
Walter ‘Walt’ E. Neulreich was born to Eternal Life on January 3, 2023, age 105. Walt worked hard, loved his family, was a
loyal friend, served his country, and was a devout member of the Catholic Church. He was an exemplary
member of the Greatest Generation.
Born in Milwaukee on July 6, 1917, after his parents Anna M. Kohar and Walter F. Neulreich emigrated
from Austria, Walter was the oldest of six children. His parents always found work during the Great
Depression and taught their children the importance of helping others. Walter recalls selling the
Milwaukee Sentinel for 3 cents as a young teenager. When his mother told him to take some homemade
beer to the construction workers next door, the workers got to know him and let him help the masons.
Before child labor laws, he learned to be a hod carrier and took an interest in the construction trades.
Starting at age 16, he worked construction jobs in the summers. After Messmer High School, he attended
Milwaukee Area Technical College. After the war, he put his skills to work by building his own home in
Menomonee Falls with some help from his brothers.
Walter married Phyllis Darlene Burgess on March 8, 1941. They had two daughters, Darlene (Paul)
Webber and Lynn (Joe) Coady. After Phyllis’s death on February 24, 1963, Walter married Marguerite
Eleanore Zeck on January 24, 1964. She died on December 23, 1964. On June 24, 1967, Walter married
Antonia (Toni) Marie Brulc and they were married nearly 34 years until her death on May 14, 2001.
Walt worked for the Milwaukee Road sorting metal in the scrap yard, then as an electric crane operator
and finally as assistant warehouse manager. He drove the cinder truck for overtime on weekends. He
was vice-president of the Railway Workers labor union. After 12 years, interrupted by military service, and
feeling like he had more to offer, he answered an ad for a front desk worker for Adelman Cleaners. While
working at Adelman’s, he met a customer who invited him to sell Life Insurance for Acacia Mutual. Too
many evening hours in insurance while caring for a young family led him to work as the Installation
Manager at Sears Roebuck & Company where he managed contractors throughout the Greater
Milwaukee area who installed fences, kitchens, bathrooms, furnaces, water heaters, and anything else
that Sears sold that needed a contractor to install. One of his contractors, McCoy Construction, saw the
value of having a man with years of construction and sales experience. After Walt retired from Sears in
1980, he worked part-time as a Sales Statistician for McCoy. In 2015, at age 98, Walter retired and
moved from his home of 66 years in Menomonee Falls, WI to Howards Grove WI.
Walt was inducted into the U.S. Army at Milwaukee, Wisconsin on January 18, 1943, and went to Basic
Training with the Army Air Corps in Saint Petersburg, Florida. He served as an Administrative Specialist in
the Continental United States with the 616th Training Group of the 64th Training Wing, 2nd U.S. Army Air
Force, in Lincoln, Nebraska; and at Peterson Field in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He also served for a
time at Dalhart Army Air Base, Texas; Pyote Army Air Base, Texas; and Davis-Monthan Army Air Base,
Tucson, Arizona. His wife Phyllis traveled with him to these assignments. His military record indicates that
he “supervised as many as 800 military personnel in the preparation of correspondence, records, forms,
reports, and orders.” His Honorable Discharge on February 16, 1946 indicates his status as a Staff
Sergeant with the 200th Army Air Forces Base Unit at Peterson Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado. What
the record doesn't show is that he was appointed acting First Sergeant at Peterson Field without the
benefit of promotion to that rank. He knew how to handle men.
Walt stayed in the Reserves and received an Honorable Discharge from the USAF Reserve on January
12, 1949. He followed this with a second enlistment and served as a Staff Sergeant in the Air Force
Reserve from January 13, 1949, until his Honorable Discharge on October 6, 1952.
Walter consistently sent cards and letters to friends and family. Birthday and anniversary cards always
included a poem copied from one of his many books of inspirational poetry. He cherished his time with
his children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren.
Walter volunteered as a blood donor and was recognized as a Milestone Donor by the Blood Center of
Wisconsin with 556 units. He served in the St. Vincent DePaul Society delivering kind words and
groceries to families in need. Walter was a member of the St. James Catholic Church Choir in
Menomonee Falls WI. He treasured his time with choir members and choir director, Barbara Schuelke.
He inspired others with his proliferous garden and walking tours of his yard, teaching others the Latin
names for the diverse flora. He enjoyed time in his woodworking shop, making toys for his grandchildren.
Neighbors will remember seeing “Walking Walter” with his work boots laced high, walking an hour each
day.
Walter is survived by his daughter Lynn (Joe) Coady of Howards Grove, son-in-law Paul Webber (Linda)
of Colorado Springs, his grandchildren Timothy Webber, Rachel (Steve) Webber Wilson, Joshua
(Adrienne Miller) Coady, Nicholas Coady, and his great-grandchildren Olivia Wilson and Rowen Joseph
Miller Coady, and many nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents, his wife Phyllis, his wife Marquerite, his wife Antonia (Toni),
daughter Darlene Webber, sisters Margaret (Art) Laumann, Mary (John) Chermak, brothers Otto, Henry,
Robert and grandson Benjamin Coady.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11:00 am on Saturday, January 14, 2023, at St. Thomas Aquinas
Catholic Church (94 Lincoln Street, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020) with Fr. Phil Reifenberg presiding.
A special thank you to the caregivers from Tender Hearts Senior Care in Sheboygan and the Aurora
Hospice Team for their attentive and compassionate care.
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Walter Neulreich Memorial at Lakeshore Technical
College Foundation, 1290 North Avenue Cleveland WI 53015. Walter was an advocate for education in
the building trades and a longtime supporter of NARI.
Please visit our website to share your stories and leave your condolences for the family
www.zimmerfuneralhome.com



Comments