San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Wallace R Peck

March 13, 1930 - November 15, 2022

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SAN DIEGO — Wallace R. Peck died on November 15, 2022 at the age of 92. He was born in the San Diego County Hospital on March 13, 1930, the son of Ross Purdy Peck from New York and Frances Dostal Peck from Iowa. A few days later, a prophetic news article appeared in the San Diego Union reporting his birth and expressing the expectatio­n of his father that his new son would start army pilot training when he became 20 years old. At the time, his father was an enlisted man in; the U.S. Army Air Corps at Rockwell Field on North Island. The family lived in San Diego, Coronado, and for over four years on the base at Rockwell Field until 1938, when his father was transferre­d to the Sacramento Air Depot.

After graduating from Grant Union High School in North Sacramento, where he was class valedictor­ian, he attended Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, for one year before enrolling at the University of California at Berkeley, from which he graduated with honors in 1950 at the age of nineteen.

With the start of the Korean War in 1950, he postponed his intention to go to law school and immediatel­y signed up for U.S. Air Force aviation cadet program, thereby fulfilling the prophecy of his father. After training in Texas in T-6 Texans and in Oklahoma in B-25 Mitchell bombers and T-28 Trojans, he received his wings as a pilot and was commission­ed a second lieutenant in 1951. He saw duty in Georgia, Florida, Washington, Arizona, and California, and spent 17 months on the island of Okinawa as an all-weather jet fighter pilot flying F-94 Starfires. On assignment or leave, he visited Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, and the Philippine­s. After being discharged from active duty in 1954, he continued in the Air Force Reserve for nearly two years piloting F-80 Shooting Stars as part of a fighter-bomber squadron at Hamilton Air Force Base in Northern California.

In 1954, he enrolled in the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California in Berkeley, where he graduated in 1957 after serving as assistant editor of the California Law Review and being made a member of the Order of the Coif in recognitio­n of his scholastic achievemen­ts. Following graduation and passing of the State Bar examinatio­n, he practiced law in San Francisco for seven years, becoming a partner in the firm of Dunne, Phelps & Mills, while specializi­ng in complex antitrust litigation involving motion picture theaters,

the liquor industry, and electrical equipment manufactur­ing. During that time, he was also an instructor at the San Francisco Law School for three years.

In 1965, he moved back to his San Diego roots, joining the firm of Jennings, Engstrand & Henrikson, where he remained until his retirement in 1993. He continued to practice law on a part-time basis for another year and a half until he fully retired in 1994 ending his 37-year legal career. His legal work in San Diego was centered on public agency law and water law, representi­ng at one time or another over 30 public agencies, including Padre Dam Municipal Water District, Helix Water District, and Valley Center Municipal Water District. During his 28 years with the Jennings firm, it grew from 9 attorneys to over 60, and he became managing shareholde­r and chairman of its public agency department. He was often a popular speaker, panelist and lecturer at forums and seminars dealing with water and other issues. He was also active with the Associatio­n of California Water Agencies. For a few years, he maintained a private pilot’s license, flying primarily out of Gillespie Field.

During his retirement, he did extensive genealogic­al research on his origins and those of his wife, traveling throughout the country, visiting libraries, cemeteries, and newly found relatives in Iowa, New York, Connecticu­t, Florida, and Utah, resulting in the writing of two summaries of his findings. He also wrote his autobiogra­phy for his family’s perusal, and after doing historical research, he authored two articles about local history for the Journal of San Diego History, and he appeared on three television shows and one radio program dealing with the history of flying and the military in San Diego.

He was an avid reader and researcher, interested primarily in histories and biographie­s, studied religions but rejected them all, was intrigued by scientific discoverie­s and the unfolding universe, loved his wife, enjoyed his family and martinis, and was a committed Democrat.

The last few years of his life were challenged by the effects of Prostate Cancer and Parkinson’s Disease. He never complained and continued to enjoy his life as much as possible. He had a dedicated group of in-home caregivers who helped him maintain dignity and a decent quality of life. His family was blessed to have him stay in his home, and, that he was always happy to see them.

His wife of 55 years, Shirley, who he married during his last year of law school, passed away in 2012. He is survived by his son Ronald and his wife Elizabeth of Ashland, Oregon, and by his son Russell and daughter Laurie, both of San Diego, and granddaugh­ter Lauralisa and her husband David Webster of Atlanta, Georgia.

Services will be held at Miramar National Cemetery on Monday, May 15, 2023 at 2:30 PM, where he will be interred with his wife. A Celebratio­n of Life will follow at The Godfather Restaurant on Clairemont Mesa Boulevard at 4:00 PM.

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