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Elmer Bowen

Posted 2018-12-14 by mhenderson
Published in the Daily Miner on June 3, 2018 -
Kingman, Arizona -

Elmer Bowen, age 92, World War II Veteran, member of “The Greatest
Generation,” and a 56-year resident of Kingman, Arizona passed away
May 28, 2018 after a short illness.

He was born in Taylorville, Illinois to Edwin and Mary Jane (Lovell)
Bowen on August 12, 1925, the 10 of 11 children. A true child of the
depression, he quit school after the eighth grade in order to help
support his family. During that time he worked as a farm hand, as a
hog butcher in a slaughterhouse and built and maintained railroad
lines.

The day after Pearl Harbor, Elmer went to join up, but they turned him
down because he was only 16. Finally on December 29, 1942 at age 17,
he figured out how to fool the recruiters and enlisted in the Navy.

During the war he was stationed in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands and
achieved the rank of Torpedoman’s Mate 1st Class by the time the war
ended.

When he returned to his family in Auburn, Illinois in the fall of 1945
he began seeing Betty June Walker, the girl next door, who had been
writing to him during his long years in the frozen north. They decided
they still liked what they saw, so they married in Chicago on December
12, 1945.

Elmer was born with the wanderlust, so in the spring of 1946, he and
his bride traveled west to California in and old jalopy via Route 66.
During the two years they lived in the Los Angeles area he held
several jobs, including working as a machinist at North American
Aviation.

Upon returning to Auburn in 1948 with a baby boy in tow, Elmer managed
to find at least one job at a time to support his growing family. He
worked as a machinist building heavy farm equipment, did factory work
at Pillsbury Mills, worked as a carpenter, roofed, built septic tanks,
and was a mechanic. He even helped out his in-laws Harold and Mary
Walker at their business - Scottie’s Tavern in Auburn. Never fired, he
only left one job for a better one. During these years in Illinois, he
and Betty added to their family by producing two daughters.

In 1962 the wanderlust hit again he decided to move west, bringing his
family to Kingman, Arizona, where he decided to stay. He had several
jobs, but in 1964 he began working at Ford Proving Grounds in Yucca,
starting as a test driver, and retiring as chief brake test mechanic.

Elmer and Betty enjoyed nothing more than raising their three
children, (and later playing with their grandkids) and through the
years while working full time managed to build four different houses
with their own four hands for their family to live in. He was truly a
self-made and self-sufficient man who lived at his home until the very
end.

Elmer never had a mortgage, a car payment, or ever owed anyone a
penny. He never wanted a credit card. When he needed a new car, he’d
just take the checkbook to the dealership. Although he had little
formal education, he was exceptionally well read in World and US
history, current events, politics and geography. For decades he read
each month’s National Geographic cover to cover. He enjoyed listening
to old country music, drinking beer, and shooting the breeze. He loved
surf fishing in the Gulf of Mexico, taking long road trips all over
America along the most desolate backroads and nighttime drives over
every washboard road in Mohave County to go rattlesnake hunting.

Elmer was a man with a tender heart and unlimited patience for
children and animals, but he didn’t suffer fools gladly. He was very
opinionated and would argue the spots off dice if he believed he was
right. (Mostly, he was). He was also a consummate storyteller that
could keep anyone within earshot entertained for hours.

Elmer is survived by his beloved wife of 72 years, Betty, his son John
(Julie) Bowen of Ferndale, Washington, a daughter Rebecca (Ron) Bowen-
Odom of Boise Idaho and a daughter Cynthia (John) Short of Kingman. He
also leaves behind seven grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren,
along with many cousins, nieces, nephews and their families.

He was preceded in death by his parents and all 10 of his siblings. He
was the “last man standing” of the Bowen tribe.

Elmer didn’t want any services, but his family is planning to get
together in the near future to hoist a few, play some honkytonk music,
reminisce, and spread his ashes along those old dirt roads he loved to
drive.

Thoughts and condolences may be submitted to the family at www.lietz-
frazefuneralhome.com.





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