Zabrocki, a village trustee from 1972 to 1981 and mayor from 1981 until 2015, said Rea’s “heart and soul were in Tinley Park” his entire life.
Zabrocki said he referred to Rea during one public speech as a “Renaissance man.”
“He was so knowledgeable in a wide variety of subjects and spoke so well on all of them,” Zabrocki said. “There were so many different facets to his life.”
With Rea’s background, “he could have moved to anywhere in the world,” Zabrocki said.
Zabrocki said that Rea knew so many people and was involved in so many things directly related to Tinley Park or outside the village.
“He was a guy who would talk to anybody. He was just open that way,” he said.
Rea grew up in the village’s older Parkside subdivision and through the years lived within a very short distance of Village Hall, Zabrocki said.
Laura Godette, deputy village clerk in Tinley Park, said she had known Rea since she came to the village as deputy clerk in 2007 and worked under Rea. Both hailed from Parkside and “we were old Tinley Parkers so we had a camaraderie,” she said.
“I learned a lot from Pat,” she said. “I learned about his devotion to the village.”
Rea was appointed clerk in May 2009 following the death of longtime Clerk Frank “Bill” German. Godette worked alongside him in the clerk’s office for nearly 10 years.
“I learned so much about how things work and why things work,” she said of Rea. “He will be greatly missed.”
Glotz said he considered Rea and Zabrocki to be mentors, and that “I learned more from Clerk Rea than any person of anyone I’ve been involved with politically or not politically.”
“From his financing expertise to the military, what he brought to the table, he’s not the norm,” Glotz said.
Rea attended First Baptist Church of Tinley Park for more than 25 years, and that will be the location of funeral services, according to the Rev. Harold Parsley.
“He was very important to us here,” Parsley said Monday. “We have been very active together and he really helped the church here.”
Rea was a vice president and corporate banker at Bank One Capital Markets and began his banking career in 1969 at First National Bank of Chicago, later Bank One.
He had a bachelor’s of science degree in economics and business and a master’s in economics from the University of Illinois.
According to a village proclamation, Rea was born in Chicago and his family moved to Tinley Park’s Parkside subdivision when he was 7.
Rea was appointed village trustee in October 1971, filling a vacancy created after German was tabbed to be village clerk, according to the proclamation. Rea was one of the youngest Village Board members in the town’s then 79-year history.
mnolan@southtownstar.com
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