Biography: Richard Lee Desmarais, 82, beloved father, grandfather and
community member, died on October 25, 2024, in Belfast, Maine. He was a
resident of Searsport, Maine, where he had lived for over 25 years.
Richard “Dick” Desmarais was born on November 19, 1941, in Lowell,
Massachusetts, the youngest of nine children born to Hector and Margaret
Desmarais. Mr. Desmarais graduated from Lowell High School in 1960 and served
in the US Army, Military Police Canine Unit, during the Vietnam War.
Following the war, he married his high school sweetheart, Alice Mae Woods, and
moved to Westbrook, Connecticut where they raised two daughters. Mr. Desmarais
worked at Pratt & Whitney for 31 years. He was an EMT and CPR instructor
and volunteered and served as a past president of the Westbrook Ambulance
Association, vice president of the Valley Shore Mutual Aid Association, Special
Deputy Sheriff in Middlesex County, and a unit representative for the
Interstate Police Officers Association. He was also a charter member of the
Westbrook, Connecticut Lions Club and a volunteer driver for the American
Cancer Society’s Road to Recovery. Mr. Desmarais was a hobby woodworker and
made and sold wooden gifts and furniture throughout New England in his spare
time. In 1998, Mr. Desmarais retired to Searsport, Maine, where he continued
his woodworking under the name Searsport Landing. He served on many Searsport
town committees, was a town Selectman and author of the “Radio Searsport”
newsletter for 15 years, and volunteered for the Searsport Fire Department. He
served on the Penobscot Council of Governments and was instrumental in
advocating for the naming of the Penobscot Narrows Bridge to promote the
Penobscot River and Bay region. Mr. Desmarais’s love for the Midcoast and
Downeast regions of Maine began as a young boy, when he spent summers with his
aunt and uncle digging clams on the shores of Castine. In 2013, Mr. Desmarais
started Searsport Flags and for the next 10 years Mr. Desmarais sold and
distributed a variety of United States and other flags to towns and
organizations around New England and throughout Maine. He looked forward to
watching the annual Wreaths Across America Honor Fleet pass by his home on Main
Street as it carried veterans’ wreaths down to Arlington, Virginia every
December. Mr. Desmarais is survived by his daughter, Tricia Desmarais, and a
grandson, Jaden Lee-Jeffrey Desmarais, both of South Pasadena, California, as
well as numerous nieces and nephews, including his contemporary-nephew, Ronald
Johnson of Madison, Maine. He was the father of the late Dawn Marie Desmarais
of Searsport, Maine, and brother of the late Louise Johnson, Robert Desmarais,
Edmond (Jim) Desmarais, Lucille Desmarais, Rita McDonald, Albert Desmarais,
Agnes Adams, and Kenneth Desmarais |