Winery owner benefactor of poor

Marijke Byck-Hoenselaars May 3, 1933 - January 5, 2006

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT (Jan 7, 2006)

A couple of miles and many socioeconomic boundaries separate the Gold Coin Motel on Mendocino Avenue from Marijke Byck-Hoenselaars' winery in the Fountaingrove hills.

But every Friday morning for more than 20 years, Byck-Hoenselaars - who died Thursday after being hit by a car on Old Redwood Highway - dropped her sheen of affluence to try to bridge that distance.

Calling herself Marie, wearing her children's old sweatpants and driving a pickup, she delivered Catholic Worker food packages to residents at the Gold Coin, a horseshoe of green-painted brick buildings that is home to janitors, assembly workers, students and others pressed by economic hardship or other ills.

She brought holiday gifts for residents' children. At times, she contributed to someone's rent, always anonymously. She helped a mentally ill woman find subsidized housing and for years, every two weeks, took her to eat, shop and talk.

"There were dozens and dozens of people like that," said her husband, Walter Byck, a retired radiologist and co-owner of Paradise Ridge Winery.

The accident is under investigation. Byck-Hoenselaars was hit by an SUV as she ran across the street. Her husband had let her off on the west shoulder so she could cross to her pickup, parked near Cardinal Newman High School.

Born May 3, 1933, in Hees, Holland, Byck-Hoenselaars trained as a nurse, and in 1961 married Byck, whom she'd met in a New York City hospital cafeteria. The couple opened Paradise Ridge Winery in 1994, on land they bought in 1978 and turned into vineyards.

Byck-Hoenselaars treated the winery as a home, and ran it as such, with a firm, loving hand, family members said.

"She was real stern, real old-fashioned, but a real great lady," said Mitchell Williams, 24, a PG&E worker who spent two years as a catering captain for the winery's events.

Lori Darling, co-owner of Cafe Lolo, a former downtown Santa Rosa restaurant that catered most of the winery's functions, said Byck-Hoenselaars was a driven, exacting leader.

"She kept me motivated," Darling said. "She compelled me to always do my job well, because she demanded that of the people she loved and cared for."


 

Marijke Byck-Hoenselaars

The mother of five children, Byck-Hoenselaars was active on social issues ranging from suicide prevention to foster care to homelessness, plunging into volunteer activities soon after moving to Santa Rosa in 1965.

Her name was well known in nonprofit, fund-raising and wine-industry circles. At the Gold Coin, behind the JhanThong Banbua Thai restaurant, her anonymous deeds gained her equal recognition.

"She would make sure nobody got left out," said Pauline Hopper, 53, a resident since 1989 who raised six children in the motel, and now takes care of her eight grandchildren there every day.

"They live off the stuff she brings," she said Friday.

Hopper, now an assistant manager at the motel, was among the few at the Gold Coin who knew Byck-Hoenselaars' identity as a winery owner with a comfortable life. After noticing Byck-Hoenselaars' photo in a 1999 newspaper profile, she told her: "I seen your picture in the paper."

Hopper said that Byck-Hoenselaars replied: "Please don't tell anyone, because I don't want them to have different feelings toward me, to think I feel sorry for them, that I'm doing the handout thing."

The trim blond who called herself Marie didn't show up at the Gold Coin on Friday. And soon word of her death was out.

"The people around here so sad," said Pleinnikul Khun Chai, owner of the motel and restaurant, whose family was planning a trip to Thailand with Byck-Hoenselaars and her husband. "She's so kind people. She skinny looking, small lady, but she have a huge heart."

 

 

 

 

 

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