The Hamilton Spectator

‘We all adored her’: Family mourns loss of daughter in ATV crash

- FALLON HEWITT Fallon Hewitt is a Hamilton-based reporter at The Spectator. Reach her via email: fhewitt@thespec.com

A 21-year-old Flamboroug­h woman killed in an ATV crash near Tew’s Falls is being remembered for her passion for helping others and the “joy” she brought to her family.

Rebecca Dilkes was a passenger on an ATV being driven by her 24-year-old sister, Camille, on Harvest Road, just east of Ofield Road South, around 5:30 p.m. on April 25.

The ATV slid down an embankment about 10 metres and both women were thrown from the vehicle, said Const. Jerome Stewart with Hamilton police.

Camille suffered non-lifethreat­ening injuries, while Rebecca was found unresponsi­ve and died at the scene. Both women were wearing “appropriat­e safety equipment” welcomed member of our family, loved immediatel­y by her two older sisters. They couldn’t get enough of her,” read the obituary. “Becca fought all her life to keep up with them, never wanting to be left behind (and she wasn’t).” Graduating with honours from Waterdown District High School in 2016, Rebecca went on to earn her bachelor of science in nursing from Lakehead University in April, according to her obituary.

Describing it as a “trip of a lifetime” in a Facebook post, Colette said Rebecca also completed her nursing placement in New Zealand this winter.

“Becca was the adventurou­s, social butterfly of the family,” wrote Colette. “She loved and cared for so many people.”

Rebecca was also well known in the community, having worked as a lifeguard and aquatics instructor at the Waterdown YMCA for six years, and spending four summers as a lifeguard at her “second home,” Emerald Lake.

For the last three summers, Rebecca worked part time as a personal support worker (PSW) at Alexander Place nursing home in Waterdown. In a Facebook post, the organizati­on said Rebecca was a “dearly loved” staff member and that she would be missed “tremendous­ly.”

Her family described Rebecca’s love for seniors as “tender,” treating each “resident like her own grandparen­ts.”

“Her passion and calling was to help people,” read the statement from the long-term care home.

With her degree completed, the family said Rebecca was looking forward to being back home with her sisters after four years in Thunder Bay.

“She brought so much joy to our family and we will miss her dearly,” stated Colette in a Facebook post.

Due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, a private funeral for the family will be held for Rebecca at the Kitching, Steepe & Ludwig Funeral Home in Waterdown on Friday at 11 a.m. Those hoping to join the family are asked to do so via a livestream on the funeral home’s website.

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