Birth: 2/26/1937, New York, New York
Marriage: August 24, 1963, First Baptist Church, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Spouse: Mary Jane Moored ()
Death: 12/10/2017, Kalamazoo, Michigan
David Cameron Macleod was the third of four sons born to A. Garrard and Margaret Macleod of New York, New York. The family moved to Kalamazoo, Michigan in 1941 so his father could pursue an employment opportunity with the Upjohn Company.
David was very proud to be a student of West Main Elementary, Woodward Jr. High and Central High School in Kalamazoo. He attended Kalamazoo College and later graduated from the University of Michigan with both a Bachelor’s and Master’s Degree. He was a loyal U of M fan who could boisterously sing the Michigan fight song on command.
At the University of Michigan, David experienced two life changing events. First, he became involved in the peace movement, presenting a student written proposal to Presidential Candidate John F. Kennedy that would later lead to the founding of the Peace Corps. He also met his wife-to-be, Mary Jane Moored at Follet’s Book Store.
Between terms at Kalamazoo College and the University of Michigan David served in a role as community ambassador for an exhibit entitled Kalamazoo and How it Grew, traveling around Britain with the exhibit. He would often talk wistfully of his time in Europe and always wanted to return.
David was very active with the formation of the Swords into Plowshares Peace Center at Western Michigan University, considering the founding of this institution as a fruition of a lifelong dream. Always a peace activist, David worked toward establishing a world both free of the threat of war and working in the direction of inclusiveness and justice for all.
Professionally, David started his work as “filthy MacNasty,” lightheartedly describing his time fueling the blast furnace at Buckley Steel as life changing. He recalled a conversation with the full-time fireman who encouraged him to attend college and study hard as a means of avoiding a career of such manual labor, a conversation David took very much to heart.
Upon graduation from the University of Michigan, David began work with the Kalamazoo City Planner’s office, moving from there to a teaching job at State College at Boston, in Boston Massachusetts. Later he moved to Valparaiso University in Valparaiso, Indiana where his children were both born. David’s career then took him to Marquette, Michigan to work at Northern Michigan University then to Escanaba, Michigan and Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan working with the Boy Scouts of America and as a Real Estate Agent. A lackluster economy in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan brought David and his family full circle to Kalamazoo where he worked as a Realtor before returning to academia at Nazareth College, Lake Michigan Community College and at Western Michigan University. Perhaps his most successful career path came when he developed MacHandyman, a handy-man service he and his wife Mary ran together until the end of his days actively working.
David’s lifelong loves included the outdoors, exercise, walking, running, writing, and “tinkering” with his 1926 Ford, a car he and his brother George bought as teenagers. David was a man with a profound sense of right and wrong and was never afraid to stand up when he sensed an act of wrongfulness or injustice. David seemed capable of fixing anything and everything. This included electrical equipment, snow shoes and relationships between people. He was once instrumental in determining his own medical diagnosis while lying in a hospital bed. As such he found Parkinson’s disease particularly perplexing as it seemed to be the one thing beyond his reason and understanding.