Guy Renzaglia remembered for contributions to SIUC, wine industry
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">With sadness we lost Guy Anthony Renzaglia on Wednesday, November 4, 2010 at 4:35 am in his home at Mahomet, Illinois.<span style=""> </span> He was with his life companion, Betty, when he fell, gracefully, peacefully next to her.<span style=""> </span> Guy’s passing leaves a void in the lives of many.<span style=""> </span> He was a husband, father, grandfather, great grandfather, friend, teacher, and colleague without parallel, and a champion for those in need.<span style=""> </span> His legacy reaches across the region and into the far reaches of the country.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">Guy was born in Virginia, Minnesota as Guido Renzaglia in 1918 to Renaldo and Filomena, who were recent immigrants from Italy.<span style=""> </span> He grew up in the deep North Country’s Iron Range, where his father was a miner, fireman, and ultimately owned a corner, Italian store.<span style=""> </span> While speaking only Italian at home, Guido learned English from his older brother, sister, and classmates in elementary school.<span style=""> </span> He was the fourth child of seven, two of whom died shortly after birth, and was the only sibling to attend college and leave the area.<span style=""> </span> He was a high school athlete and at the age of 17, he was recruited on a football scholarship to George Washington University in Washington DC, where he played for four years, and was later inducted into the GWU Hall of Fame.<span style=""> </span> After graduating with a BA in Physical Education, he returned home to earn a Master’s degree in Physical Education at the University of Minnesota.<span style=""> </span> During the early days of WWII, he worked for the military as a physical trainer before enlisting and attending Officer Candidate School in the Army Air Corp.<span style=""> </span> Though he thought of himself as a “jock,” he surprised others by finishing first in his OCS class and being commissioned as an officer, serving five years during the war.<span style=""> </span> He never spoke of the brutality of war—it was not his nature— but regaled his kids with his stories of serving in North Africa, particularly Casablanca, and then finally through Italy during the waning days of war. Like many of the Greatest Generation, he returned home and enrolled in school on the GI bill.<span style=""> </span> While completing his PhD in Counseling Psychology, he met his wife, Josephine Elizabeth (Betty) Guidinger, on a blind date in late 1947 and they married shortly after.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;"><span style=""> </span>In 1948, Guy and Betty began a journey that included raising seven children, creating a university department, and developing a wine industry that has betrothed the Southern Illinois region. After completing a second masters in psychology he moved from St Paul to the University of Montana in Missoula, where their first son was born.<span style=""> </span> A year later, Betty gave birth to a daughter while visiting her mother in Etonia, Saskatchewan, Canada.<span style=""> </span> He returned to Minnesota as a doctoral student and a second son graced the world.<span style=""> </span> His first professional appointment was at the University of Minnesota at Duluth.<span style=""> </span> He then joined the faculty at the University of Missouri, Columbia, where a second daughter was born.<span style=""> </span> In 1955, Southern Illinois University’s President, Delyte Morris, offered Guy a position in the Psychology Department with the hope of expanding services to people with disabilities.<span style=""> </span> Guy moved his wife and four young children to Carbondale where he remained for over 50 years, adding three more children and creating a legacy in both Rehabilitation and the Illinois wine industry.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">Guy’s vision of providing support to underserved persons came to fruition at SIUC. He separated from Psychology, developed the Rehabilitation Institute, and helped equip the campus for the disabled, making SIUC one of the few universities in the country to provide services for the blind, deaf and persons using wheelchairs. He was a great innovator for persons with disabilities long before the Americans with Disabilities Act.<span style=""> </span> Through his strength and charisma, the Rehabilitation Institute grew into one of the largest counselor training programs in the Midwest, providing trained therapists for rehabilitation and mental health services across the country.<span style=""> </span> During his directorship, Rehabilitation became a nationally acclaimed program that trained over 1,000 professionals who dedicated their careers to helping others.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;"><span style=""> </span>Guy retired at age 60, concluding 23 years of service to SIUC, to pursue a lifelong dream.<span style=""> </span> While working as a retired annuitant and running the Touch of Nature Environmental Center, he partnered with Ted Wickman and Skip Cosgrove in 1980 to start a vineyard and winery, later known as Alto Vineyards.<span style=""> </span> After years of tilling the field, planting seedlings, digging post holes, and stringing wire, the vineyard produced its first grape crop in 1984.<span style=""> </span> A small winery was built in 1988, the first in Southern Illinois, opening its doors on a cold February day, only to sell out its inventory two days later.<span style=""> </span> After his partners left the business, Guy turned to his son Paul to become the wine maker, while Guy maintained the vineyard and acted as the chief executive officer, a partnership that prospered. Under his leadership, the Illinois Grape Growers’ Association was established, where he served as its first president, and the Illinois Wine Counsel and Shawnee Hill Wine Trail were formed.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">Guy had a vision, personal fortitude and knowhow that are rarely encountered. He was a trailblazer and leader who thrived by fighting for others and believing in the importance of a dream.<span style=""> </span> He not only led but brought people along, building on their strengths. He had a heart of gold and generously gave of his time, knowledge, and compassion. Guy knew no strangers; everyone was equal in his eyes and worthy of his time, insight and concern.<span style=""> </span> He saw beauty and worth in every human he encountered. Even in his last few months, he charmed those in Bridle Brook Assisted Living, making them feel his humor, his warm presence and his loving positive regard for all.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">Guy was preceded in death by his parents, brothers, Dominic and Frindo, and sisters Irena and Zaida.<span style=""> </span> He leaves his wife of 63 years, Betty; his children, Gary (Sandy Hughes and daughter Julia), Adelle (Jim Dubnicek and daughters Lindsay and Lauren and son Ryan), Paul (Katrina and daughters Elissa, Rhiana, Kara and Anna), Karen (Wayne Womac and sons Miguel and Andres), Mark (Sandy Dengate and sons Sam and Paul), Danny (Debbie and daughters Elizabeth and Catherine and son Joey), and Mary Jo (Jim Weir and sons Alec and Jack and daughter Carlee); and one great grandchild, Rylan.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">Our hearts are heavy with his loss but we rejoice in the time he shared in our lives.<span style=""> </span> His heart will never leave the fertile and beautiful rolling hills of Southern Illinois, and the wonderful people of this area and the SIU community.<span style=""> </span> His spirit remains a living part of us all.<span style=""> </span> We love and will forever miss him.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">Visitation will be from 5:00 to 8:00 pm, Thursday, November 11, 2010 at the Crain Pleasant Grove-Murdale Funeral Home, Old Rt 13W between Carbondale and Murphysboro.<span style=""> </span> A funeral mass will occur at St Francis Catholic Church in Carbondale at 11:00, Friday, November 12, with Father Robert Flanery officiating, followed by a reception at the church.<span style=""> </span> In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Guy Renzaglia Scholarship fund: Rehabilitation Institute, Rehn Hall 317, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">To leave online condolences visit <a href="http://www.crainsonline.com">www.crainsonline.com</a></span></p>