Lanny Priddy, K5LP Silent Key
Lanny
Priddy, K5LP
Silent Key
For
publication 2-16-2008
Laurance L. Priddy, K5LP, age 67, of Aledo, TX,
departed this world Wednesday, February 13, 2008, as
a result of complications following Brain Surgery on
Saturday morning, February 9, 2008.
Visitation will be at Greenwood Funeral Home, 3100
White Settlement Rd, Fort Worth, Texas, on Sunday,
February 17, 2008, from 3:00 to 5:00 pm.
Funeral
will be Monday, February 18, 2008, at 10:00 am at the
Aledo United Methodist Church, Oak
& Pecan, Aledo, TX, – Mapsco 810-C.
Interment at Greenwood Memorial Park, Fort Worth.
Lanny’s family includes his wife, Kim, his
daughter, Janie, two grandchildren, and his son,
Thomas.
Born in Sweetwater, TX, on January 14, 1941,
Lanny’s dad was the High School football coach
and his mom taught English. Mr. Priddy entered the
Navy and the family moved to Chicago until the end of
WWII. They then moved to Gainesville, TX, where Mr.
Priddy became the High School football coach. Next
his dad moved them to Fort Worth to work as a
football coach at Poly High School. Lanny attended
Handley High School and was starting Tackle on the
football team.
During this time Lanny developed an interest in
Amateur Radio and was first licensed as KN5HTM in
1956 and upgraded to K5HTM in 1957. Hearing the
strange code sounds from across the street, Philip
Vinson inquired and soon found himself taking the
Novice exam from Lanny. Phil, now K5MFE, and Lanny
have enjoyed a very close, wonderful, lifetime
friendship to this day. In 1978, Lanny traded his
call for K5LP
After high school, Lanny spent one year at Texas Tech
University on a football Scholarship.
He then transferred to The University of Texas at
Arlington, participating in ROTC, receiving a
commission, and graduating with a Degree in History.
While at UTA he participated in the UTA Ham Club.
Next he went to the University of Texas in Austin to
complete his Law Degree.
He entered the Army as a 2nd Lt. and was stationed at
Ft.
Benning,
GA. where he qualified as a paratrooper. He was later
assigned to the Military Police and sent to Korea
where he operated Amateur Radio as HL9KW in 1966 and
1967. While in Korea he met and married his wife Kim
in 1966. Returning to the states, Lanny was stationed
at Ft. Sam Houston, in San Antonio, TX, as the
Military Police Commander, completing his military
obligation.
Returning to Fort Worth, Lanny passed the Bar Exam
and accepted a job with the Fort Worth City
Attorney’s office. He later moved into private
practice as a Personal Injury Attorney. At his death,
Lanny was a lawyer for Advocacy Inc. in Dallas, a
non-profit corporation that does social and legal
work for people who have physical or mental
disabilities.
In addition to being a Lawyer Lanny was a writer. He
published three novels;
Winning Passion in 1994, Son of Durango in 1996, and
Critical Evidence in 2002. He
had recently completed
a forth
novel.
Risky Justice,
and was in the process of seeking a publisher. During
a visit with Lanny in the hospital, Sunday, February
10, 2008, the day after his Brain Operation, Phil,
K5MFE, said Lanny was optimistic about a publisher
expressing interest his new novel and was anxious to
pursue this opportunity after leaving the hospital.
Lanny died the next Wednesday. He had been a long
time, active, member of the DFW Writers
Workshop.
Lanny’s contributions to the Amateur Radio
Service are truly remarkable in every respect.
As a ARRL volunteer counsel, Lanny represented many
hams in their battles with city councils and
homeowner associations trying to regulate antennas.
Chris Imlay, W3KD, ARRL
General Counsel relates, “Lanny Priddy was
doubtless among the top antenna lawyers in the
country, if not the very best. He had unlimited
energy and an uncanny ability to persuade land use
authorities and explain their obligations with
respect to antennas. Amateur radio has lost one of
the best friends we ever had “. As an expert on
PRB-1, Lanny persuaded several North Texas cities,
including Dallas and Fort Worth, to allow hams to
erect towers beyond PRB minimums. Lanny also
represented many fellow hams for free as their legal
counsel.
As a long time member of the Lone Star DX
Association, Lanny was an award winning contester and
DX’er. He also enjoyed working DX to get to
know hams throughout the world.
Lanny had been a member of the Kilocycle Amateur
Radio Club of Fort Worth for 50 years.
In
the early years of Lanny’s Amateur Radio career
he was involved in traffic nets and was a net control
station for the North Texas Traffic Net on 75 meters.
This net control experience was valuable in later
years when he was a net control for Tarrant Co.
SKYWARN Nets.
Severe Weather was one of Lanny’s primary
interests. In 1978 he joined Claude Whitley, WB5FLQ,
working the Amateur Radios in the Forecast Office of
the National Weather Service. Lanny worked severe
weather SKYWARN Nets in North Texas for 17 years. He
later served as net control for Tarrant County RACES
weather and disaster nets. He could be counted on to
be there and in operation under any circumstances.
The model for Amateur Radio Public Service Events in
Fort Worth is the Cowtown Marathon, beginning in
1979. Keith Pugh, W5IU, coordinator, remembers Lanny
becoming the principal net controller on the 146.940
repeater, in about 1981. “His friendly and
effective voice added stability to the net. He had a
knack for calming people down in the “heat of
battle” and extracting all of the pertinent
information for the good of the operation. His clear
analytical mind and memory could reduce most problems
to a simple solution which he implemented with
ease”. During last years Marathon event, Lanny
earned the title “Net Control Emeritus”
serving as advisor to new recruits for net control
duty. The 30th
Cowtown
Marathon will be next Saturday, February 23, 2008.
All of the Amateur Radio Nets that day will be
dedicated to the memory of Lanny Priddy, K5LP, and
this will be mentioned frequently during the running
of some 12,000 Cowtown participants.
Lanny gladly shared his talents and station for the
good of Amateur Radio in general. When it
Was time to launch AMSAT OSCAR 40 (AO-40), Lanny
volunteered his competition class station as a relay
station for the AO-40 Launch Information Net.
Lanny
also provided help for the Texas VHF-FM Society in a
lawsuit over coordination issues for no charge. The
lawsuit was eventually dismissed. He was given an
Honorary Lifetime membership in the Society for his
services. When he upgraded his ham radio station
after his college days, he donated his old station to
the Arlington State College Club Station.
Now is the time to stop and reflect. Consider
the impact that Lanny Priddy, K5LP, made on the
Amateur Radio Service. On the lives of those that
were privileged to know him. Such a unique person, he
was purely honest, kind, optimistic, and fun. He was
never heard to utter a negative word about anything
or any individual.
The sound of his key and the sound of his friendly
voice will be long remembered and missed by all.