The orbit of retired firefighter Guy Evers' life often passed through old Fire Station 13 in south Minneapolis.
Evers, a Golden Gloves boxer. entered the ring in the basement of the station. He worked there as a firefighter, and he lived and worshipped within a few of blocks of the station. Evers, who once pulled a drowning boy from Lake Hiawatha while on duty, died of cancer June 25 at his Edina home. He was 67.
When he was a boy, Evers attended nearby St. Luke's Lutheran Church, and in retirement would provide free computer help to the church - which became El Milagro Lutheran Church - community groups and neighborhood members of any denomination.
When he was a Golden Glover, he fought in a boxing ring set up in the station house at Cedar Avenue and 42nd Street, five blocks from his boyhood home.
He wasn't a champion, but he would spar with anyone of any size, said his lifelong friend, Jerry Brown of Minneapolis, a retired Minneapolis firefighter.
After Evers graduated from Roosevelt High School, he served in the Air Force. He received a bachelor's degree in psychology and counseling from the University of Minnesota in 1965, and a master's degree in psychology from Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti.
After a stint as a vocational rehabilitation counselor for the state of Minnesota, he knew he liked to help people, but he didn't want to be a counselor.
So he applied for a firefighting position in Minneapolis, and got the job in 1975. "He said it was the best move he ever made," he told his wife, Jean of Edina. "He loved it." During his 25-year career, he served at Station 13 from 1981 to 1991.