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Tragedy Strikes Well-known Boxing Family
On Friday, June
20, Adalaide Byrd, Nevada Boxing judge and wife of World Boxing Hall of Fame
Referee, Robert Byrd, received a call that her youngest brother, Aaron Tyndale,
44, of Pennsylvania had been in a terrible motor vehicle accident and his
condition was grave.
Tyndale had
been traveling from Virginia to his home in Philadelphia when his vehicle was
run off the road by a tractor-trailer on I-95 in Delaware. Eyewitnesses claim
that Tyndale’s vehicle rolled over several times. Byrd’s brother was able to
speak briefly after the accident, but shortly after went into cardiac arrest and
was taken to Christiana Hospital in Newark, Delaware. As a result of the
accident, Aaron Tyndale suffered several severe head injuries and was pronounced
brain dead at 4:50 AM on Saturday, June 21. Tyndale’s wishes were to be an organ
donor, so at that time the family gave permission for his organs to be removed.
Mr. Tyndale led a healthy lifestyle and six of his organs were perfectly healthy
and viable for transplant.
Adalaide Byrd was proud of her youngest brother. “He accomplished so much in his
44 years, and he lived the life of a 75-year old man,” passionately emphasized
the Nevada boxing judge. Tyndale had been in the Air Force for 22 years and
retired as a Senior Master Sergeant. He wanted to keep busy after his
retirement, according to Byrd, so he had recently obtained a government job in
Virginia from which he was traveling back home from on the day of the accident.
He had only had the job for 3 weeks.
Members of the boxing fraternity had the opportunity to meet Aaron Tyndale in
late May of 2007at the IBF convention in Miami, Florida, which he attended with
his sister and brother-in-law. Just this past May, the Byrd’s spent a few days
with Tyndale who visited them in Nevada to celebrate their daughter’s graduation
from University of Nevada in Las Vegas. “It seems that certain events, good
times, have led up to this moment,” warmly added Mrs. Byrd.
Tyndale not only had a great impact on the lives his family, but also on those
of his friends. Along with family members, several of Tyndale’s longtime
friends, some of which Adalaide Byrd did not even know, rushed to the hospital
after the accident and stayed to support the family through the ordeal. “At one
point,” Byrd fondly recollects, “a friend of his, Scott, told us how his 21-year
old son would use not having proper clothes as an excuse to not go out and get a
job. Well my brother got the young man 20 pairs of pants and dress shirts and
some shoes, and told him not to use clothing as an excuse any more. That is just
the kind of person he was. He had a big heart. We couldn’t have asked for a
better brother.”
Adalaide Byrd’s adoration for her brother, Aaron, pours out of her when she so
lovingly speaks of him. From her words, her stories, her memories of Mr. Aaron
Tyndale it is apparent that his family, friends, acquaintances and even society
lost someone who had a lot to offer in life all too soon.
Aaron Tyndale was the youngest of five siblings. He is survived by his three
sisters Faith, Dawn and Adalaide, his brother Mark and his mother, Beatrice
Tyndale. Funeral arrangements for Mr. Tyndale have been made for Saturday, June
28 with a viewing from 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM and the service following at 11:00 AM
at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church, located at 1030 N. 48th St in
Philadelphia. Aaron Tyndale will be buried with full military honors on
Saturday, August 5, at Arlington National Ceremony in Arlington, Virginia.
Boxinginlasvegas sends out heartfelt sympathies to the Byrd family. RIP Aaron
and know that because of your generosity as an organ donor that 6 people will
now live normal life's.
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