Header: Header: Header:

Our Fathers And Their Children

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing March 2022

My father-in-law, Dr. Woodward D. Lamar, best known as Woodie, died on Thursday morning, February 24, after a brief illness. He was, as the obituary stated, “99 years of ageless.”

It takes a sharp mind to come up with a line like that, but Woodie’s daughter and my wife, May, as anybody knows her knows, is very sharp, and she was the one who wrote her dad’s obituary, which wasn’t a surprise because she, too, is a lifelong journalist and author and has written hundreds of obituaries through the years.

Following Woodie’s death, up until his burial, it was four days of mostly great food, great companionship, great memories and mostly at our house in Montgomery, Ala., the city where Woodie was born and died, and where he practiced dentistry.

Several people commented to me that Woodie’s death was the “passing of an era,” and the main reason they said that was because he served during World War II as a U.S. Navy pilot and Lieutenant. He was the last living of seven siblings, all boys except one, many of them serving during World War II, including a brother, Claude, a First Lieutenant who flew bombers in the U.S. Army Air Forces and was shot down late in the war in the Pacific. His name is on the Walls of the Missing in the Manila American Cemetery.

American journalist Tom Brokaw popularized the term, The Greatest Generation, with his book of the same name, referring to those who experienced the Great Depression and either went into military service during World War II or honorably served the war effort in others ways on the home front.

My dad, Thomas Marshall Donnell, was part of this “greatest generation.” He served as a Master Sergeant in the U.S. Army Air Service Group, was stationed three years in the Pacific and received two bronze stars.

My dad died at 65 back in 1982, still a young man upon his death compared to Woodie. But they shared similar traits. Both great family men, including wonderful, lifelong spouses. Both great sports fans, having played a lot of ball during their youth. Both with successful careers (my dad was in finances with Ralston Purina). Both rarely talked about their experiences in World War II. Both could get a little political, but put more worth in a good round of golf with their wives followed by a Scotch and water.

My father-in-law was blessed to be able to experience nine grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. It was several of those great-grandchildren, including my daughter’s two daughters, who naturally commanded much of the attention at our house during the visitation, and who preciously intercepted any of our slips into sadness and turned it into gladness. Woodie had been able to celebrate his 99th birthday last Halloween with many of them, and in some days before his death was able to talk briefly with his grandchildren.

I know that Woodie did, and my dad would have appreciated the depiction as “the greatest generation,” but they also shrugged off such glittering generalities. I also know that they had confidence that the generations that followed them, in particular the members of their families, would live their lives just as completely and also with the best of intentions.

Latest News

Weyerhaeuser Buys 69,000 Acres

Weyerhaeuser is purchasing 69,200 acres of high-quality Alabama timberlands from Soterra, a subsidiary of Greif, Inc., for $149 million. The acquisition comprises highly productive timberlands in southwest Alabama, 100 miles north of Mobile…

Georgia-Pacific Finishes Strong

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-In-Chief, Timber Processing March 2021 – When the largest privately held company in the U.S., Koch Industries, purchased publicly-held Georgia-Pacific Corp. in 2005, the lumber leadership at GP who came to Koch with the…

Humboldt Sawmill Gains Biochar Certificate

Utilizing major cogeneration residual, Humboldt Sawmill in Scotia, Calif. has obtained a European Biochar Certificate, the first U.S. based company to do so. Through the production of biochar, a byproduct of its Scotia, California cogeneration plant, Humboldt Sawmill is providing a sustainable product that can be added to soils by farmers and other landowners to aid in…

Interfor Is Purchasing WestRock Summerville Sawmill

Interfor is acquiring the WestRock sawmill in Summerville, SC for US$59 million. The Summerville mill produced 125MMBF in 2020. A new permit was received in 2020 that allows for the production of up to 200MMBF and Interfor has identified a number of operational and capital investment initiatives to optimize and…

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.