2132 Broadway, Everett, WA 98201
(425)252-8266

 Remembrances

 Hoss

 

     Hoss was a beloved blood donor cat at Broadway Animal Hospital for a number of years. He saved many lives and soothed many patients, both human and animal.

     According to Joan (see below), he had the capability to sense when a person was in distress and he would always come over to offer feline support.

     He was imperturbable even in the face of large barking dogs.

     His legacy lives on through many other blood donor cats, but none of them have been as memorable or as beloved as Hoss.

     To this day, there is a plaque hanging in the waiting room of Broadway Animal Hopital declaring him to be "The Best Hospital Cat Ever." Most everybody who ever met him agrees.

 Joan Collins

Joan worked at Broadway Animal Hospital from December of 1989 through June of 2006. The following is a summary of Joan's life story, which was published in the Everett Herald on July 2, 2006.

     Folks calling Broadway Animal Hospital learned to announce themselves by saying their pets' names. If someone said they were Sue Jones or Bob Smith, it might take a moment for recognition.
     If they said "It's Fido" or "It's Fifi," Joan Collins knew exactly who was calling.
     "She was much more tuned to your pet than to you," said Broadway customer Marjorie Heidrich.
     Known for her skill with rescued dogs, Vonny McCarver said if Collins could have lived 20 more years, she could have saved another 20,000 animals.
     Collins, 46, died June 5 of a heart attack at her Everett home. She worked at the veterinary office in Everett for more than 16 years, fostered many litters of kittens and rescued dogs and held a special place in her heart for pit bulls.
     A volunteer for Purrfect Pals in Arlington, Mary Cathey, said Collins will be sorely missed by clients and friends who loved her dearly.
     Born in Monroe, Collins spent her childhood in Oklahoma. Her adult life was spent in Everett.
     She leaves her husband, Elroy Collins, and three children, Kim Petryk, and partner, Sean Biegel; Charles (Tony) Jackson; Amy Collins and partner, Ken Linares; grandchildren Corinne Petryk, Ciara Petryk, Diego Linares and Kiera Biegel; stepdaughter Stacy (Bobby) Piker and stepgrandchildren Caitlynne, Krystin, and Mitchell; siblings Lori Landers, Howard Jackson, and Jeanne Ward.
     Her daughter, Kim Petryk, said regardless of her devotion to animals; her mother put her children first in her life.
     "Her emphasis was on her family," Petryk said. "She was oh so caring."
     Her mother was strong-willed, independent and self-sufficient. Collins preferred wearing shorts, tank tops and Birkenstocks year-round. She shunned makeup and yelled at "Jerry Springer" guests on television. The workaholic took chores home from the vet clinic and loved music by Queen.
     Her nephew, Mike Darlington, said she changed his life.
     When he was on the wrong path as a young man, she steered him right. Now an engineer, he called her at all hours for advice and was the only one who could wake her up with a telephone call and not get chided.
     Needing to kennel his dog, Chocolate, in Montana, customer Duane Parker said he forgot required paperwork. He called Collins and she provided the information.
     "She concluded the conversation saying to the Montana attendant, 'I encourage you to keep the dog but get rid of the character,' " Parker said. "That was Joan, always helpful, very sharp, and a fun person."
     Friend Sharon Iverson's cat, Norman Bates, was vicious but Collins loved him, Iverson said.
     "She understood my love for that cat and supported my decision to keep him. She was the funniest, sassiest, most headstrong woman I ever had the pleasure of knowing."
     A friend and customer, Debbie Magill, talked to Collins every week.
     "I had a dog that had special needs, so I was constantly needing advice or medicine or food," Magill said. "Joan was the one I would call. If I was unable to pick what I needed up within business hours, she would put my things in a bag and set them out back for me to pick up later."
     The most amazing thing about Collins was her compassion, her willingness to go out of her way for her clients, and the intensity with which she loved animals, Magill said.
     "One day I remember going in there, it was near the end of the day, and Joan was down," Magill said. She looked like she was near tears. The reason she was sad was because they 'had a lot of losses' that day. So even though she was a receptionist in a vet clinic, she still had a hard time when the inevitability of death came around too often."
     Readers may recall a Herald story from 2002 about Collins and the office blood-donor cat named Hoss. Everyone in Everett seemed to know the lifesaving cat.
     The cat just gives and gives, Collins said then. She said Hoss sensed when someone in the waiting room was stressed about a sick pet and would make his way to each lap and offer feline support.
     Collins adored every animal in her care said Shaney Riley, whose companion and confidante is Harley, a rescued pit bull.
     "She saved hundreds if not thousands of animal lives," Riley said. "Joan left behind a legacy, in her friends, her family and all pets that were benefactors of her love."

 Dr. Leighton Wallace

 Dr. Wallace founded Broadway Animal Hospital in 1945 and he sold the practice to Dr. Shepherd in 1988. The following is his obituary, published in 2009.

     Leighton E. Wallace, known to many friends and clients as "Doc," died Thursday, February 19th in Kennewick, WA. He was a long-time resident of Snohomish County.

     Born on September 28, 1921 on a farm near Outlook, Washington, Leighton was the third child of Armour and Shirley Wallace. In 1924 the family moved to Snohomish. Leighton grew up on a dairy farm on the banks of the Snohomish River between Lowell and Snohomish, graduating from Snohomish High in 1939.

     In the fall of 1939, Leighton went off to Washington State College as a pre-vet student and was accepted into vet school in September of 1940. While at WSC he lettered in wrestling. Leighton joined the Army Specialized Training Corps and attended classes in uniform as a PFC. Due to WWII, his veterinary class continued studies though the summer of 1943. In January of 1944 the College of Veterinary Medicine held its first midyear graduation at which Leighton received his DVM degree.

     Leighton met Dolores Garbe, who would become his partner in life, at WSC. They were married in August of 1944. He worked for the Bureau of Animal Industry and the State of Washington in brucellosis control at various locations in Western Washington.

     In the fall of 1945, Leighton and Dolores moved to Everett where he bought an animal practice and began what would be 43 years as a solo veterinarian at Broadway Animal Hospital. By the time "Doc" retired in 1988, he was treating the animals of a second generation of clients.

     Leighton was a charter member of the North Everett Lions Club and remained active for fifty-five years. He was a long-time member of Immanuel Lutheran Church, over the years serving many terms as church president and elder.

     Although he enjoyed trips with Dolores in his retirement years, Leighton's favorite place was home; his favorite pastime was working in his yard.

     Leighton was preceded in death by his parents; brothers Lee, Gale, and Wayne; sister Kathryn Berg; his wife, Dolores; and daughter, Janet Wallace.

     He is survived by daughter Nancy Wallace of Everett; daughter and son-in-law Joan and Dan Bauermeister of Connell, WA; two gandchildren Jennifer Tuttle of Richland, WA and Davin Bauermeister of Milwaukee, WI; and nieces and nephews.