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Lyle King

Birth
Chenoa, McLean County, Illinois, USA
Death
19 Dec 2016 (aged 97)
Princeton, Bureau County, Illinois, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Lyle King, 97, of Princeton, Illinois, passed away Monday (Dec. 19, 2016) at Liberty Village, Princeton. He was surrounded by family and friends at his passing.

Lyle was born March 10, 1919, in Chenoa, Illinois to Jesse and Lula King. Lyle was preceded in death by his parents, one sister and two brothers.

Lyle is survived by his wife of 70 years, Johnnie Louise; three children, Susan (James) Smuda, Lyle B. King and Kenneth (Sandra) Simpson; six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

Lyle was active in the Heart Association and the Cancer Society and was a delegate to the Illinois Coaching Association. He was a past Bureau County commissioner. Lyle coached several sports (football, track, basketball and wrestling) at Waverly, Chenoa and Princeton high schools. When he started the PHS wrestling program, he taught himself the sport and how to coach it, as he was never a wrestler. At one time, his football teams had the longest winning streak in Illinois high school football history. He was inducted into the Illinois High School Coaches Association Football Hall of Fame in 1981. He started the Princeton Invitational Wrestling Tournament, now the Lyle King Invitational, with a small handful of teams more than 40 years ago. The tournament now attracts wrestlers from more than 30 teams and is recognized as one of the best Class A wrestling tournaments in the state. As a high school biology teacher, he inspired many students to pursue careers in the sciences. He taught at the advent of DNA technology and was always excited by the new frontiers that the science of DNA would open.

During World War II, Lyle served in the Caribbean and South Pacific arenas. He married Johnnie Taylor Lanning in December 1946 and together they made a life in Princeton where they lived for more than 60 years.

In addition to earning degrees from Illinois State and the University of Illinois, Lyle completed graduate credits at the University of Southern California, Arizona State University, the University of New Hampshire and Brandeis University.

Lyle valued hard work and fair play. Throughout his life as a teacher, coach and parent he strove to instill these values in his students, athletes and children.

Pantagraph, The (Bloomington, IL) - Thursday, December 22, 2016
Lyle King, 97, of Princeton, Illinois, passed away Monday (Dec. 19, 2016) at Liberty Village, Princeton. He was surrounded by family and friends at his passing.

Lyle was born March 10, 1919, in Chenoa, Illinois to Jesse and Lula King. Lyle was preceded in death by his parents, one sister and two brothers.

Lyle is survived by his wife of 70 years, Johnnie Louise; three children, Susan (James) Smuda, Lyle B. King and Kenneth (Sandra) Simpson; six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

Lyle was active in the Heart Association and the Cancer Society and was a delegate to the Illinois Coaching Association. He was a past Bureau County commissioner. Lyle coached several sports (football, track, basketball and wrestling) at Waverly, Chenoa and Princeton high schools. When he started the PHS wrestling program, he taught himself the sport and how to coach it, as he was never a wrestler. At one time, his football teams had the longest winning streak in Illinois high school football history. He was inducted into the Illinois High School Coaches Association Football Hall of Fame in 1981. He started the Princeton Invitational Wrestling Tournament, now the Lyle King Invitational, with a small handful of teams more than 40 years ago. The tournament now attracts wrestlers from more than 30 teams and is recognized as one of the best Class A wrestling tournaments in the state. As a high school biology teacher, he inspired many students to pursue careers in the sciences. He taught at the advent of DNA technology and was always excited by the new frontiers that the science of DNA would open.

During World War II, Lyle served in the Caribbean and South Pacific arenas. He married Johnnie Taylor Lanning in December 1946 and together they made a life in Princeton where they lived for more than 60 years.

In addition to earning degrees from Illinois State and the University of Illinois, Lyle completed graduate credits at the University of Southern California, Arizona State University, the University of New Hampshire and Brandeis University.

Lyle valued hard work and fair play. Throughout his life as a teacher, coach and parent he strove to instill these values in his students, athletes and children.

Pantagraph, The (Bloomington, IL) - Thursday, December 22, 2016


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