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Irving William (Bill) Fobair

Posted 2018-03-27 by Judy Wight Branson
Camp Verde Bugle, Camp Verde, Arizona
Saturday, March 10, 2018

I.W. “Bill” Fobair, 92, of Cottonwood, Arizona, passed away on Feb.
16, 2018. He was born on the Niobrara Ranch, homesteaded by his
grandfather in 1890, 7 miles southwest of Butte.

By the time Bill reached the eighth grade, he was determined to
become a Soil and Water Conservationist, based on the severe rill
and gully erosion he witnessed in rural Boyd County.

Bill enlisted in the U.S. Navy (1943-1947) and served again during
the Korean War (1951-1953). In between that service, he received his
BSc., in Agriculture, University of Nebraska, Lincoln. He was a
charter member of one of the first College Student Chapters of the
Soil Conservation Society of America.

Bill married Joyce A. Pellew in 1949, a knowledgeable young lady
from New Zealand. By September 1953, when Bill again received his
second discharge from the Navy, Joyce expressed a desire to visit
her family. Bill had never met her family, so they determined it
best to make an extended trip to New Zealand before starting his
career in the Soil Conservation Service. Their youngest son, Roger,
was nine months old at the time.

They made the trip aboard the HMS Oronsay, with stops in Hawaii and
Fiji, arriving in New Zealand in December 1953. Bill pursued post-
graduate studies at the Canterbury Agricultural College, in Lincoln,
South Island, New Zealand.

Prof. McCaskill was his councilor, whom was acquainted with the SCS
program in the U.S. and a friend of “Bones” Norton. Later Don
Williams, upon request by the New Zealand government, spent six
weeks in developing his recommendations for carrying out their Soil
and Water Conservation program. Bill still has a copy of his report.

Bill took out a patent pending for a folding, rolling shopping
basket, had 1,000 made, sold them after graduation in 1954 on a six-
week tour of New Zealand. The proceeds paid for their expenses in
New Zealand and trip back to the States in 1955.

Bill started his career with SCS at North Platte, Nebraska, in May
1955. He was assigned to the Alma, Nebraska, work unit in late 1956,
after being interviewed by each of the five Harlan County SWCD
supervisors, perhaps not a normal procedure but one resulting in
mutual respect and opportunities.

Bill Richards, Chairman, was Vice-President of the National
Association of Conservation Districts at the time and soon became
President. Dempsey McNeil, vice-chairman, was chairman of the
Nebraska Soil and Water Conservation Commission and LaSalle
Whitehead, Secretary, was Secretary-Treasurer for the Nebraska
Irrigators Association.

Bill later served as Area Conservationist in Flint, Michigan,
Resource Conservation and Development Coordinator in the Panhandle
of Nebraska and as Seed Production Specialist, for the small
livestock industry, Tunis, Tunisia. Bill retired in 1981 with 33
years of service including seven years with the U.S. Navy.

From 1982 to 1986 he was under contract with Utah State University
and Louis Berger International to implement a soil and water
conservation program for the Central Rangelands Development project
in Somalia. The program included: sand dune stabilization in 11
villages, establishment of three regional nurseries, well
rehabilitation and construction of dams and dugouts. Upon completion
of the Somalia tour, the Fobairs lived in Sedona for 13 years, then
moved to Cottonwood, Arizona, in 1998.

Bill and Joyce have traveled to 39 foreign countries, all states in
the U.S. except North Dakota, several provinces in Canada, Alaska
and Mexico. Bill traces his family history to Montreal and enjoys
genealogy and more recently, landscape design and consultation.

They celebrated their 67th wedding anniversary July 5, 2016.

Their oldest son, Roger, mechanical engineer, works for John Deere
at corporate headquarters, Moline, Illinois, and their youngest son,
Ralph is Technical Education Director, Mingus Union High School in
Cottonwood. Bill and Joyce have three grandchildren.

Bill feels he owes his success and an enjoyable career to hard work
and the shared experiences of many, many others with similar goals
he brushed paths with along the way.

An online guestbook is available to sign at
www.westcottfuneralhome.com

Information provided by survivors.




Note: These obituaries are transcribed as published and are submitted by volunteers who have no connection to the families. They do not write the obituaries and have no further information other than what is posted within the obituaries. We do not do personal research. For this you would have to find a volunteer who does this or hire a professional researcher.

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