Born in
Coronado, California, on April 24, 1943, he was the son of Hope King Reese and Wilbur Roy Reese. The Reese family moved to
Williamsburg, Virginia, when he was seven, and he attended James Blair High School before enrolling in the
University of Virginia as an undergraduate. From 1966 to 1968, he served in the U.S. Navy on a search and rescue ship off the coast of Vietnam. Upon completion of his military service, he returned to school and graduated with bachelor's degree in architecture in 1971. After receiving his professional certification in 1973, Bill spent several years working for architecture firms in the Charlottesville and Newport News area before relocating to
La Jolla, California, in 1977. He practiced architecture in the
San Diego area until 1982. Reese believed the work of architect
Rudolph Schindler to be of great importance and considered Schindler's contribution to the world of architecture to be monumental. He found in him a kindred spirit and was inspired by the freedom and simplicity of his designs. Reese lived in one of Schindler's homes in the Pueblo Ribera complex in La Jolla, California in the early 1980s. The impact of Schindler's simplistic architectural style can be seen in many of Reese's designs, including the
North Haven, New York home for which Reese was featured by
Metropolitan Home magazine as one of the top 100 architects to have been published by the magazine. ==Later professional career==