A dying man’s wish to bury him astride his beloved bike had been fulfilled by his family members.
82-year old Billy Stanley who died on Sunday was dressed in his favorite leather and sunglasses, sitting on top his 1967 Electra Glide cruiser, a Harley Davidson for his journey home.
see more pics after the cut...
Stanley who died from lung cancer, was placed in a huge see through glass coffin- a part of his dying wish.
Daily Mail reports:
For years the Mechanicsburg man had told family and friends that he didn’t just want to ride off to heave, he wanted the world to see him do it in a big see-through box.
He started the funeral preparations himself, buying three large burial plots next to his wife, Lorna so the hole would be big enough to accommodate his unique casket.
His sons Pete and Roy fashioned a casket out of Plexiglas and reinfornced the bottom with wood and metal.
Theresa Adams, Bill Standley’s daughter, says goodbye to her dad
To ensure Mr Standley didn’t become unseated on his final journey, embalmers prepared his body with a metal back brace and straps.Standley told people he didn’t just want to ride off to heaven, he wanted the world to see him do it in the big see-through box. His extra large plot will leave him next to his wife for all time
‘We’ve done personalization … but nothing this extreme,’ Tammy Vernon, who works at the funeral home, told the Dayton Daily News.
‘He was the one who kept throwing this idea out there, to be buried on his bike. We were glad to assist him.’
The family man was pleased with his funeral plans and would show off the casket, which was stored for five years in a garage, to visitors.
Throwback: Billy Standley riding his prized motorcycle many years ago
‘He was proud of it,’ Roy Standley said.Hog heaven: Standley had spoken about being buried on his Harley for years. His sons, Pete and Roy, fashioned the casket out of Plexiglas, reinforcing the bottom with wood and steel rods to handle the extra weight
Upright til eternity: Five embalmers worked to prepare Standley’s body with a metal back brace and straps to ensure he’ll never lose his seat
While his family agreed that the procession to the cemetery, during which the body was on display, may be shocking, they wanted to honor their father’s last wish.
‘He’d done right by us all these years, and at least we could see he goes out the way he wanted to,’ Pete Standley said.
His daughter, Dorothy, added that he was ‘a quirky man’.
Mr Standley, who used to work as a bareback rodeo rider, was be escorted to the ceremony by a procession of bikers.
Some of the mourners at his graveside donned motorcycle jackets for the occasion as they watched the extra large coffin be lowered into its massive plot.