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Charles “Chuck” Russell Tilton


 

Charles (Chuck) Tilton, 75, of Palm Harbor, Florida, formerly of Needham, Massachusetts, passed away on May 30th in Tampa, Florida. After fighting bravely for four weeks in the ICU unit of St Joseph’s Hospital, he succumbed to complications from injuries sustained in an automobile accident on May 2nd.

He is survived by his daughter, Laura Tilton and grandson Declan Kemmerer of Saratoga Springs, New York; his sister, Barbara Grealish of Middleboro, Massachusetts; his step-sister Linda (Bob) Kosobuki of Venice, Florida; and many nieces and nephews.  He was preceded in death by his wife, Sheila (O’Neill) Tilton; his son Adam Tilton; and his brother Richard Tilton.

Chuck grew up in Lowell, Massachusetts, where he graduated from Keith Academy High School.   He took on an almost comical number of jobs as he worked his way through his degree over ten years, including mailman, factory worker, cranberry juice tester, retail clerk and IT worker. Proving he was a man ahead of his time, he opened a short lived but forward thinking computer store in 1978 in Harvard Square. Ultimately he enjoyed a long and successful career as a computer programmer and contractor, meeting many friends along the way.

He proudly raised his family in Needham, Massachusetts, and moved to Middleboro, Massachusetts, to retire.  After the death of his son and wife of 40 years in 2009, he established a new life for himself in the Tampa area of Florida, making many new friends, and demonstrating great resilience and ability to find joy while living on his own terms.

Chuck will be remembered for many things, including but not limited to:  his quick wit, his unbridled enthusiasm for his beloved Patriots, his off-color jokes, his back pillows, his lifelong war against the random-number-generator at the core of various state lottery systems, his passion for ideas and favorite authors, his love of the dog track, his excessive tipping, his quirky sense of humor, and his spirited (and totally wrong) rantings on politics (sorry Dad, the writer of this obituary gets the last word on that count). But most of all, he will be remembered for his big heart, and extreme generosity.   Whether it was total strangers or those he was closest to, Chuck was happiest when he was helping other people, in both small and in big ways, and never asked for anything in return.   He will be greatly missed.

 

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