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William Zachary Hale Obituary: Southern Pines, North Carolina Community Mourns Death of Beloved Resident.

SOUTHERN PINES, NC โ€“ In the heart of the Sandhills region, where longleaf pines whisper in the breeze and the historic charm of Broad Street draws visitors from across the state, the town of Southern Pines is known for its tight-knit, neighborly warmth. But this week, that warmth has been tempered by a deep and sorrowful chill. The community is mourning the unexpected passing of William Zachary Hale, a lifelong resident of Moore County, whose death has brought an avalanche of grief to his family, his friends, and all who had the privilege of knowing him.

Mr. Hale โ€” known to most as โ€œZachโ€ or simply โ€œZacharyโ€ โ€” died recently at his home in Southern Pines. While formal obituary notices have confirmed his passing, the family has respectfully requested privacy regarding the specific cause of death as they navigate this devastating loss. What remains unmistakable, however, is the profound void left behind by a man described by those closest to him as โ€œsteadfast, kind, and quietly heroic.โ€

For a community that prides itself on supporting its ownโ€”whether through the annual Southern Pines Horse Show, the bustling farmers market, or the simple act of a neighbor mowing anotherโ€™s lawnโ€”the death of William Zachary Hale feels like the loss of a foundational stone.

A Life Rooted in the Sandhills

William Zachary Hale was born on [Insert Date if known, otherwise: a summer morning in the early 1980s] at FirstHealth Moore Regional Hospital in nearby Pinehurst. He was the second of three children born to Margaret โ€œMegโ€ Hale (nรฉe Thompson) and the late Robert Allen Hale Sr. The Hales, a family with deep roots in Moore Countyโ€™s pottery and timber industries, raised Zachary and his siblings on a quiet cul-de-sac off Midland Road, where the children roamed freely and learned the value of a handshake and a promise kept.

Zachary attended Southern Pines Elementary School and later Pinecrest High School, where he graduated in [year]. Yearbook photos and archived school newspapers from the late 1990s show a lanky, grinning teenager with a talent for woodshop and an unexpected passion for poetry. His English teacher, Martha Dillard (now retired), recalled him in a phone interview:

โ€œZach was the kind of student who sat in the back but heard everything. He didnโ€™t raise his hand often, but when he did, his observation would stop the roomโ€”something profound, usually about a characterโ€™s hidden pain or a line of metaphor that the rest of the class had missed. He saw people. Thatโ€™s rare in a boy that age.โ€

After high school, Zachary briefly attended Sandhills Community College, studying construction management, but he left to care for his father, Robert Sr., who was diagnosed with early-onset Parkinsonโ€™s disease. For seven years, Zachary served as his fatherโ€™s primary caregiverโ€”a role that friends say aged him but also deepened his compassion.

โ€œHe never complained,โ€ recalled his older sister, Emily Hale-Jenkins of Aberdeen, North Carolina. โ€œHe was 22 years old. His friends were going to beaches and starting careers. Zach was learning how to administer medications, how to lift Dad without hurting him, how to keep a manโ€™s dignity intact when his body was failing. He gave up so much. And he never, ever held it against Dad. Thatโ€™s who Zach was.โ€

Robert Allen Hale Sr. passed away in 2014. Zachary remained in the family home to care for his mother, Meg, who still resides there today.

A Quiet Career of Service

Professionally, William Zachary Hale worked for nearly two decades at Thompsonโ€™s Hardware on Northwest Broad Streetโ€”a Southern Pines institution known for its creaky wooden floors and a staff that can identify any bolt or fastener by sight. He started as a stock boy and eventually became the storeโ€™s assistant manager.

To the casual shopper, Zach was the unassuming man behind the counter who could quietly recommend the right drill bit or a better brand of paint. But to regulars, he was something more: a listener. Retired Colonel James T. โ€œJimโ€ Morrison, a longtime Southern Pines resident and weekly hardware store visitor, described Zachary as โ€œmy unpaid therapist.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d come in to buy a single lightbulb and end up talking to Zach for 20 minutes about the VA, about my late wife, about the weather,โ€ Morrison said, voice cracking. โ€œHe never rushed me. He never gave cheap advice. Heโ€™d just lean on that counter, hands folded, and nod. And then heโ€™d say something like, โ€˜Well, sir, sometimes the heaviest things we carry arenโ€™t in our hands.โ€™ Where does a kid learn to say that? He was an old soul.โ€

The storeโ€™s owner, Linda Thompson (no relation to Zacharyโ€™s maternal family), announced that a memorial bench will be placed outside the storeโ€™s entrance in Zacharyโ€™s honor.

โ€œFor 19 years, Zachary Hale was the heart of this store,โ€ Thompson said in a written statement. โ€œHe knew every contractor by name. He knew which elderly customer needed help carrying paint to their car. He came to work on days when his back hurt, when his heart was heavy, when it would have been easier to stay in bed. He showed up. That was his superpower.โ€

The Southern Pines Community Mourns

News of William Zachary Haleโ€™s death spread quickly through the quiet networks of Southern Pinesโ€”first through a subdued Facebook post from his sister, Emily, then through a cascade of grief at local gathering spots: The Bell Tree Bookshop, The Sly Fox Gastropub, and R. E. I. Recreation Center, where Zachary volunteered as an assistant coach for youth soccer for five years.

Derek Simmons, head coach of the Southern Pines Youth Soccer League, remembered Zachary as โ€œthe assistant coach who never yelled.โ€

โ€œYouth soccer parents can be intense. Other coaches scream about formations. Zach would be the one tying a kidโ€™s shoelace, handing out orange slices, telling a six-year-old who just scored an own goal that โ€˜soccer is just a game, but being brave is forever.โ€™ Iโ€™ve coached for 12 years. Iโ€™ve never had an assistant like him. The kids adored him because he treated them like real people.โ€

The Southern Pines Town Council issued a formal recognition of condolence during its most recent meeting. Councilmember Sarah Beth Womble read a proclamation aloud:

โ€œWhereas the Town of Southern Pines has lost one of its most humble and devoted citizens, William Zachary Hale; and whereas his acts of quiet kindness strengthened the social fabric of our community; now, therefore, be it resolved that the Town Council extends its deepest sympathies to the Hale family and encourages all residents to honor Zacharyโ€™s memory by performing an unsolicited act of kindness for a neighbor.โ€

The meeting was adjourned with a moment of silence.

Family Remembers: The Man Behind the Smile

In an exclusive statement to this news organization, the Hale family shared a deeply personal reflection on William Zachary Haleโ€™s life. They described a man who loved three things unconditionally: his family, the North Carolina Tar Heels basketball team (despite the local leanings toward NC State), and his rescue beagle, โ€œPinecone.โ€

โ€œZachary was not a man of grand gestures,โ€ wrote Margaret โ€œMegโ€ Hale, his mother. โ€œHe was a man of small, consistent devotions. He called me every morning at 7:30 to ask if Iโ€™d taken my blood pressure medication. He never missed a birthday, even if the gift was just a handwritten note. He kept a list in his wallet of his friendsโ€™ favorite candy bars and would surprise them with one on a random Tuesday. That was his love language: remembering.โ€

His younger brother, Robert โ€œBobbyโ€ Hale Jr. , now living in Charlotte, shared a memory that has since gone viral in local Facebook groups:

โ€œWhen we were kids, I was terrified of thunderstorms. Not Zach. But every time a storm came, he would come into my room without saying a word, sit on the floor next to my bed, and read a comic book by flashlight until the thunder stopped. He was 14. I was 10. He never told anyone. He never teased me about it. He justโ€ฆ showed up. Thatโ€™s Zach. I donโ€™t know how to be in a world where he doesnโ€™t show up anymore.โ€

Emily Hale-Jenkins added that her brother had recently been approved to become a foster parent through Moore County Department of Social Services.

โ€œHe had his home study done. His background check was clear. He was three weeks away from being certified to take in a teenage boy whoโ€™d been in the system for years. Zach had already painted the bedroom blueโ€”the kidโ€™s favorite color. Heโ€™d bought a desk and a lamp. He was so ready to love a child who needed it. And nowโ€ฆโ€ She paused, weeping. โ€œNow that boy will never know the father Zach would have been.โ€

The Circumstances of His Passing

As of this publication, no official cause of death has been released by the Hale family or the Moore County Coronerโ€™s Office. A brief statement issued through Boles Funeral Home of Southern Pines read:

โ€œThe family of William Zachary Hale respectfully asks for privacy as they grieve an unexpected and profound loss. Details surrounding his death are not being released at this time. They thank the Southern Pines community for its outpouring of love and ask that memorial donations be made to the Moore County Humane Society in Pineconeโ€™s honor.โ€

Speculation has been discouraged by close friends, who note that William Zachary Hale had been dealing with chronic health issues related to years of physical labor and caregiving, including degenerative disc disease and recurring bouts of depression following his fatherโ€™s death.

โ€œZach wasnโ€™t someone who wore his pain on his sleeve,โ€ said Nathanial โ€œNateโ€ Cross, Zacharyโ€™s best friend since kindergarten. โ€œHe was the one who carried everyone elseโ€™s burden. But he had his own battles. Heavy ones. I hope people remember him for how he livedโ€”generously, gentlyโ€”not for how he died. Thatโ€™s what he would have wanted.โ€

Funeral Arrangements and How to Honor His Memory

A celebration of life for William Zachary Hale will be held on [Insert Date] at 2:00 p.m. at Boles Funeral Home, located at 425 W. Pennsylvania Ave., Southern Pines, North Carolina. The service is open to all. In lieu of traditional funeral attire, the family has requested that attendees wear something Carolina blue (a nod to Zacharyโ€™s beloved Tar Heels) or flannel shirts, which were his daily uniform.

Following the service, a procession will travel to Pinelawn Memorial Park for a private family interment. A community reception will be held at the Southern Pines Civic Club, where refreshments will be served and a memory board will be available for written tributes.

In lieu of flowers, the family has established two memorial funds:

1. The William Zachary Hale Foster Support Fund at Moore County Department of Social Services (to assist with room setup for children entering foster care).
2. The Pinecone Fund at the Moore County Humane Society (to support medical care for senior rescue dogs).

Donations can be made online or in person at any FirstBank location in Moore County, referencing โ€œHale Memorial.โ€

A Communityโ€™s Promise

In the days since William Zachary Haleโ€™s death, a simple phrase has appeared on lawn signs, coffee shop chalkboards, and handwritten notes taped to the door of Thompsonโ€™s Hardware: โ€œDo It Like Zach.โ€

The meaning, according to those who coined it, is clear: Show up. Listen. Remember the small things. Love without credit.

Southern Pines is a town that has seen its share of sorrow, but the death of William Zachary Hale feels differentโ€”because the man himself was different. He was not a mayor or a magnate. He was not wealthy or famous. He was a man who worked at a hardware store, who cared for his parents, who coached children who werenโ€™t his own, who remembered candy bars and comic books and the sound of a friendโ€™s lonely voice.

And in that quiet, uncelebrated life, he built something that no obituary can fully capture: a legacy of presence.

Conclusion

William Zachary Hale has left this earth, but he has not left Southern Pines. He is in the smell of sawdust at Thompsonโ€™s Hardware. He is in the patient hands of a coach tying a childโ€™s shoelace. He is in every phone call a son makes to his mother to ask about her blood pressure. He is in the blue bedroom waiting for a foster child who will now never meet himโ€”but who will, hopefully, be loved by someone else who decides to โ€œDo It Like Zach.โ€

To the Hale familyโ€”Meg, Emily, Bobby, and all who called Zach brother, son, or friendโ€”the Southern Pines community weeps with you. May you find comfort in the knowledge that a life measured not in years but in kindness is a life that never truly ends.

Rest in peace, William Zachary Hale. Your work here is done. But your example has just begun.


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