Eminent Leader in Agriculture, Family, and Community
County: Butte
Inspired by what they learned through 4-H, when working on a project around the Reich home or ranch, a question the family frequently asked was, “is this fair-worthy?”
“4-H encourages its members to be the best they can be,” Ree Reich explained. “Nobody is the best they can be at something the first time they do it. … You cannot be the best without practice and perseverance. That is what 4-H is about.”
A mother to four, Reich served as a 4-H leader for 40 years and remains an advocate and volunteer fundraiser for the organization. Recognized for her volunteer efforts and service to the community, Reich was named the 2022 Eminent Leader in Agriculture, Family and Community by South Dakota State University Colleges of Agriculture, Food & Environmental Sciences and Education and Human Sciences.
Reich became involved in 4-H when she and her husband, Tim, returned to her hometown of Belle Fourche in 1978. Shortly after they moved into Reich’s family home, a childhood friend invited them to join Valley View 4-H Club. Reich quickly signed them up.
“We desired solid friendships for our children - here we were bringing teens and pre-teens to this community for the first time,” said Reich of their now grown children: Mark Todd Reich (deceased), Heather Heckmann, Angela Reich and Holly Main.
A stay-at-home mom, Reich saw benefits beyond friendship in 4-H involvement. “One day I mentioned to my mother that I should be doing more for the community, and she said, 'Ree, you are raising citizens for your community.' I thought about that so many times over the years. As a parent, you don’t just raise children, you raise citizens. 4-H raises citizens through various ways such as public speaking, service to community and learning by doing,’” Reich said.
Reflecting on this and many conversations with her parents, Ruth and David Richards, Reich credits them instilling in her integrity and a desire to give back. “I had great examples in my wonderful parents,” she said. “They taught me to be a volunteer. You have to be taught to give back. That’s what my parents did. That’s what 4-H does.”
In addition to serving as a 4-H leader of Valley View 4-H Club, Reich also served as a 4-H county and state judge and still serves the board of the Western Family Consumer Science Show.
Even after retiring as a 4-H leader, Reich remains an active advocate. In 2017, she helped launch the Redwater Youth Leadership Fund. One hundred percent of donated dollars go to fund 4-H youth scholarships to cover expenses so Butte and Lawrence County youth can participate in national leadership opportunities. The organization’s main fundraiser is a pitchfork fondu hosted during the Butte Lawrence County Fair.
“In her youth, our daughter, Holly, qualified to go on several national trips. Those opportunities changed her perception of where she could go in life. They gave her so much insight,” Reich explained. “This fund helps provide similar experiences to other youth.”
In addition to 4-H, music is another way Reich gives back to her community.
“Growing up, there wasn’t anything I ever wanted to do but teach music and I was spoiled enough to get do that,” Reich said.
She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in music from the University of Wyoming, but becoming a homemaker was her career of choice.
For more than 40 years she has helped with church services at the Belle Fourche long term care facility, played French Horn in the Belle Fourche Cowboy Band, shared a weekly Bible study in their home and given many gallons of blood. For many years she sang with a volunteer group called Mixed Company and now she directs a senior choir in Spearfish.
“Volunteerism is a bit of selfish act,” Reich said. “We all know that when we volunteer, we receive more than we give.”