This past year has claimed the life of yet another, iconic American with the passing of Fremont Edward Monte Wicker. The former Whittier mayor and longtime owner of Montes Camera Shop died of natural causes on Sunday (Christmas Day) at Southern California Post Acute Care on Sorenson Avenue. He was 99.
The man with the booming baritone voice, easy smile and perpetual gleam in his eyes served on the Whittier City Council from 1962 to 1974 and was Whittiers mayor from 1964 to 1966. Wicker was born in his parents Whittier home on May 22, 1917 and wended his way through Whittier schools before graduating from UC Davis in 1939.
His son, Kim Wicker, said his father originally wanted to be a veterinarian, but followed his passion for photography and turned it into a career when he opened Montes Camera Shop in 1948. The longtime motorcycle enthusiast was past president and a member of the Whittier Host Lions Club, a service organization that gives away thousands of dollars every year in college scholarships and free eyeglasses to the underserved in Whittier.
In an interview in August 2013, Monte recounted the time he and a friend smuggled bottles of beer into the old American Red Cross building on Washington Avenue using a string dangled from the third floor window. And the time he and Hubert Perry (who also passed away this year at 102 years old) raced soap box derby cars down Greenleaf Avenue. He hinted at more than a few brushes with the law. He was an instigator, said Whittier Host Lions Club President Ben Greer. Montes father, Lewis, helped found the service club in 1922. Monte has been a member for, like, forever. He was heavily involved in everything that made the club great. All the fund-raisers, the horse show. For our newer guys in their 60s and 70s hes like a long lost link to the past. He kept us in stitches with his sense of humor. He was just an active guy and the older guys just revered him. He and his antics are constantly talked about. He will be sorely missed. Greer said past members like Wicker and Perry wove the cultural tapestry that makes Whittier a unique and caring community.
Kim Wicker said his dad met Ellen Chilton in high school and the sweethearts were married in August of 1939. They had four children: Joelyn Jolly, Chris, Mark and Kim. Jolly died from a sudden illness when she was 15. Monte leaves behind four grandchildren, Lisa, Mark, Alina and Tara and five great-grandchildren.
After a stint with Southern California Edison, Wicker worked for the California Department of Fish & Game before being drafted into the Army in 1945. He served stateside before opening his camera shop in 1948. Aside from the Lions Club, Monte also had leadership roles in the League of Independent Cities, the Southeast Mosquito Abatement District, the Whittier Uptown Association, Whittier College and the Bank of America Advisory Board.
After Ellen Wicker died of melanoma in June 2000, Monte fell in love with Beverly Harris, who he met while performing in Whittier Community Theater. Beverly and Monte were inseparable until his death.
Monte loved to perform and often would belt out a tune for his fellow Lions. Although his harmonica was always at the ready, he played a mean clarinet, Kim said. I remember going into Montes Camera as a kid and Monte showing me how to properly use it, said Mayor Joe Vinatieri on Wednesday. As a young man, Monte was a person on the City Council who understood who we are as a community and the values for which we stand. As mayor, Monte meant to me a person who gave me advice regarding several issues. I saw him in a different light as I grew older.
Kim summed up his fathers life: I would say he was easygoing, very musical and almost always happy.
Funeral services are planned for 10 a.m. on Wednesday, January 4th, 2017 at the First Friends Church, 13205 Philadelphia St., Whittier with burial to follow at Rose Hills Memorial Park. A reception honoring Montes life will follow the interment at the Whittier Museum, 6755 Newlin Ave.
By Tim Traeger
Editor, 411whittier.com
Tim Traeger is former editor of the Whittier Daily News and is currently executive director of the Whittier Historical Society & Museum.
Monday, January 4, 2016
Starts at 10:00 am (Pacific time)
First Friends Church
Monday, January 4, 2016
Starts at 12:30 pm (Pacific time)
Rose Hills Memorial Park
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