Newfoundlanders killed in crash in Nova Scotia were longtime friends, co-workers - Action News
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Newfoundlanders killed in crash in Nova Scotia were longtime friends, co-workers

Andy Fillier, 61, and Jim Wheeler, 69, were the victims in a two-vehicle collision in Nova Scotia's Pictou County on Sunday. According to relatives, they had been driving together from Newfoundland to Ontario to visit their families over the holidays.

Andy Fillier and Jim Wheeler had been driving from Newfoundland to Ontario to visit their families

Jim Wheeler, left, and Andy Fillier enjoy an outdoor trip in Newfoundland. The two men worked together at a tire manufacturing plant in Kitchener, Ont., before it closed. (Submitted by Tara Lee)

A pair of longtime friends and former colleagues both with connections to central Newfoundland and southwestern Ontario were killed Sunday while driving to visit their families in Kitchener for Christmas.

Andy Fillier, 61, and Jim Wheeler, 69, were the victims in a two-vehicle collision Sunday in Nova Scotia's PictouCounty. According to relatives, they had been driving together from Newfoundland to Ontario to visit their families over the holidays.

"He was on his way up to spend Christmaswith us all, with his daughters and his sisters and brother, and nieces and nephews," said Tara Lee, Andy Fillier's sister.

He will be so missed.- Tara Lee

Both Fillier and Wheeler had children living in Kitchener. They both spent decades working at the B.F. Goodrich plant in that community. Lee said they had been longtime friends.

Filliermoved back to Buchans, his hometown, in Febuary. He had bought a home in the community, and had planned to retire there with his wife, Maureen the"love of his life," said Lee.

Andy Fillier, left, and his wife, Maureen, dated in high school, and were married eight years ago after they reunited. (Submitted by Tara Lee)

They never got the retirement they dreamed of;Maureen died this past January. She was 59.

"They dated in high school, and went separate ways and lived a lifetime apart, and about 10 years ago they reunited," Lee said."There was always something for her. They just went different paths for about 30 years."

Lee said her brother was struggling with the death of his wife, who died suddenly, but was slowly improving and enjoying life again.

He was learning a new song to play for us.- Tara Lee

"He was lost. Trying to find his way back to some joy in life. Him and Maureen, he played guitar and she sang. He stopped playing his guitar. But he was bringing his guitar with him [to Kitchener]. He was learning a new song to play for us, so he was going to play his guitar again," Lee said, while fighting back tears.

"Unfortunately his guitar got smacked up in the truck."

Lee said it would have been "extremely special" to hear him play his guitar again.

"He would be healing," she said.

Fillier's sister, Tara Lee, says he was an avid woodworker. (Courtesy Sunset Memorial Funeral Home)

Fillier's mother died in November.

Filliertravelled with the cremated remains of his wife on the trip.Lee says he "always took her with him when he travelled."

There was always something for her.- Tara Lee

Both will now be buried in Buchans in the summer.

"He was a very kind, loving dad. He was a wonderful big brother. And a wonderful little brother to our oldest sister. A great son. He will be so missed," she said.

"Oh, and the best uncle.I'm getting told the best uncle," she added.

According to his older brother, Jerome Wheeler, Jim Wheeler had moved to Millertown from Kitchener about eight years ago, prompted by the closure of the B.F. Goodrich plant in Kitchener.

He moved to that community to be closer to his sister, Eileen.

"We was pretty close, me and Jim. Anything I wanted done, I just had to ask him," Jerome Wheeler said. "Last three or four years, now, I'm not so good myself, so he'd do a lot of work for me."

I think he spent a lot of time helping people up in Millertown.- Jerome Wheeler

Jerome and Jim were born and raised in Summerford.

"He was always, like, more or less chasing me around when we was small," Jerome remembered though added he was never annoyed by his younger brother.

Jerome said he became closer with his brother over the past three or four years, and Jim would often visit him for dinner on fishing trips through Summerford.

"He was a very kind feller, and I think he spent a lot of time helping people up in Millertown."

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