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Obituary

Patrick David Beatty

Patrick David Beatty, 68, died May 18, 2026, after a life marked by faith, devotion, grit, movement and an abiding love that he freely shared and generously received.

He was born Sept. 30, 1957, and raised in Clinton, where the East Tennessee hills and roads became part of him early in life. While work and life took him far from Clinton for many years, he later passed away while resting in a house built by his family in a valley near his hometown.

Patrick graduated from Clinton High School in 1975, attended Middle Tennessee State University, and built a career spanning more than 40 years in property management in fast-growing Nashville.

But the shape of Patrick’s life could not be measured by work alone. He loved his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and was devoted to his wife, Jill. Patrick and Jill shared 37 years of marriage filled with steadfast loyalty, laughter, travel and companionship.

Together, they made multiple trips to Hawaii, visited family in Michigan and Florida, and spent treasured time on the family farm in East Tennessee. He loved Tennessee football and basketball, fast cars driven as fast as possible, and the simple joy of being with the people and places that felt like home.

And he loved to ride his bike.

A lifelong cyclist, Patrick first learned to ride as a boy from his father, Ray Beatty, riding up and down the streets of Clinton.

What began in childhood became a defining rhythm of his life. He rode the roads of East Tennessee with friends, delivered newspapers along his paper route by bicycle, and later discovered the Natchez Trace in Middle Tennessee, which became one of his most-beloved riding routes.

For decades, Patrick rode long distances with remarkable discipline and joy, often logging thousands of miles each year — sometimes as many as 10,000. To Patrick, cycling was more than exercise. It was endurance, prayer, solitude, friendship and freedom.

When Patrick was diagnosed with a rare bone cancer in 2021, he faced the illness with the same determination that carried him through long climbs and hard miles. He endured extensive surgery, chemotherapy, proton therapy and rehabilitation. Even during treatment, he was thinking about the road. On his first day of chemotherapy, he asked his oncologist whether he could ride his bike after treatment. Soon, he was back on the road, logging miles again.

Patrick often spoke of meeting God on the Natchez Trace. During one difficult ride, struggling up an early incline, he prayed and wondered how he could possibly finish the miles ahead. Then he looked up and realized he had reached the turnaround point with no memory of the miles that had passed. For Patrick, that was one of many moments of grace — one of many encounters with “God on the Trace,” as he called them.

Patrick was preceded in death by his parents, Ray and Betty Beatty.

He is survived by his loving wife, Jill Beatty; stepdaughter, Shannon Parker; brothers, Timothy Beatty and wife Gayle, and Michael Beatty and wife Beth Ann; and nephews, Christopher and Justin.

The family will hold a small private service.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville.

Patrick will be remembered for his faith, his toughness, his loyalty, his love of the open road, and the way he kept moving forward through heat, hills, pain and uncertainty. He knew the road could be hard. He also knew there was grace to be found on it. And he rode it with all his heart.