In memory of Hazel the deer; “She chose humans as her people”

[March 29, 2025]    On the morning of Wednesday, March 19, 2025, Hazel the deer was traveling along Limit Street on the east side of Lincoln when she was struck and killed. Immediately word spread throughout the community that the most friendly deer around, who loved food and attention, was gone. A sadness fell over the community.

Hazel, the beloved deer who was rescued and nursed back to health by a local family, had become a local legend. She has a story.

And she created a connection between neighbors, friends and families that will likely never be forgotten.

Hazel's story

About three years ago, Eric Leever found a tiny deer, trapped in a hole and she didn’t look like she had much of a chance at survival. Between Leever and his wife, Sherry, they spent countless hours bottle feeding the tiny creature. Then there were issues that needed to be addressed to get the little deer to go to the bathroom. All of that took a lot of time and patience, 24 hours a day worth of time and patience.

“She probably only stood around fifteen to eighteen inches tall and her ears were really crinkled up like she was dehydrated,” said Leever, upon seeing her at first sight. “She was bottle fed but never was she penned up. She was always free range and for over a year she never ventured very far from home. She would stay under our pool deck at night. As she grew she would show up and steal snacks from our grandkids and if you weren’t paying attention she would make herself right at home and come in the house or get in your vehicle if she was given the opportunity. She would come to our picture window or bedroom window daily to get our attention. As she grew older, she would take off for a day or two here and there. Then it turned into sometimes a week or two but she would always come back.”

“She had a fawn last year and we thought that might be reason enough to stay away but she continued to come back and frequented multiple other families as well,” explained Leever.

Eventually, Hazel, who was named for the coon dog that Sherry’s dad had growing up, began to wander a bit farther.

Photo provided by Eric Leever

Leever added, “There’s nobody that would have enjoyed Hazel more than her dad who passed, so without any thought, Hazel it was.”
Once Hazel’s adventures far and wide began, so did the phone calls. Just like when a kid gets in trouble and the parents get phone calls, Hazel was no exception.

“In this past year she made multiple trips to town and our phones would blow up but like we told everyone, “She’s a wild animal (kinda) and we can’t control what she does or where she goes,” said Leever. “One occasion we got a call from some friends that live about five miles to the east and the next day we got a call that she was at the Sportsman Club, which is about seven to eight miles west of us. Then she showed back up at our house the same night.”

Hazel was just out there making friends.

“I couldn’t begin to guess how many people she met or the smiles she put on faces,” said Leever. “She was so loving and absolutely loved attention. The last time she was actually at our house was Christmas. Then she headed to town and didn’t look back. I still saw her every week and if I didn’t, our phones were always ringing and people felt the need to keep us posted. To say she was pretty special is an understatement.”

Leever added that between family, friends, neighbors and everyone in town she has to be one of the most photographed deer ever.

And here’s a fun fact about Hazel: she was almost in a movie! In January of 2023 a movie producer from Chicago contacted him about having Hazel appear in a movie that needed a doe. The movie producer was willing to drive to the Leever’s house to do a location shoot but they needed one more thing: snow. However, the weather did not cooperate and hence Hazel’s movie career never got off the ground.

While Hazel could’ve been a Hollywood star, she was undoubtedly content covering all the ground she could right here in Logan County. But then again, given her ability to show up at parties and around the holidays, she probably would’ve enjoyed the Hollywood scene.

Without a doubt Hazel was well taken care of at the Leever’s house in the country, where she had the grandkids like Cope, Brexton, River, Crue, Cove and Kason to spoil her, but she seemed to yearn for new friends and she found plenty of them.

Hazel found her “homes away from home” in the city limits of Lincoln, where she was particularly fond of the people and pets in the Tulip Drive and Sycamore Lane neighborhoods.

Ron Budd, who is one of the original residents of the neighborhood, said he recalls seeing Hazel laying on his back deck one day and he tried to shoo her away but she would not move.

Pretty soon word got around, as did Hazel, and she was beginning to make her presence known as the friendly deer who went door-to-door begging for food with those big, brown eyes.

Tucked away on Tulip Drive near Ron Budd are neighbors Marjorie Blackford and Jerry Reichle. It’s safe to say Hazel stole their hearts pretty quick.

“Oh my, what can I say about Hazel?! She was just magical!” said Marjorie Blackford. “The first time I saw her was a couple weeks before Thanksgiving last year. I had not heard of her until I posted pictures of her on Facebook and then I learned the “Story of Hazel.”

“Several members of my family started messaging me that they were excited to meet her on Thanksgiving Day,” continued Blackford. “I kept trying to tell them that I highly doubted that she would come around. But just as we sat down for dinner, there was Hazel. We had some apples, so my kids, younger and not so young ones, were able to enjoy the awesomeness of Hazel. She loved people, loved hugs, loved petting and even loved our dog. I’m sure her visit will be remembered and the topic of Thanksgiving dinner memories for many years to come.”

Photo provided by Marjorie Blackford

Blackford expressed the sentiments of the entire community eloquently when she offered this:

“What a gift she was to our community. We sure do miss her. I still look out the window and expect to see her strolling through the neighborhood. Such a gentle creature. Definitely a gift from God to the people of Lincoln.”

Jerry Reichle lives next door to Blackford and she would often alert him when Hazel was in the neighborhood. Reichle always had snacks handy for his new four-legged friend.

“Hazel loved apples,” said Reichle. “All kinds. I once got her to eat seven at one time. I also got her to eat pears. She didn’t like nuts very well. She ate a few shelled walnuts once but I couldn’t get her to eat them again.”

“I couldn’t see when Hazel would come to my front door,” explained Reichle, “but my neighbor could so she would call me and let me know and I’d go out and feed Hazel. As much as she wanted food, I think she also wanted to be petted. I think she enjoyed that almost as much.”

“A few times, when I’d walk the high school track in the morning, I’d see Hazel laying in Jim Ireland’s back yard. Ron Budd said he found her in the morning sometimes sleeping on his back patio,” said Reichle of Hazel’s sleeping quarters.

“We know Hazel could hop fences because she was in Marjorie Blackford’s fenced backyard all the time,” said Reichle. “Hazel got along with dogs well too. Blackford’s dog, Bubby, would get out sometimes and just run up to Hazel, tail a-waggin. Hazel never budged. I once went out and heard the two dogs in my neighbor’s backyard barking and found Hazel with her legs up on the fence and the dogs running around barking, not menacingly though.”

“I had hopes of having Hazel around for many years to come.”

Tricia Goldsberry is just one of the many residents on Sycamore Lane who really enjoyed seeing and feeding Hazel. Like her neighbors, Goldsberry feels sadness now that Hazel is gone.

“She loved grapes and the last time she came to our house there were only a few grapes left in the bag and she had her whole little snout on her nose in the bag trying to get more,” said Goldsberry.

“I know she would bed down in Mr. Hopp's backyard many nights,” continued Goldsberry. “And she loved to play with my dogs. She would run and play with them along the fence lines. She was like clockwork. About every two to three days she would come to visit. She would come right up to our door so we could see she was out there.”

“Our family loved her,” Goldsberry said, sincerely. “Her simple face brought joy to everyone. She even affected the lives of people not in Lincoln. My stepdaughter and her family from Springfield got to meet her too. They came for Thanksgiving and Hazel showed up. My stepdaughter got her picture with her."

“Recently Hazel had been jumping the fence in our yard and our neighbor’s yard,” said Goldsberry. “My husband, John, had to pat
her on her butt to get her out.”

Hazel just kept moving on. Spreading the love and searching for more food.

When Hazel wandered to the King residence down on Sycamore Lane, she found another family who adored her and she did not have a problem making herself at home.

“Hazel was the sweetest girl and my whole family loved her,” said Kim King. “She would just show up at our back door. We would feed her apples and tomatoes. She would eat an entire apple out of our hands. She would sleep under our trampoline. I think she first showed up at our house around Halloween last year. It had been a rough year already for the kids because we lost both of our dogs, Thor and Bella.”

“Sometimes we would see Hazel going through dumpsters and everybody’s trash in the neighborhood,” added King. “We didn’t want her to go through the trash for food so we would just talk to her and say, ‘Hey, Hazel, we’ll feed you fruits and vegetables.’ And she seemed to listen.”

The King family had just fed Hazel the night before…

Ron and Vicky Klokkenga also looked forward to Hazel’s daily visits on Sycamore Lane. They had just seen Hazel the day before she died.

“The Chester East Lincoln bus went by at 3:00 p.m. on Tuesday and Hazel was laying in our front yard,” said Ron Klokkenga. “We heard the kids yelling 'a deer, a deer.’ The driver slowed down so they could see Hazel. That is what we will cherish about Hazel. Bringing joy to others.”
 


“When Vicky was scooping ice and snow this winter from the front walk, Hazel came up and put her hoof on the snow shovel, like she wanted the noise to stop and now play,” added Klokkenga.

“One time Hazel was across the street by the side of Dan Hopp's house when I came out the front door and rattled a package of cookies,” continued Klokkenga. “Her tail went up and she ran over to me for a cookie. Just like a little kid.”

“Many times she would come over to our backyard, lay down, and look out at the timber across the fields,” recalled Klokkenga. “One day she was laying there for over an hour. It made us feel like she thought our area was a safe place for her.”
 

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Photo provided by Eric Leever

Hazel also found a friend in Boris, the big, playful dog on the street corner. Debra McAdams, Boris’ owner, has lots of pictures of Hazel and Boris.

“When we first met Hazel she was visiting other neighbors down the road and she walked out of that yard and into the street, right up to Boris,” said McAdams. “Boris loves other animals, too.”

“Once she was in my front yard and ate the carrots (noses) off the snowmen,” McAdams laughed. “It was so funny and I was happy for her to have a snack.”

“Then I found her in my back yard after work one day,” McAdams recalled. “I went back there and asked her what she was doing and laughed because at first I had no idea how she got there because my fence in the yard is a six-foot fence. And then I realized the neighbor’s boarding fence on one side is only three or four feet tall, as is their very back fence. I even checked my cameras and sure enough she had hopped over their fence, into my yard and was just having herself a nice visit. Then she didn’t want to leave my yard.”

Photo provided by Debra McAdams

“I also bought a deer Christmas decor this year because of Hazel,” said McAdams. “It was that same day after setting it up that she came to investigate it. After seeing it, she seemed to approve. Every year now that decor will be in her memory for sure. She was sweet to us and made our day every time we saw her. It was like she was just stopping by to check in sometimes or just to say hi. She let Boris know who’s boss when he would sniff too aggressively. She would gently push him away with her hooves. She found a happy medium behind the fence, playing with him just like she did the other neighbor’s dogs.”

“She surprised me one time while I was loading stuff into my truck,” recounted McAdams. “I turned around and she was literally right there. I even jumped. I was like “Hazel!” In my country accent, I was just laughing, telling her, ‘Don’t be scaring me like that!’ We all just cared for her and got really close with her.”

Carol Boss lives just a stone’s throw from McAdams and she also connected with Hazel.

“I met Hazel about a year ago,” said Boss. "She would come over and visit me many times. I believe she slept in the field right next to my house and behind the baseball fields at the Rec. I loved her visits. She would let me pet her and hug her and she would follow me around the yard like a dog. Once she came to my front door like she was knocking. I opened the screen and I think she wanted to come in. She was right on my doorstep. I work from home and one day as I was working, I looked out my picture window in the living room and she was standing right there, looking in like she was looking for me. I went out and petted her and talked to her that day. That was the last time I saw her. It breaks my heart that she got hit by a car. I cried like a baby when I heard. I am sure gonna miss those visits.”

Down the block and around the bend is another resident who grew fond of Hazel in just the short time she made the neighborhood her home away from home.

“Hazel was a neighborhood gem!” said Jennifer Sawicki. “I miss her already. We have so many pictures and videos. She was so comfortable in our neighborhood and would bed down in our yards. She would run back and forth along the fences, playing with our dogs. We also witnessed her get the “zoomies” and run around about five houses several times, jumping some small fences. She would then pant with her tongue out. We found her twice in our fenced yard, probably because of that. But she knew to come and wait at our back fence gate, looking in the ‘dog window’ and our front door to get apples and acorns. But her favorite treat she loved was soft peppermints, like horses do. We could barely get them opened as she forced her face into your hands and pockets. If she was across the cul-de-sac or in another yard, I could call her name and toss an apple in the air and she would literally run to me. She would come onto my porch and look right into the front door and she would lick it too.”

“She brought so much joy to us all,” Sawicki went on to say. “I have my husband videoing her on the front porch and the cameras videoing them. Also the night before she died, Hazel was bedded down in Mr. Hopp's backyard and when I got back from the gym, I walked over to her and gave her a handful of Ritz crackers and I rubbed her head.”

Sawicki’s friend, DeAnn Cooper, met Hazel once on Sycamore Lane and observed, “I was only privileged to see her in person one time, but she was just such a gentle soul. So relaxed and comfortable around people. I loved looking into her deep, brown eyes and talking to her. It was as if she understood what I was saying. I feel lucky to have encountered her. She chose humans as her people.”

Hazel’s people also included the kids at Lincoln Community High School. She was known to show up at track and football practices and there is even a video where Hazel looks as if she is preparing to do the hurdles. She was even staying in her own lane, prancing on the track.

LCHS Track and Field coach Jenna Crombie said, “Hazel was magical! She walked around the track and football field like it was her home. She really liked to hang out by the long jump pits and rumor had it she loved M&M’s.”

Crombie noted that track athlete Mallory Short had a special love for her. Short saw Hazel a lot last summer and Crombie said she felt like she was in a Disney movie.

“Hazel came to a couple of our summer track practices and in season too,” said Short. “It was always so funny when we would be running our workouts and she would join in and run with us. She always seemed to show up when we needed her during the harder workouts. She could distract us and our coaches so we could get a little more rest time during our workout. She was so cute and always made track practices more fun and interesting.”

Interestingly, Hazel made her way over to Pulaski Street to visit people there too.

Neighbors Jennie Brosman and Phyllis Welch got to know Hazel very well.

“She spent hours at our house and came to the door for food and petting,” said Brosman. “We just loved her and our hearts broke when we got the news.”

“Hazel was a very special creature,” said Phyllis Welch. “She was at my house a lot. She would follow me into my garage and didn't want to come out. If I went inside she would look in my patio door. She loved grapes. She will be missed.”

As Leever noted, Hazel would come and go from their house frequently late last year. It was during this time that Hazel stopped in one farmer’s field and she captured his attention so much that he quit farming for a hot minute and he gave her the attention and the food that she was craving.

Greg Rademaker recalled his first encounter with Hazel in the field that day.

“I was cutting beans in the field by the old Maple Club and there she was,” said Rademaker. “She appeared out of nowhere. I got out of the combine and walked over to my truck to get her an ear of corn. She walked over to me and I fed her the corn. Then she was gone.”

Rademaker did manage to get a video of their meeting in the field.

Hazel would eventually find where Rademaker lived and she visited his home twice. One time she just came over to their pool and walked right up to Rademaker and his wife, Gayal.

A third time when Hazel came over, Rademaker wanted his son, Greyson and his girlfriend, Erin, to meet her. They were petting her when Rademaker decided to give her some little dog treats. Hazel immediately went running over to him and the treats.

“She loved those little dog treats,” he said, adding, “She was just so friendly.”

It was Rademaker’s friend, Tony Meyer, who believes he was the last one to feed and pet Hazel the morning that she passed.

“She was here at 6:50 a.m. that morning,” said Meyer, another Sycamore Lane resident.

Hazel knew Meyer’s morning routine. He gets up early every morning and goes to his garage. Hazel would be waiting for him. She loved to get into people’s garages after all. And just like everyone else, Meyer has pictures, videos and stories featuring Hazel.

“She got in our yard once,” said Meyer. “The gate was left open and she was walking around on our inground pool cover. I had to coax her off with food. Regularly she would walk up to our front porch and set the ring doorbell off. My wife would go out and give her a snack. She loved to be petted and have her ears rubbed. We are going to miss her.”

Miss her is an understatement. Her loss is huge to not only the family of Eric and Sherry Leever and their friends, but also the entire community of Lincoln.

It’s only been a week and the sadness is still very real.

Meanwhile, there is one man who saw Hazel take her last breath and he did the right thing.

Upon seeing the accident on Limit Street, Robert Morrow stayed with Hazel, comforting her till the end.

Morrow just happens to be a resident of Sycamore Lane and just like the others, he was a friend to Hazel.

“We absolutely loved Hazel around our neighborhood and especially when she came to our home,” said Morrow. “She was such a regular around our house I had gotten to the point where I would just look up and say, “Oh hey Hazel,” and she would follow me around the house while doing outside chores. I have tons of photos with her and the family. The kids really loved her. My oldest, Olivia, would always make sure they had “healthy” food for her. She loved graham crackers and my youngest, Xavier, would stand on the porch and feed her. She really liked Olivia’s boyfriend, Hayden. He would give her more pets than anyone else. My wife, Amanda, who has always been a little skittish around animals, even loved her.”

“She was an amazing creature and truly a part of the community,” continued Morrow. “It’s a lovely neighborhood here and she made it even better, if even only for a short time. One of the best moments of this last winter was watching her across the street. The neighbors had their grandchildren outside building snowmen and Hazel was there prancing and jumping around playing in the snow with them.”

Hazel even captured the attention of Lincoln’s mayor, Tracy Welch, who caught her walking down the alley behind his Ninth Street home. Mayor Welch has donated a memorial brick in her honor at the Forever Home Cemetery at 1801 N. Lincoln Parkway. The cemetery is affiliated with the Humane Society of Logan County.

“Hazel was a gentle spirit that touched the lives of so many residents and I know that her presence will be missed,” said Mayor Welch.
There is also a fundraiser in Hazel’s name set up at the Humane Society of Logan County.
If you wish to make a donation in Hazel’s memory, you can mail your payment to:

Humane Society of Logan County
P.O. Box 404
Lincoln IL 62656

Or use the HSLC PayPal account.

Or drop your donation off at:
1801 N. Lincoln Parkway
Lincoln IL 62656

However, Hazel’s final resting spot is back with the family that saved her life. As Eric Leever got word that morning that Hazel had been struck by a vehicle, he was able to retrieve her and give her the proper burial spot on his property. It’s a comfort knowing she will always be remembered and cherished by those who loved her first.

Finally, thank you to the Leever family for sharing Hazel with the community. Everyone shares in your loss.

[Teena Lowery]

 

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