The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Football star’s life forced onto a different path

Sudden traffic accident left him damaged at 25, but with loyal friends.

- By Bill Banks

Walter Chadwick became a legend while at Decatur High as an indomitabl­e running back with formidable shoulders and uncommonly thick fingers.

He led the state in rushing in 1963, when Atlanta Journal sportswrit­er and the future novelist, Terry Kay, wrote that Chadwick causes defenders “to stumble, scatter or bounce [while also employing] brute power.”

Chadwick secured certified folk hero status when he headed to Knoxville and the University of Tennessee. During his senior

year in 1967 the Vols went 9-2, won the Southeaste­rn Conference Championsh­ip and finished second nationally in both the Associated Press and Coaches polls.

The 5-10, 205-pound Chadwick was the fulcrum of an offense that averaged 25.7 points per game, a whopping sum a half-century ago. He led the SEC in touchdowns with 11, and after every one he tossed the football in the stands, sometimes celebratin­g so hard with fans he forgot about the game left to be played.

But the most remarkable act in Walter Chadwick’s long narrative is the last one.

In April 1971, days after his 25th birthday, Chadwick was sitting at an Atlanta red light in his Volkswagen Beetle when a Wells Fargo truck smashed into the car. He was in intensive care for 15 days and in a coma for 3½ months, and when he woke up a portion of his brain was irreparabl­y damaged.

In those days before the Shepherd Center was built, his post-accident rehab was a long hit-and-miss ordeal. His high school friend Jerry Eickhoff says it took two to three years for him to became ambulatory. He had to relearn to write, talk and walk. During his peak years after his recovery, he could walk with a cane, ride a bike and, as Eickhoff points out, “He could still crush your hand with a handshake.”

He took jobs from cleaning presses for a printing company to bagging groceries at Publix and working as a custodian. For about two years in the 1990s he worked as a support coach at Emory Hospital for patients with brain injuries.

Chadwick was mostly able to live independen­tly and was often ubiquitous around Avondale Estates and Decatur peddling his bicycle. He made friends everywhere, but with advancing years fewer and fewer remembered or ever knew he wore #20 for the Decatur Bulldogs and Tennessee Volunteers.

Former All-America Tennessee linebacker Steve Kiner lost touch for a while but reconnecte­d with Chadwick. After a nine-year NFL career, Kiner returned to college and got two master’s degrees in clinical psychology and counseling. By 1991 he was managing the emergency psychiatri­c services for Emory Healthcare.

“At that time Walter was lucid,” Kiner said. “He could carry on conversati­ons, but he didn’t always have access to recall and memory on demand. I thought he needed some psychiatri­c help.”

Kiner helped Chadwick get the help and the job at Emory, with Chadwick riding his bike to MARTA so he could catch a train the campus.

“I also went to the Tennessee alumni associatio­n in Atlanta and told them that Walter needs to be more active, he needs broader social interactio­n.”

A group of mostly Tennessee alumni created the

“Friends of Walter,” a collective starting with three or four and ending with 85. They raised money for his clothes, his meals, his living conditions and even a birdhouse — he loved animals all his life. They drove him to Tennessee games, including the 40th and 50th anniversar­ies of the ’67 team.

Every week without fail for nearly a decade-and-ahalf, the FOW took Chadwick to lunch. On Oct. 30, 14 of the friends met for “Walter Wednesday” at City Barbecue, a new favorite of Walter’s, whose appetite was famously robust.

Chadwick, 73, died from congenital heart failure around 7 a.m. the next day in the assisted living home where’s he had lived the last three years. A funeral was held earlier this week.

For Alan Chadwick, the youngest of Walter’s brothers, it’s no mystery how Walter inspired such devotion

“His personalit­y always drew people to him,” Alan said. “He was outgoing and always positive, even after the accident. He was friendly, zany and, to put it mildly, a little bit of a character.”

Kiner said: “He was never mean or angry. I never ever heard him complain about one thing. He was like that after the accident and he was like that going back to college.”

Walter Earnest Chadwick was born in Decatur on March 30, 1946, the second of four boys to Walter and Eleanor Chadwick. All four played football, with three making first-team all state, and each excelled in college.

Walter’s most indelible high school performanc­e came during a 1962 playoff game against bitter rival Avondale High. Late in the game Walter took a pitch from his quarterbac­k and threw a touchdown pass that delivered a 7-6 win for Decatur and gave Avondale its first home loss in a stadium already eight years old.

But this was only a prelude for what followed. In 28 games at Tennessee he rushed for 1,306 yards, and 16 touchdowns while catching 35 passes for 409 yards. He threw two passes in college, both during his 1967 senior season, both for touchdowns in critical victories over Alabama and Mississipp­i.

Though drafted in the sixth round by Green Bay, Chadwick never played in the NFL. His pro career consisted of one season in the Canadian Football League. In the spring of 1971 he seemed to have found his calling, getting hired as head football coach by Wills (now Campbell) High in Smyrna. “No doubt Walter would’ve been a lifelong coach and great one,” said his brother Alan, who’s coached 43 years (34 as head coach) at Marist and ranks second among all Georgia high school coaches with 384 victories.

The accident came two weeks after Walter was hired. He was already married with two sons, ages 2 and 1. His wife eventually divorced him and took the boys, March and John, back to Knoxville. Both attended Walter’s funeral this week and said, despite the geographic­al and health complexiti­es, they never lost contact with their dad.

“We only knew him when he was disabled,” said March, an architect in New York City ( John lives in Knoxville). “But he was a great dad. Caring. We saw him every summer.”

When Walter could no longer ride his bike, he liked being driven through the Winnona Park neighborho­od where he grew up. He’d point out his old home, the homes of old friends, and the homes no longer there, torn down and replaced by McMansions. One afternoon, noticing a for sale sign with an $800,000 price tag, he looked at Ellen Morrison, a founder of FOW, and said, “Chump change.”

When anyone donated money, or practicall­y did anything at all, Morrison said, Walter liked writing the thank you cards by hand so they had a personal touch. He struggled mightily one night trying to figure what to say to his old Tennessee head coach Doug Dickey. He sat for a long time, she said, before he scrawled: “Coach Dickey, thank you. You taught me how to live.”

Chadwick is survived by sons, March Chadwick of New York City, NY and John Chadwick of Knoxville, TN, brothers, Donald (Gaelyn), Dennis ( Janet) and Alan (Lisa) Chadwick.

 ?? SPECIAL/ 2016 FILE BRANDENCAM­P/ ?? Walter Chadwick was a star running back at Decatur High and at the University of Tennessee.
SPECIAL/ 2016 FILE BRANDENCAM­P/ Walter Chadwick was a star running back at Decatur High and at the University of Tennessee.
 ?? BRANDEN CAMP / 2016 ?? Walter Chadwick, who was a star running back at the University of Tennessee, walks with friend and UT alum Ellen Morrison and former Wills High School football player Keith Miller in Laurel Park.
BRANDEN CAMP / 2016 Walter Chadwick, who was a star running back at the University of Tennessee, walks with friend and UT alum Ellen Morrison and former Wills High School football player Keith Miller in Laurel Park.

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