BABBITT,
James D. (Jim)
Arizona Daily Sun, Flagstaff, Arizona,
Tuesday, September 03, 2013
James D. Babbitt, co-owner of Jim Babbitt Ford, died Thursday in Sun City at the age of 89. A memorial service will be held Thursday, Sept. 19, at 10 a.m. at the Flagstaff Elks Lodge -- “bring your Levis,” says the family.
A formal obituary will appear this Sunday. Bonnie Stevens wrote this profile of Jim Babbitt in 2011 for the Babbitt Ranches Newsletter, and it is reprinted below with her permission.
Jim Babbitt’s life reads like a history book of the expanding West and its connection to a more innocent and patriotic America.
From his youth growing up in a frontier town as part of the Babbitt dynasty, his love of the ranches, his leadership in the Babbitt Brothers Trading Company and his career as an auto dealer, Jim will tell you he’s had a wonderful life.
But he won’t tell you much. And he’s certainly not likely to open the chapter about his three years as a World War II fighter pilot, his 60 combat missions and how he escorted General George Patton by air across Europe and into Germany, from the Normandy Invasion to the end of the war.
Babbitt was born in 1924. He grew up in a modest house on Elm Street and attended St. Antony’s Nativity grade school. It was a time when Flagstaff winters were harsh, groceries were delivered on Babbitt wagons pulled by a team of horses, and hobos were invited into your home for a hot meal.
“We lived three blocks from the railroad tracks. There were a lot of hobos on the train and people used to say our house had a mark on it because they would stop in for a free meal. We weren’t worried about strangers. Nobody thought any differently of anyone and everybody was your friend.”
The town was small then, maybe 5,000 people. As an eighth grader in 1938, Babbitt had all girls for classmates. “I made jokes about being the smartest boy in the class.”
In those days, the centerpiece of downtown was the Babbitt Brothers Trading Company Thriftway Department Store.
“We don’t have a place like that today where you’ve got everything-groceries, shoes, ammunition-and a drugstore across the street.”
Jim had horses as a boy, was interested in the branding and sale of Babbitt Ranches horses and cattle, and had great admiration for the ranch leaders. “Frank Banks, ranch foreman, was the most knowledgeable rancher in the West. John Babbitt, president of Babbitt Ranches, commanded the greatest respect of any individual I can recall.”
DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS
During the war, Jim saw the destruction and impact the war had on life in other countries. In his P-47 single engine plane, Babbitt moved across Europe as Patton’s 3rd Army moved. He wore a headset and throat microphone to communicate with troops on the ground close to the front lines.
“It was scary flying and firing with anti-aircraft fire bursting all around, shaking the planes while you are strafing or dive-bombing the enemy.”
Once he had a dead-stick landing on his way back to the allied air strip. This means the engine quits and the plane has to make a forced landing.
He calls General Patton a great leader. “He really led the troops across Europe and moved so fast, he outran his supply line and had to wait for them to catch up because he had run out of gas.”
[Editor’s note: Air Force records show he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross “for superior tactical skill and strafing attacks on enemy air fields in the face of intense fire” and the Air Medal with 11 Oak Leaf Clusters.]
When the atomic bomb was dropped in Japan, Jim was on a 30-day leave. He was outside the Monte Vista Hotel on San Francisco Street in Flagstaff when he got the news. “We had never even heard of the atomic bomb.”
The war in Europe was over and he was discharged before the age of 21.
SIX BUFFALO
Jim’s father, Ray Babbitt, was involved in the mercantile branch of the family company. Jim was a clerk in the grocery store as a teenager. Later he spent his weeks traveling from Babbitt trading post to trading post all over northern Arizona getting orders for supplies.
Travel weary, Jim was ready for a new job when his uncle, E.D. Babbitt, who owned Babbitt Motor Company, asked if he’d want to get into the automobile business. His response was a resounding “Yes!”
Jim bought the Babbitt Motor Company in 1965, after E.D. Babbitt died. It was later renamed Jim Babbitt Ford. He continued to operate the business with co-owner Alan Chan.
In the ‘90s, he and his wife, Marge, used to visit “the girls.” These were six buffalo that Babbitt Ranches brought to Spider Web Camp.
“It seemed like a wonderful thing to have a herd of buffalo, but you couldn’t control them. They jumped over fences, crossed Highway 89 and wandered around on the San Francisco Peaks.”
‘TREMENDOUS, RESPECTFUL PEOPLE’
As a member of the Babbitt Ranches’ Board of Directors for many decades, Jim has witnessed the ranches grow from a cattle operation to what it has become today.
“We were raising cattle and shipping them off. It’s a totally different operation today, managing cattle, land and the natural resources, and public recreation. There was no such thing back then.”
Through it all, Jim has a great deal of pride in the Babbitt legacy. “I am very humbled that there were some really bright, brilliant, wonderful men in the family and the older generation that started it all. They were tremendous, respectful people who were extremely generous within the communities they served. And I’ve had an exceptionally good life. I’ve been so fortunate to have so many wonderful family and friends.
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Arizona Daily Sun, Flagstaff, Arizona,
Friday, September 06, 2013
James “Jim” David Babbitt passed away peacefully August 29, 2013.
He is survived by his wife Marge; children Susan Babbitt, James Babbitt Jr., Mark (Melanie) Tabor, Chris (Teena) Tabor, Nancy Tabor; sisters Rosemary Babbitt, Catherine B. Ramsey, Margaret B. Charles; grandchildren, great-grandchildren and many other family members and friends who all dearly love him and will miss him. He was preceded in death by his parents Raymond G. and Rose Walsh Babbitt; his first wife Alice C. Babbitt; and his brothers Raymond G. “Ted” Babbitt and David W. Babbitt.
Jim was born June 17, 1924 in California. He grew up in Northern Arizona, enjoying the small town life of Flagstaff prior to WWII. When the war broke out, he enlisted and became a fighter pilot for three years, flying the P-47 single engine plane across Europe. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with 11 Oak Leaf Clusters. After the war, he came home and worked for Babbitt Brothers Trading Company for several years before being offered a position at the first Ford dealership in Arizona owned by his uncle, E.D. Babbitt. In 1965, he bought the dealership. For the past 25 years, he has partnered in the business with one of his closest, most valued and trusted friends, Alan Chan.
Jim and Marge were on site the very day that the dealership celebrated its centennial anniversary on December 12, 2012. This was a moment of incredible pride for Jim. He also spent many years on the Board of Directors for the Babbitt Ranches, another enterprise he held close to his heart. He continued to enjoy his association with the ranches and with the president, William C. “Billy” Cordasco, whom he cared for deeply. Jim was an avid outdoorsman who loved the ranching business, fishing, hunting and skiing. He enjoyed travelling, especially to Mexico and Hawaii.
Jim will be remembered by those who knew him best as a fine, quiet, compassionate man with a keen sense of humor and fun. He was a man who savored every moment life had to offer and was extremely grateful to God for his family and friends.
A memorial service celebrating the life of this remarkable man will be held on Thursday, September 19, 2013 at 10:00 a.m. at the Elks Lodge in Flagstaff, AZ. Casual or Hawaiian attire is optional.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations be made to one of Jim’s favorite organizations, the local Marine League Charities for either Toys for Tots or Wounded Warriors of AZ, P.O. Box 127, Flagstaff, AZ 86002-0127.