BLOOMINGTON — The Springville man that went missing in Monroe Lake Thursday night has been found, according to Indiana Conservation Officers.
The body of Dwight Fry, 64, was located in 30 feet of water using sonars and divers near the area where he was last seen.
Fry had jumped into the water in an attempt to save his wife who was struggling in the water, according to DNR.
Pantry 279 in Ellettsville tells WRTV Fry, also known as "Barney," has volunteered with them since 2017.
"He was the first one to show up and volunteer. At first, he would help us get ready to open by lifting the heavy stuff and stocking shelves. Then once it was starting time, he would be the guy at the door letting people in when it was their turn," the group shared. "He was kind and would chat with the guests while they waited, help carry their food to cars if needed [or] really whatever we needed."
As one of two people with the organization that had a CDL license, Fry was also able to help by driving a 24 foot box truck up to three times each week.
"Thinking about it, he did so, so much — but the most important was he was always there with a big silly grin, a joke, a hug [and] words of confidence. He was a big part of our Pantry family," the organization said. "Pantry is not a job or something we do; it's a lifestyle. Barney believed this and lived it with all of us. I can't tell you how badly he will be missed."
Lesamarie Hacker knew Fry as a "beyond energetic," charismatic, funny and hardworking person. The two were friends for a decade.
"He literally woke up and laid his head down at night to serve. That entire time he's awake, he was serving someone. It was not just people he knew; it was strangers every single day at Pantry 279 in Ellettsville, at his church, friends, anyone."
Hacker said Fry adored and loved his wife and would save a life to help someone else.
Unchained Gang, a motorcycle ministry Fry was part of, drove to Terre Haute to escort his body to the funeral home.
The exact cause of death has not been released by the coroner's office.
-
Racist flyers found scattered around Hamilton County
Numerous neighbors are taking action after dozens of racist flyers threatening deportation were found scattered across roads in Hamilton County.University of Indianapolis launches new Behavioral Health Trauma certificate
The certificate specifically focuses on mental health professionals who plan to provide trauma counseling. It is obtained after three courses and nine total credit hours.Josh Downs, Anthony Richardson team up to give Colts offense a jolt of energy
Indianapolis Colts receiver Josh Downs welcomed last week's announcement that Anthony Richardson would return as Indy's starting quarterback.Barrett scores season-high 39 as Raptors snap losing streak, beat Pacers 130-119
Benedict Mathurin scored 17 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter and Pascal Siakam had 25 points and 10 rebounds against his former team as the Pacers lost for the third time in four games.