Duluth lost one of its most generous benefactors and civic boosters when Leonard Everett Griffith, 86, died of cerebrovascular disease April 29 at his home in Tucson, Ariz., where he had moved after a successful business career.
Griffith spent most of his life in Duluth, where he began his career as an officer with First American National Bank. Over 30 years, he worked his way up to senior vice president, said his wife of 60 years, Karen.
He was a prominent civic leader, serving as president or board member of several organizations, including the Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center, Spirit Mountain Recreation Authority, the Duluth Tennis Club, the Duluth Kiwanis Club and Northwoods Children's Home. He served as an assistant Boy Scout leader, acted in plays at the Duluth Playhouse and helped adolescents get their cars ready for soap box derbies, Karen said.
"He was the type of person who felt that giving back to the community was an important element of being a citizen," said his son Thomas, of Plymouth.
Griffith was born in Minneapolis and graduated from the former West High School. His belief in service led him to the Army during World War II. He was a lieutenant and captain in the 1st Infantry, 16th Regiment and fought in the Battle of the Bulge.
He recounted some of his wartime experiences in an interview that was recorded and in 2005 submitted to the Library of Congress for the Veterans History Project, Karen Griffith said.
He returned from World War II and majored in journalism and business at the University of Minnesota. He graduated in 1951 but returned to the service during the Korean War and was stationed in Texas. After the war, he returned to Minnesota, and he and his wife settled in her hometown of Duluth.
Besides working at the bank, which later became part of Norwest and ultimately Wells Fargo, Griffith taught public relations courses at the College of St. Scholastica. He enjoyed going to the Duluth Symphony, and his love of music led him and his wife to establish a music scholarship for students at the University of Minnesota Duluth.