Background
Wendler was born on March 9, 1917 in Grand Rapids, Michigan to Paul and Anna Wendler.
Wendler was born on March 9, 1917 in Grand Rapids, Michigan to Paul and Anna Wendler.
He worked at a General Motors plant there, as manager for 14 years, and as director of purchasing and quality control for 12 years, before his retirement in 1982. Encouraged by his bosses at General Motors, Wendler ran for and served on Saginaw City Council for 14 years, and was mayor from 1971 to 1973. During his tenure, he was instrumental in both the construction of what is now the Dow Event Center (then the Saginaw Civic Center) and in bringing a hockey team to the city.
Civic center
Following the condemnation and impending demolition of the old Saginaw Auditorium, the question of whether to build a new civic center in downtown was put on the ballot.
After being rejected once, a provision was added to pave several roads on the city"s east side and the question put to the voters again, successfully, in 1972. Wendler and Canadian businessman and hockey coach Wren Blair were key to bringing hockey to Saginaw.
Following this incarnation of the Gears, which ended in 1983, several other hockey teams played in Saginaw in the 1980s and 1990s, including the Generals ("85-"87), Hawks ("87-"89), Wheels ("94-"96), Lumber Kings ("96-"98), and a second incarnation of the Gears ("98-"99). In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Wendler, Blair, and local businessman Richard J. Garber brought an Ontario Hockey League franchise, the Saginaw Spirit, to the city.
The arena in which the Spirit play was named for Wendler in 1972, and Garber later called Wendler the "father of hockey" in the region.
In 1978, he received an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Saginaw Valley State University. He was a supporter of the institution from its founding in 1963, and had served as the chairman of multiple fund drives and on several college committees. Wendler was an active part of many conservation organizations and causes.
Wendler"s efforts helped secure a donation by the Dow Chemical Company to improve fish passage on the Tittabawassee River around a dam owned by Dowager
Apart from being married to Phoebe he had 3 children, Paul O., Anne M., and Gretchen A. (Deceasesd). There ard 8 grandchildren, Scott, Julie, Lissa, John, Melissa, Theresa, Rebecca, Christopher.
Wendler was a trustee and vice president of the Frank North. Andersen Foundation, the Saginaw Valley State University Foundation, a member of two crime commissions, the Saginaw Rotary Club, and the Boy Scouts of America. Wendler also served as a member of the Michigan Natural Resources Commission and as an adviser to former Interior Secretary James G. Watt.