Deceased November 15, 2008

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In Memory

Dave Stephens and Anne Smaridge met at a Mount Holyoke College “social” three days into Anne’s freshman year, the beginning of Dave’s senior year at Amherst.  They married in 1958, and, after Dave served in two years in the U.S. Navy as an air intelligence officer, they settled in Seattle, Wash. Dave studied forest engineering at the Univ. of Washington and later worked in various investment firms before forming his own business, Trace Athletic, which manufactured athletic equipment.  In 1994 they moved to Vershire, Vt. There, Dave was able to pursue his wide and deep love of the outdoors, which included farming. He loved training a set of draft horses to help work their farm. Dave played a significant role at the school, assisting in business issues and maintenance and instructing students about horses and farming.      

Dave came to us from Putney School in Vermont where early on he distinguished himself in athletics, among other things, winning the state downhill skiing championship.   

Dave was unquestionable the best athlete in our Class. His accomplishments in baseball and football are legendary.  When Amherst celebrated its 100 years of playing collegiate baseball, Dave was one of nine players selected for the centenary team.  Dave’s success in athletics grew not just from his flat out natural ability but also from his ironclad discipline in conditioning himself, his dogged determination, his high intelligence and his tremendous versatility. In baseball he was our catcher as a freshman and could and did play infield or outfield on the varsity. In football, Dave was an outstanding defensive and offensive end and punter. Many of us remember Dave’s miraculous catch in the end zone, our junior year, resulting in Amherst’s 6-0 upset of long-undefeated Tufts. Dave had to dive and stretch out to make that catch before hitting the goal post, causing a broken tooth. In the ’57 game, Dave recovered an early Tufts fumble that led to our first touchdown in a 19-6 victory. Dave had that elusive “extra something” that marks winners.  As Tom Gorman put it, “Dave was a highly skilled athlete who improved each year through hard work and attention to details . . . extremely capable, a ‘rock,’ one you always count on for maximum effort and positive results.”

Dave and Anne’s life was rich with many wholesome activities and interests. They maintained farms in both Seattle and Vermont. When Dave was 11, he spent the first of three summers working on a farm in New Brunswick, Canada. This experience cultivated his deep and long lasting love of farming, draft horses, animals and the rural landscape.

Dave enjoyed cooking, soccer, volleyball, canoeing and bird watching in waterways of the Pacific Coast of British Columbia and later on the Connecticut River. He and Anne danced to Harold Luce at Mountainview, to country western music at bars, and, in their farm home, to the Beatles. They canoed and hiked extensively in the Maine Islands, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and on the dangerous seas on the west coast of Vancouver Island. Later in life, they grew to love “looking” and “educating themselves about art” as they frequented museums and art shows.    

Anne wrote this of Dave for our 50th Reunion book. “Dave has always been a New England Yankee: tough, contained, unselfish, responsible, understated and relatively undemonstrative emotionally, competent, diligent and hard working.” This description of Dave fits so well with those us who were lucky enough to know him.

Dave Stephens died on Nov. 15, 2008, after a four-year battle with Lewy Body Disease, a progressive neurological disease manifested by progressive dementia and Parkinsonism. Dave and Anne have two boys: Benjamin ’81 and Tim ’85 and five grandsons. Ben majored in psychology and was a soccer star (was drafted by a pro-team) and also, at one time held the indoor high jump record. He is now a lawyer and works for Intelligent Ventures in the state of Washington. Tim majored in economics, played soccer, was a three time All-American, went to Tuck Business School and is now an executive vice president for Fidelity.

Marsh McLean ’58