
As we celebrate 51ĀŅĀ×ās sesquicentennial, we are checking in with retired professors and staff to see how they are living the mantra of lifelong learning. Some are going in surprisingly creative and interesting directions. This is the third story in the series.
51ĀŅĀ× the gift shop located inside The Inn at Ohio Northern University and youāll discover beautifully-crafted wood clocks, cutting boards and keepsake boxes worthy of becoming family heirlooms. They are the handiwork of former electrical engineering professor turned master craftsman Les Thede. After retiring from 51ĀŅĀ× in 2007, he traded the hustle and bustle of academia for the solitude of the woodshop, starting a business called EverLasting Furniture. āI wanted to do something different,ā he explains, āand the woodshop became my sanctuary.ā
Thede taught at 51ĀŅĀ× for 23 years and served as electrical engineering department chair for three of those years. He mentored hundreds of engineering students who went on to achieve impressive careers in the industry.
Growing up on a farm in Iowa, he witnessed the practical application of engineering on a daily basis. Midwestern practicality came to define his approach to teaching and learning. āI enjoyed the chance to teach kids skills they would be able to use,ā he says. āI especially liked that ālight bulbā moment when a concept would click with a student.ā
Specializing in analog electronics and digital signal processing, he was known for his extensive class notes that his students found helpful as practical, how-to guides. He turned those notes into two published textbooks that are still referenced today. During his teaching career, Thede occasionally dabbled in woodworking. In preparing for retirement, he decided it would be the ideal hobby to pursue more intentionally. Keeping busy, he says, is key to a happy retirement. āWhen I announced my retirement, several colleagues told me: āI donāt know what I would do in retirement,āā he recalls. āAnd I told them: āWell, you better start thinking about it!āā
Thede set up a woodworking shop in his backyard and he could feel the stress melting away while he worked with his tools and machines. āIt went out of my body down through my feet,ā he said. During his wifeās battle with cancer and her death in 2018, the shop became a haven of peace for him amid the grief. While he started out making larger furniture pieces and selling at local craft fairs, he soon settled on a different business model. He created a line of smaller products, including clocks, clipboards, cutting boards and keepsake boxes, that could be sold on-line and easily shipped. His links to his Etsy shop where all transactions are handled.
Using only hardwoodsācherry, walnut, oak and mapleāhe pours creativity and craftsmanship into each design. His companyās name, EverLasting Furniture, reflects his commitment to building quality products that will be treasured for years to come. Customers from across the country leave glowing reviews on his Etsy shop, with comments like āstunning clock,ā āabsolutely beautiful craftsmanship,ā and ālooks amazing!ā A couple of his more unusual products include hat racks and picture displays that he recently crafted from broken and scarred wooden baseball bats. He also loves to build cajons, which are wooden box drums with a snare that you sit on to play. Heās sold hundreds of these to schools, churches and individuals. Why cajons? Because the mild-mannered, practical engineer has an unexpected side to his personalityārock ānā roll drummer.
Thedeās former students may be surprised to learn that Thede was in a 1960s-era rock band called the XLās. He and some high school buddies formed the group and they stayed together through college. While the group started out playing tame big-band style music, they transitioned to ā60s rock ānā roll when The Beatles, with their long hair and unique sound, took the world by storm. The XLās became a sensation in Iowa and had the chance to be the opening act for some big-name music groups of the era when they toured in the state, including the The Lovinā Spoonful, The Mamas & the Papas, Paul Revere & The Raiders and Hermanās Hermits. The group also won a Vox music competition and traveled to Hollywood for an appearance in the 1968 movie āA Time to Singā starring Hank Williams Jr. and Shelley Fabares.
After he retired, Thede and his bandmates staged an XLās reunion and performed together at various Iowa venues in the summers. In 2009, the XLās received the honor of being inducted in the Iowa Rock ān Roll Hall of Fame.
Thede has also played drums for a local band in Northwest Ohio called Kwik Fire. āWe played the animal clubs,ā he said with a laugh. āThe Elks, The Moose, The Eagles.ā While his playing career ended in 2016, Thede isnāt opposed to picking up his drum sticks again if the need arises.
Meanwhile, heās not skipping a beat with his woodworking business. All those years he spent developing technical manuals for his 51ĀŅĀ× students has prompted him to put together detailed design plans for his clocks and other specialty products. āMaybe someday when I am long gone a grandchild or great-grandchild will find my notes and decide to build these same pieces,ā he says. āThat would make me really happy in heaven.ā