Roger Weurding
October 9, 1921 - September 23, 2006
Dean Weurding's remembrances shared during the celebration of his father's life:
Dad will probably be a 
little embarrassed by all of this attention, but I’m sure he’ll understand.  My intent today is 
	to pass on some of the things that my Dad experienced in his life that had 
	more far-reaching effects than he probably ever could imagine.
	I think Dad must have 
	been somewhat mischievous as a youngster, and then later as an adolescent 
	and young man.  The stories were 
	slow coming from him, I heard most of them later in life, too late for me to 
	have put them to good use.  I’m 
	sure that was by design. A lot of the stories involved brothers or friends, 
	while he was just a bystander.  I 
	even believed that once in a while.
For instance, Dad and 
some friends, while students at 
There were the automobile 
stories.  Apparently, my Grandfather 
Weurding owned a 1935 Graham Paige automobile, a fine car with a supercharged 
engine.  For those non-motorheads in 
the crowd, a supercharger makes an engine produce a lot more horsepower than an 
engine without a supercharger.
My Dad said that you 
could hit 50 miles per hour in first gear, 80 in second, and who knows how fast 
in third.  He would quickly 
	add that this information came from his older brothers, as he was too young 
	to drive. Then he would talk about Grandpa being angry at the Firestone 
	rubber company, because the tires wore out so quickly. 
	Dad blamed that on his brothers also.
	I had mental pictures 
	of Dad and his brothers careening about the countryside, seeing what the car 
	would do.  But he was always 
	quick to relate a story in which he was driving way too fast and just missed 
	a car that pulled out in front of him. 
	He would say that his legs were shaking so badly, that he couldn’t 
	push the clutch in, so the car just stalled as he came to a stop.
	What a unique way to 
	pass on a lesson.  That was his 
	way of telling me that cars are fast and fun, but that you couldn’t hide 
	tires that wore out too quickly, and also that things happen way faster than 
	you think.
	When Dad was 21, he 
	joined the Navy, where he quickly developed into a proficient pilot. I loved 
	to hear about airplanes, flight training, aircraft gunnery practice, and his 
	various flying exploits.  Even 
	though I heard these stories countless times, I never got tired of them. 
	I liked to imagine 
	Dad in the magnificent machinery of the time, Stearman biplanes for 
	training, then the famed SNJ, Grumman Wildcat, and Grumman Hellcat.
Carrier landings sounded 
like fun, even though Dad lost many friends just in flight training. 
	Dad just days ago was telling people that a carrier landing was a lot 
	easier than it looked. 
	They say that the 
	early 20’s are the most enjoyable years of a man’s life, and Dad did his 
	best to prove that.  The Grumman 
	F6F Hellcat had a 2000 horsepower engine. 
	The Grumman Aircraft Company advertised that the Hellcat was capable 
	of over 300 miles per hour at sea level.
	Dad was always one of 
	those “don’t believe it ‘til I see it” kind of guys, and as the story goes, 
	his squadron would regularly test the performance of their machines along 
	the 
	Even though you 
	shouldn’t fly right at sea level due to the predictable effects of touching 
	the water at 300 miles per hour, 30 feet above sea level was judged to be an 
	appropriate altitude.  Dad would 
	chuckle while telling us that it was apparent that that people walking or 
	laying on the beach could not hear a squadron of Hellcats approach at 300 
	miles per hour, judging by their reactions.
	Of course, all planes 
	have ID numbers on them, so when he and his fellow pilots were quizzed about 
	the complaints from the local beach goers, they explained that it must have 
	been mistaken identity.  After 
	all, how anyone could read the numbers on a plane flying at such a speed?
	And if buzzing the 
	beachgoers got dull, you could always fly up the 
	Dad would say that 
	most rules were set with a little safety factor, so that you could bend them 
	a little, as long as you knew why there were rules, and adhered to the basic 
	principles.
	In later years, Dad 
	was quite an athlete from the sounds of things. 
	Basketball and softball were his specialties. 
	Dad played many years in the 
	Tales of how to 
	out-rebound a taller opponent by grabbing his shorts so they came off when 
	they jumped, or standing on their feet so they couldn’t get off the ground. 
	Waiting until the opponent jumped, then putting just a little 
	pressure in the small of their back to get them off balance. 
	“Nobody could out-rebound Lawt and I” he would say. 
He would talk about 
playing 
	Softball was also the 
	topic of many stories.  Those of 
	you who are old enough to remember when Jack Moss was sports editor of the 
	Kalamazoo Gazette may remember his occasional references to Bob Walterhouse, 
	apparently a legendary fast-pitch pitcher from 
	One of my favorite 
	stories was when Dad and Uncle Lawt played on a team that beat Walterhouse’s 
	team 1-0.  I was left with the 
	impression that it doesn’t matter who you are or where you’re from, you can 
	never be counted out.  Dad lived 
	that way, and always believed that.
Some of my first memories 
were wanting to go with Dad to the coffee shop, the hardware store, the post 
office and such on Saturdays. 
	Most times I could go, and soon I got to know just how many friends 
	and aquaintences he had.  I 
	remember too, that Dad never wore a coat. 
	He would just say “it’s not that cold out”.
I quickly observed that 
Dad was respected and liked by most people. Later in life, I observed that most 
days, Dad would be dressed in his Lawton Produce Company business attire, 
meaning salty overalls and t-shirt. 
	At times we wondered why Dad refused to get fancied up to go to the 
	bank, or come to a baseball or basketball game. 
	I remember hearing an explanation. 
	“If you need to impress someone by the way you look, they’re probably 
	not worth impressing”. 
	Speaking of the 
	Lawton Produce Company, that piece of Lawton history has faded into an 
	overgrown field, but was at that time a classroom in disguise. 
	I was too young to remember the move of the “pickle factory” from 
	along the railroad tracks near the Welch’s plant to the site on 
	Stories of loading 
	rail cars with barrels of cured pickles were intriguing. 
	I later appreciated how much work that must have been while, at an 
	early age, watching a lot of 
	Later on, this task 
	was done with a fork lift and bigger 20-bushel boxes. 
	After growing up a little, I got to learn first hand about hard work 
	at the pickle factory, spending countless hours shoveling dozens of 
	wheelbarrows of salt into the wooden tanks full of pickles.
	The full appreciation 
	of the hard work involved in this business came in the winter, when every 
	bushel of those cured pickles was removed from the tanks by my Dad, my uncle 
	Most of the human 
	resource activity, such as hiring, firing and discipline, was handled very 
	simply.  Dad would tell 
	prospective pickle-kickers, as they were called, “if you work hard, you can 
	keep your job, and the pay isn’t bad”.
	One sure way to get 
	fired was to get into a pickle fight, like a snowball fight, but using 
	pickles as weapons.  Wasting the 
	profits was a term I heard many times. 
	One warning, and then the second time you were probably done. 
	Luckily, I learned that lesson by watching.
	When things were a 
	little slow during the day, sometimes the help would relax and sit down to 
	enjoy a pop.  If we lingered too 
	long, rather than telling anyone to get to work, Dad and Uncle Lawt would 
	usually start cleaning things up, making repairs to machinery and such. 
	We usually felt guilty about the bosses working while we relaxed. 
	Another lesson, without them saying a word.
And Dad never shied away 
from doing the dirtiest of the dirty work, which Mom’s laundry basket would 
attest to.  I don’t know 
	how many “kids” the Lawton Produce Company employed over the years, but I 
	would bet many of them learned some good work habits there. 
	Dad led by example.
	As I reached my 
	middle teens, and started keeping a later schedule, I would notice Dad would 
	spend at least 12 hours a day at work, then stay up very late just pacing 
	the kitchen.
	Many a pack of 
	cigarettes would vanish in these late night sessions, which I later learned 
	were spent mulling over what the sale price of pickles should be, whether 
	buying or selling.  Some things are 
	worth losing sleep over, I learned.
	When pickles weren’t 
	“in season”, Dad was able to get away with Mom for entertainment, going out 
	for evenings to Lake Brownwood to dance with friends, or heading away for a 
	weekend to Chicago or New York. 
	The group loved to 
	have a great time, and once in a while, Dad or one of his friends would have 
	to have a diplomatic discussion with an officer of the law.
	Once again, Dad’s 
	understanding that the officer had a job to do, and respecting that fact, 
	usually resulted in a warning to behave themselves. 
	The principle of mutual respect of others’ jobs and opinions was 
	deeply rooted in Dad.
	The family vacations 
	were a source of much learning. Topics included navigation skills, how to 
	execute several illegal U-turns before arriving at your destination, and the 
	deeply ingrained belief most people who were native to the areas that we 
	visited went by names that probably shouldn’t be repeated here.
	And that those 
	particulars Canadians known as “Quebecers” really could speak English if 
	they wanted to, but they just didn’t like us. 
	Also, all of the roads in 
	In later years as my 
	family and I vacationed, we visited many of the same places, and I would 
	related these stories.  Derek and 
	Brent certainly understood, as they were experiencing some of the same 
	traits.  I’ve gotten very good a 
	U-turns myself, probably some kind of hereditary trait.
	Dad helped me build 
	two houses.  His work ethic and 
	building skills were indespensable. 
	The second of the two was built when Dad was 70, and many people were 
	shocked at how hard he would work, even when the temperature was in the 
	90’s.
Sometimes we would have 
discussions about how straight and square a house needs to be. 
I don’t know if we ever agreed, but we got the job done. 
One night, I showed up after work to pick up where Dad left off that day, 
putting shingles on the roof.
I was surprised to see 
that some of the rows that he had put on were extremely crooked. 
Not wanting to hurt his feelings, I took those rows back off after he 
left, and re-laid them, which took a few hours, but I never planned for him to 
know.
The next night, when I 
showed up, he chuckled as he asked how long it took to remove and re-lay the 
shingles.  “You didn’t think I was 
going to leave them that way do you?” 
We shared many a laugh about the shingles over the years.
There are so many things 
that I would like to share about my Dad’s personality and character, but most of 
you already know, in fact that’s the reason you’re all here, I guess.
I realize that I’ve 
rambled on a bit, so I’ll  finish up. 
I can’t help but wonder whether the adventures made the man, or the man 
made the adventures.  In either case, 
I think it’s important today to smile and laugh as we remember the character 
with character, Roger Weurding.
