At 90, fence builder defies age, stays on the job

Like a stout fence he put up with his bare, weathered hands, Walt Easter stands tall with time.

Kent’s Walt Easter continues to put up fences for others. He has operated his own business for 56 years.

Kent’s Walt Easter continues to put up fences for others. He has operated his own business for 56 years.

Like a stout fence he put up with his bare, weathered hands, Walt Easter stands tall with time.

Having overcome personal problems and serious health problems, the 90-year-old Kent man stays active today running a fence company out of his West Hill home.

Need to replace a cedar or add a chain-link fence? Call on Easter, someone who’s been at it since 1958.

“I just love the business,” said Easter, who works between 25 and 30 hours a week putting up commercial and residential fences with the help of a carpenter. “The main part is you’re meeting different people all the time. I like people and the hard work. Still do.”

Easter learned the value of hard work growing up on his family’s 320-acre farm in Arkansas during the Great Depression. One of 10 children, he did his share of the chores and worked long days on the farm, using horses to help harvest hay, corn and wheat. The family never went hungry, he said, and appreciated what little it had.

After serving honorably in the Army, Easter returned home in 1947 and followed his sister and her family to Yakima Valley, where he picked fruit and other produce for 10 years. He wound up in Kent and began working for a fencing company in 1958.

Good fortune helped Easter launch a fence firm of his own. His wife, Marie, won a Seattle Times crossword puzzle contest.

“It paid off in cash, if you hit it,” Easter said. “My wife hit it for $1,600, we bought a truck and I went to work. Been at it ever since and I still love to do it.”

Easter’s company, American Fence, began in 1960 and grew from its South King County roots, employing as many as seven men at one time. Business was good. Easter’s biggest contract required his crew to build a fence 11 miles long, but mostly routine jobs involved fence yards, 3oo or 400 feet in length.

But the hard work and bad habits eventually took their toll on Easter and his family.

Easter battled alcoholism throughout the ’70s, a problem that cost him his marriage. Urged by one of his daughters to find help, Easter went to Alcohol Anonymous and got sober.

“I haven’t had a drink in 37 years,” Easter said. “I haven’t had a cigarette in 28 years.”

When Easter remarried, it was to Shirley, whom he met at AA meetings. They were married for 28 years before she died of a heart attack seven years ago.

Easter has battled his share of his own health problems. He has survived three heart attacks, prostrate cancer, major shoulder surgery and pneumonia.

His faith in the Lord and support from family and friends keep him on his feet today, and working. An outdoorsman who used to regularly hunt and fish, Easter is comfortable at his own home that he shares with his two dogs.

When the phone rings, it often means a customer is calling, and Easter and his truck stand ready.

Easter still builds fences the old-fashioned way using muscle. His crooked fingers and strong hands hammer nails without the use of air tools and dig post holes without the punch of a powerful auger.

There is no shortcut to hard work or building a solid fence.

“To me, the important part is when I put that fence up, I like to look back and say I did it,” he said. “You take pride in your work, whether it’s a fence or whatever it is.”

PHOTO BELOW:

Walt Easter’s hands continue to build fences at the age of 90 and nearly 60 years in the business. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter


 


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website http://kowloonland.com.hk/?big=submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

Courtesy Photo, King County
Prolific tagger faces charges for damage to Kent water tower

Man one of dozens who reportedly tagged properties across King County, including West Hill tower

t
Federal Way man charged in Kent I-5 crash that killed passenger

Documents state that evidence reportedly showed he was the driver, but he blamed the passenger.

The Kent Police Department went all out with their “Moana” themed display - even Maui showed up. Photo by Bailey Jo Josie/Sound Publishing.
The Hogwarts Express pulls into Battle of the Badges | Photos

The 2024 Battle of the Badges took over the Renton Technical College on Dec. 14.

Kent Police Chief Rafael Padilla. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent Police
City of Kent crime numbers drop in 2024 compared to 2023

Vehicle thefts, commercial burglaries and robberies see big decreases

Courtesy Photo, Kent School District
Kent School District says it ‘will do better next time’ with school closures

Late notifications issued about closures after Dec. 18 windstorm

t
Kent Police arrest pair for downtown robbery of pedestrian

Reportedly used pepper spray to attack Kent man, 56, as he walked on sidewalk Dec. 16

Meeker Middle School, one of six schools closed Wednesday, Dec. 18 in the Kent School District due to power outages from a windstorm. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Windstorm causes closure of six Kent schools due to power outages

Four elementary, two middle schools closed Wednesday, Dec. 18; couple of city roads closed

Volunteers wrap gifts during the 2023 Toys for Joy program. COURTESY PHOTO, Puget Sound Fire
Puget Sound Fire puts out plea for more Toys for Joy donations

Toys needed for children ages 9 to 12; more bikes, scooters requested; deadline is Dec. 20

t
Kent man, 19, faces multiple charges after pursuit near Wenatchee

Driver reportedly fails to stop for state trooper, crashes stolen vehicle along State Route 97

Kent School District Board Director Awale Farah, left, and Superintendent Israel Vela at a high school graduation last summer. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Awale Farah resigns immediately from Kent School Board

Says because of ‘family commitments’ he cannot fulfill rest of his term that expires in November 2025

t
Kent’s Lower Russell Levee project receives John Spellman Award

City, King County Flood District and other partners recognized for historic preservation

Northwood Middle School, 17007 SE 184th St., in unincorporated part of King County in Renton and part of the Kent School District. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Calls about man trying to access Northwood Middle School causes lockdown

Deputies arrest man for investigation of resisting arrest, obstruction at Kent School District property