Monday, November 9, 2015

Still on the job at 90, Jim Tillinghast makes North Stonington roads his business

Sean D. Elliot/The Day
Longtime North Stonington Public Works employee Jim Tillinghast mows Wednesday along the roadside on Rocky Hollow Road in town. Tillinghast, who turns 91 in December, started working for the town in 1968.

North Stonington — It may have been April Fool's Day but it was no joke on April 1, 1968, when Jim Tillinghast took a job with the town Public Works Department. 
He was 44 at the time and had worked a variety of jobs, doing carpentry, installing septic systems and even, as a teenager and young man, working at the old woolen mill in Ashaway.
"The foreman knew me pretty good, and he just kept after me," Tillinghast said, explaining how he came to be a town laborer. 
Almost 48 years have passed, and Tillinghast, now 90, is still on the job, working full time. 
"He's the first one in in the morning and the last one to leave at the end of the day," said Don Hill, the interim head of public works. "And he's a hell of a worker and strong as an ox. I'd put him up against any 20-year-old anytime, and Jim would run circles around them." 
The shop's head mechanic, Kip Taylor, said he's been working with Tillinghast for 34 years and still marvels at his work ethic, institutional memory of the town's roads and drainage systems, and his keen sense of humor. 
"He's easygoing and likes to have fun, to fool around," Taylor said. "And he's a wealth of knowledge. All over town, he knows how the water runs, where catch basins are, where the culverts are." 
"Whenever there is a drainage issue, he knows it all memorywise," Hill said. "He knows where everything is, when it was put down, what direction it goes. He's just a huge asset." 
"With Jim, it's like having an encyclopedia of the town," highway foreman Stephen Holliday said. "You can ask him something that happened 25, 30 or 45 years ago, and he will tell you who did it, why and where," he said, explaining that Tillinghast can pinpoint from the road where a pipe is located underground, what type it is and the direction in which it is positioned. 
"He's an invaluable employee, if you ask me," Holliday said, adding that Tillinghast is better known at the shop as "Uncle Jim." 
Tillinghast shrugs it off when he hears his co-workers praise his knowledge of the town's 64 miles of paved roads, almost 6 miles of dirt roads, and drainage systems, all spread out over 55 square miles. 
"I should know it," he said. "I've been here all my life." 
At 4 a.m. every day, Tillinghast gets out of bed at his home on Clarks Falls Road and fixes himself a hearty breakfast. 
"Sometimes I'll make a pork chop, or sometimes bacon and eggs," he said.
He does all his own cooking. He said he was married but, he explains, "I ended that." He also is the father of four children. 
Asked why he keeps working long after most people his age have retired, he said it's simple — he likes it. 
"It's fun. It's something to do," he said. "I'm not just sitting home and dreaming all the time." 
He said his doctor told him years ago, "Keep going Jim, as long as you can; that's what keeps you healthy."  Please click here to continue reading.

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