lloyd was feeling quite good that day and followed right behind the leader to whatever geological feature he was going to explain. He got a work-out that day pushing his walker over uneven ground and limestone ridges and granite whalebacks. He is pictured with the leader John Ford in his red vest, and another KFN member, Arthur Gladstone, deep in a discussion about geology.

Living at Raven Lake gave Lloyd the opportunity to use his camera equipment. Lloyd was ever-vigilant for critter movement around the house. One spring, from the diningroom window, he shot an awesome video of a White-tailed Deer doe feeding her fawn. A still from that special video is uploaded here.

Lloyd would shoot flowers on the property, have Dale identify them, then store them as a record in a file on his computer. For one KFN members' night meeting, Lloyd put together a show of his flowers, but it wasn't just a slideshow it was a quiz! The audience participated by yelling out what they thought the flower was. Nobody slept through the meeting that night!
In fact, at the Members' Night meeting in December 2019, Lloyd enthralled the KFN with a Powerpoint Presentation about a trip that he and Dale had taken to the Yukon. You could have heard a pin drop during that 40 minutes. Anyone who knew Lloyd will understand why the final photo in my series is one of Clutches and Brakes taken by Lloyd inside the #4 Dredge-National Historic Site near Skagway, Yukon, and the Dredge itself. Lloyd explained the entire working of this machine with no hesitation.
Lloyd was an exceptional man whom we are thankful to have met and been able to spend time with. He leaves us with the example of living life to its fullest, and never giving up when you have a problem to solve. He didn't just make things good', he always wanted to make them better'.
We will miss you Lloyd. Brian and Anne Barbour

Lynne Said

May 23, 2020

I have fond memories of Lloyd in my childhood. My father, Jim Wallace , and Lloyd developed a wonderful relationship at Toronto Plastics and socially. My thoughts and prayers are with his family.

Carlos Poulsen

May 20, 2020

Our sincere condolences on the passing of Loyd to the Leadbeater Family.

Carlos and Olga Poulsen
1030 Larix Lane
Harcourt Park

May 20, 2020

Our heartfelt sympathy to the Leadbeater family for the sad loss of your dear Lloyd. We are former members for 20 years at Harcourt Park.

God Bless

Don and Ralda Dye
formerly of Big Straggle Lake

May 20, 2020

Hello to the Leadbeater family.

We like so many members of Harcourt Park are so indebted to your dad/grandpa/great grandpa for the legacy he left us in our beautiful piece of Haliburton County, Harcourt Park. Lloyd set the standard for fine governance and leadership that still graces our Park and its leaders today.

His kind friendship, willingness to do what ever he could to help out, his mentorship his dedication and very hard work, all in a real sense created, along with our founders, and a few original members, the unique sylvan paradise Harcourt Park members enjoy today.

It must be gratifying to know that your dad/grandpa/great grandpa's life will continue to enrich the lives of hundreds of others for years to come.

Sincerely

Barb and Bill Sinclair

Showing 1 - 19 of 19 results

Memorial Events
for Lloyd LEADBEATER

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Jardine Funeral Home

8 Princes' Street West, Fenelon Falls, ON K0M 1N0