Ms. Linda Woods
We celebrate the amazing life of Linda Wright Woods who passed away on her farm in Stem, North Carolina, February 3, 2022, at age 79. Her vibrance, beautiful smile, and spirit live on. She leaves behind hugs and kisses to her children Amy (Jim Prewitt) Akins, Dr. Tom (Dr. Ami Wilbur) Lankford, her grandchildren Kelsey and Davis Akins, step-grandchildren Kelsey Leigh and Brian Prewitt, sisters Kay (Joe) Morgan and Millie Frazier, and to the many special friends and family who knew her as “Linda,” “Nana,” or “Mama Woods.”
Linda was born in Greensboro, North Carolina on July 18, 1942, but spent most of her childhood and adolescence in Durham, North Carolina. A graduate of Southern High School, Linda was crowned “Miss Southern” and Homecoming Queen. Additionally, she served as Class Secretary, member of the National Honor’s Society and even the cheerleading squad (she never stopped being a cheerleader). She was the first in her family to attend college and after high school, she began her studies at Wingate College. She worked relentlessly to afford college, often entering local pageants and competitions for the scholarship prize money. Once enrolled, she worked in Wingate’s Admissions Office, as well as provided campus tours to prospective students and their families on weekends. Her diligence inside and outside of the classroom showed as she proudly graduated from Wingate College in 1962 with accolades to include the college’s Honor’s Society and Wingate’s May Day Queen.
Those who knew Linda are no stranger to her glowing smile, comforting hugs, unparalleled generosity, and dedication to the job that began in 1977 which turned into a lifelong love, passion, and extended family. For decades she was the Executive Assistant to Coach Dean Smith and his first Director of Basketball Operations. Furthermore, she served many roles alongside many exceptional coaches and colleagues in the North Carolina Men’s Basketball Office. The identity of Linda Woods extends far beyond her beloved Carolina Basketball program. She loved singing along to Elvis Presley and shag dancing to Motown Hits. She loved reading in her rocker on the Neverrest Cottage porch at Atlantic Beach and hunting seashells on the shore. She loved her farm and all its furry, hooved, and feathered creatures. She loved road trips through National Parks and any traveling adventure that came her way. She loved showing off her “green thumb” with bountiful garden harvests on the farm. Most of all, she loved sharing smiles and laughter with her wonderful community of friends and family.
The Celebration of Her Life will be held Sunday, March 6, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. at the Dean E. Smith Center. All who wish to attend are welcome. Doors will open at 1:00 p.m.
Should you wish to show your love and support, please consider donating to Linda’s most prized places in her honor: Happy Place Farm or The North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores.
Happy Place Farm, LLC, is in fact, Linda’s self-proclaimed “happy place” and farm homestead. Exciting plans await as the family strives to help her legacy live on by completing her farm improvement wish list, continuing animal care, managing operations, and keeping it a beautiful place of inspiration and education for family, friends, and the community.
Stay kind, be well, and Go Heels!
Happy Place Farm, LLC
Mail checks to:
762 Roberts Chapel Road
Stem, NC 27581
Or donate via PayPal (send as friends and family option): happyplacefarm2022@gmail.com
Questions? Contact happyplacefarm2022@gmail.com
North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores
1 Roosevelt Blvd.
Pine Knoll Shores, NC 28512
https://ncaquariumsociety.com/donate/
You may specify: To Pine Knoll Shores in honor of Linda Woods
Please read this wonderful story written by Adam Lucas to fully understand the impact Ma Woods had on our lives.
https://goheels.com/news/2022/2/4/mens-basketball-lucas-mother-of-the-family.aspx
In the last days of her life, cancer had sapped the once-sparkling Linda Woods of much of her energy.
It was difficult to even sit up on her own in bed. She reluctantly agreed to a wheelchair to get around. She was tired, and she knew her time was limited.
But Woods, who worked in the Carolina basketball office from 1977-2015, had her priorities. And so, last Saturday, she rallied. Her beloved Tar Heels were hosting NC State that afternoon, and the 1982 championship team was gathering for a reunion at the game and a postgame dinner. Her boys—one team out of dozens that call her Mama Woods, as you might have read earlier this season about her relationship with Hubert Davis—were going to be in Chapel Hill. So she would be there, too.
“Even when Mom’s health started to deteriorate, the one thing that would perk her up in her last few months was a Carolina event or a visit from a Carolina person,” says her daughter, Amy Akins. “Saturday started off like it might be too much for her on that day. But mid-morning, she said she needed to be at that dinner. She went from not being able to sit up in the bed by herself to getting ready and having this happy determination.”
On a day that included the presence of Michael Jordan, it was Linda Woods who was the most beloved guest. Michael would understand. After all, this was Mama Woods.
“She was such a humble, good-hearted person who cared for everybody,” says Phil Ford. “She was the protector of Carolina Basketball, and she wanted good for everybody. I have never met anyone who has said anything bad about Linda Woods.”
She loved the players and coaches, and they loved her right back. Both Pat Sullivan and Jeff Lebo grinned this week when recounting their daily stops in the basketball office on the way to practice. Individually, they both said the same exact thing: “The coaches all thought we were coming to see them, but we were really coming to see Mrs. Woods and the ladies in the office.”
The Carolina Family is about running the Four Corners and thanking the passer and huddling at the foul line, of course. But the Carolina Family is also about those office visits. It’s about parents sending their teenagers out of state and entrusting Carolina Basketball with them, and about Linda Woods being the offcourt den mother for hundreds of boys who were confident and athletic and…maybe a little bit scared and a tiny bit lonely.
Somehow, despite the dozens of office duties she was simultaneously and flawlessly balancing, she was never too busy when players—current or former—stopped by. Sure, maybe she had to take her typewriter home with her at the end of the day to catch up on the endless correspondence for Dean Smith. Or maybe the head coach would have to pick her up on the way into the office on what would otherwise be a snow day.
But she was going to make time for her boys, coming out of her office as soon as she heard one of them in the hallway.
“She had such a deep devotion to all of us, as though we were her children,” says Eric Montross. “That extended at the very core of who she was. The first thing I think of with Linda Woods is the way she greeted us—her disposition, her sweetness, her hug. She was so genuine with her feelings towards us.”
That kindness often meant she had unique insight into a particular player’s struggles or an inexplicable shooting slump. If Carolina trailed at halftime, she would often worry as much about her boys as the outcome of the game.
“He’s having girlfriend trouble,” she might say in her seats in section 102 of the Smith Center if a player had performed poorly in the first half. “I hope they aren’t too hard on him.”
That nonstop energy didn’t cease at home, either. She was the founder of the first girls’ softball team in Chapel Hill/Carrboro Parks and Recreation history, because her daughter, Amy, wanted to play. And Linda Woods didn’t just create it—she coached it, too. If it wasn’t a game weekend, it wasn’t unusual for her to change into her “farm clothes” on Friday after work and stay in them all weekend, so she could cultivate life on her beloved farm with her much-loved family and animals.
No one was quite certain how she could do it all. She was the most popular chaperone on school field trips. She was always there on Field Day. She never missed an awards ceremony for one of the grandkids. Linda’s granddaughter, Kelsey Akins, once arrived at middle school basketball practice only to discover that her Nana had arranged a special visitor…Dean Smith.
This is why her boys from the 1982 team lined up on Saturday night to give her a hug and get a word with her. She had that impact on everyone she met.
“Just being in the Smith Center that night, she lit up,” says Amy Akins. “When she saw everyone, she was speaking more clearly than she had in a while. Her eyes sparkled, and she stood up and walked so she could pose for a picture. The Carolina Family really helped us, because it gave Mom a chance to shine at a time she wasn’t able to do all she wanted to physically and mentally. To be in the presence of that family in her second home, the Smith Center, she just lit up.”
Later that evening, Amy and Linda were sharing a quiet moment.
“You were amazing today,” Amy told her mother. “I don’t know how you did that.”
Linda just looked at her. “Well, it’s like Hubert says,” she told her daughter. “Energy, effort and toughness.”
Linda Woods died on Thursday morning, just over four days after she’d willed herself into the Smith Center to see the 1982 team. But about that energy: she left us very strict instructions. After all, we are talking about someone who could not watch the Carolina-Boston College game last week until her family had fetched her two Carolina blue pom-poms. “I always have my pom-poms,” she told her family seriously, as she proudly wore her Carolina Family Weekend t-shirt from 2018. They put two pom-poms in her bed with her. Carolina won the game.
Linda Woods very firmly told her daughter that there would be no crying while remembering her. “I have had the most amazing life,” she said, “with the most amazing people in it. I hope everybody has funny stories to tell and good times to talk about. The focus should be on celebrating.”
And before she left the Smith Center one last time on Saturday night, that is what she did. She had hugged all her boys. They had told her they loved her. And then, Amy and Kelsey pushed her wheelchair out to the Smith Center court. The seats were empty, the lights were low. They wheeled her out onto the hardwood, and she looked proudly and lovingly at their cell phones as they recorded.
“I am Linda Woods,” she said, “and I am a Tar Heel.”
Linda Woods’ wish is that her Happy Place Farm can continue to flourish and provide educational and inspirational opportunities to friends, family, and her community. For further details on how to contribute to Happy Place Farm LLC, please contact the family at happyplacefarm2022@gmail.com.
Or, if interested:
Please direct contributions the NC Aquarium at Pine Knoll
Shores in honor of Linda Woods-
1 Roosevelt Blvd
Pine Knoll Shores, NC 28512
So sorry for the loss a special lady. I spoke to her by phone about one month before her passing. She had several questions about my life and surprisingly knee quite allot about what i’d been doing such a as jobs and personal life.
I dated linda once as other men have indicated – I was intimidated by her as she so beautiful – silly me.
My name is Tracy Poe owner of poeboytreefarm. I met Miss Woods several year ago while delivering xmas trees to coach smith and the carolina basketball team from day one she was a amazing person beautiful smile and just down to earth lady. from there she helped me and my family become part of the carolina family without attending chapel hill she helped me in so many ways i would call from time to time and she recognized my voice what a special woman she will be missed greatly by all who knew her. I loved miss woods for all she done for me rest in peace you are a true tarheel!!!!!!!
Linda and I graduated from Southern High School in 1960. She was one of the most beautiful girls that ever walked the halls in the four years we were there. I always wanted to ask her for a date; however, I always had the fear of rejection since she was so beautiful & I felt like a country bumpkin. So, I never did. A few years ago we were setting up for a class reunion and I told Linda I had something on my bucket list to tell her. I said “I thought you were the most beautiful girl I had ever seen and I always wanted to ask you for a date.” Linda said “why didn’t you? I would have gone out with you.” Linda, all of the remaining graduates of the Class of ’60 are mourning your passing but are happy you are no longer suffering. You will always be loved and remembered until there are no more of us. May God comfort your family while they adjust to the absence of your smiling face.
We love you Linda!! You will never know how much you mean to us now and over the years past. You were one of the best ladies around. Always a kind word and a great smile! You will definitely be missed. We love you!! Gary and Sandra Pickeral. Penhook Va
We love you Linda!
To the woods family sorry to hear about Linda, i met her at UNC and she was a great person. She would always made time to talk to me when i worked years ago with the Bug Man Co. and done their inspections. She always sent me a UNC calendar. RIP Walter & Linda Champion
I met Linda as a young man with his family in Landover Md looking for extra tickets to the NCAA tournament first round. She took pity on us and gave us her ticket. She continued to help the Kansas Tar Heels family for many more years. She was a bright light in any room and one of my favorite people of all time. She will surely be missed!
I remember Linda from Southern High School days. Always had a smile on her face. Sorry for your loss. Praying 🙏 for everyone.
I’m just someone who met her through Coach Smith 42 years ago. I never ever met anyone finer. Sympathies to her family and the Carolina Community. May she rest in eternal peace. Amen.