                                                              |
|
OBITUARIES
Jean and Dick DeWine
Jean
Ruth (Liddle) DeWine died on Oct. 28, 2008, at home in Yellow Springs.
She was 83 years old. Her husband of 65 years, Richard Lee DeWine, died
shortly after on Saturday, Nov. 1, also at their home. He was 85 years
old. For many years, they were the owners of DeWine Seeds and the Ohio
Twine Company in Yellow Springs.
Jean was born on June 16, 1925, in Princeton, N.J.,
to Dr. Albert W. and Ruth P. Liddle. At the time, her father taught literature
at Princeton University. His love for Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Milton
instilled in Jean very early on her lifelong love of words and books.
In 1927, traveling in a 1925 Model T, Jean, her parents, and sisters Dorothy
and Judy, moved to Yellow Springs, where Dr. Liddle accepted a teaching
position at Antioch College. When they arrived, the house they were to
live in was not ready to inhabit, so, being the adventurous family that
they were, they pitched a tent and camped for about two weeks in Glen
Helen near Birch Creek Cascades.
Jean attended the Antioch School as a youngster and
later graduated from Bryan High School in 1943. Growing up, she enjoyed
spending time with her sisters, being especially close to younger sister
Judy. Jean loved to ride the family horse, Cheyenne. Once, when Cheyenne
needed to be boarded, an 11-year-old Jean rode the horse solo from Yellow
Springs to Wilberforce, some seven miles away, using only the directions
and map that her father drew for her.
Jean’s parents and sisters went on many exciting
adventures together, despite the hard times of the Great Depression. They
spent most summers at her paternal grandparents’ farm in upstate
New York near Argyle, so her father could help with the farm work. It
was an idyllic place for a child. Some of her fondest memories were of
those visits to the farm, including climbing up on top of ice in the ice
house on hot summer days, riding a hay wagon, and walking to get groceries
at the local general store. Jean also loved to frequent the barn to watch
her grandparents milk the cows. Later, she would fondly remember her grandmother
milking three cows to her grandfather’s one!
Jean’s parents desired very much for their daughters
to experience the world around them. They worked hard to be able to travel
to interesting places. They took a cross-country trip in 1936, pulling
a trailer across the United States, camping all summer in the West. The
following summer, the family traveled to Europe.
Down the street on Xenia Avenue, not far from where
Jean’s family eventually moved, lived the George and Alice DeWine
family, including children Dick, Jerry, and Mickey. Dick was born on Feb.
18, 1923, in their home, which is the present-day location of the Winds
Café Wine Cellar. George and Alice ran a feed store next door,
and right from the start, Dick’s life became intertwined with it.
As a young boy growing up in the heart of Yellow Springs,
Dick met a cast of color-ful characters who would frequent the feed business
— locals who would shape his lifelong curiosity about and interest
in people. Always a hard-worker, Dick would do anything that needed to
be done at the feed store, from loading and unloading trucks to delivering
feed to local farmers. By age 14, Dick was driving his dad as he called
on customers.
Dick attended elementary school in Yellow Springs and
graduated from Bryan High School in 1941. When Dick was 17 and still in
high school, his best friend went away for the summer and asked Dick to
look after his girlfriend — 15-year-old Jean Liddle. Dick did —
and he and Jean were inseparable forever after. They married on Sept.
2, 1943, when Jean was 18 and Dick was 20.
Their marriage brought the DeWine and Liddle families
close together. Dick’s siblings Mickey and Jerry were much younger
than he, but he always looked out for them. He and Jean, along with Jerry
and Mickey and the Liddle family, enjoyed spending a lot of time together,
whether it was going camping or attending one of Mickey’s piano
recitals. In fact, Jean used to babysit Mickey and Jerry and later Jean’s
sister Judy did, as well.
After marrying, Dick and Jean lived in Sabina, Ohio.
At just 18, Dick started running the grain elevator there until he went
into the U.S. Army as a private in 1944. Before going overseas to fight
in World War II, Dick trained at Camp Joseph T. Robinson, North Little
Rock, Ark. Jean followed him there, working at a five and dime store while
he trained. Dick went to Europe with his army company — K Company
of the 409 Regiment of the 103rd Infantry Division, 6th Corps of the 7th
Army. The company saw combat in France, Germany, and Austria.
Dick and his company were sent to the Dachau concentration
camp shortly after it was liberated in spring 1945. Throughout his life,
he never forgot the horrific things that they saw there. He also never
forgot the men with whom he served, having maintained friendships that
spanned six decades. On the day the fighting ended in Europe, Dick was
in Innsbruck, Austria, where locals greeted him and the other soldiers
with a shower of flowers. Meanwhile, Jean celebrated the German surrender
by riding on a fire truck in an impromptu parade down the streets of Yellow
Springs.
Dick was discharged from the army in April 1946, and
later served as commander of the Thomas Edwin Bailey Post #357 of the
American Legion in Yellow Springs, where he was very active, especially
in raising money to fight polio. When he came home from the war to his
beloved Jean, he joined his parents’ business, and in time, would
run it. Out of that little office and mill, with Jean right there working
at the front desk, they turned the company from a local feed, coal and
seed business into an international trading giant and the country’s
leading exporter and importer of seed grains and grasses.
Dick was a brilliant negotiator, trader, and investor,
who built DeWine Seeds and the Ohio Twine Company on close personal relationships
— whether they were with local farmers, seed dealers, elevator operators,
or international businessmen. These relationships, which he maintained
until his death, allowed him to keenly understand the markets and to gather
information to make trades and deals across the country and around the
world in places as different as Uruguay, Poland, and Ireland. Dick was
a real dealmaker. It didn’t matter if he were buying a new lawnmower
or selling seed in Europe, no one was better than Dick.
In January 1947, Dick and Jean’s son, Richard
Michael (Mike) DeWine, was born. Dick and Jean were devoted, loving parents,
who taught Mike much about life by their own example. Dick taught his
son to fish and hunt and to love Cincinnati Reds baseball, Dayton Flyers
basketball, and Ohio State football. Jean taught him to love books and
the importance of finely crafted words and sentences. She also taught
him how to debate and argue.
Dinner table conversations in the De-Wine home covered
many topics, including current affairs and politics. Both Dick and Jean
were always interested in politics. In the early 1960s, after seeing several
of her letters to the editor in the Yellow Springs News, then-editor Keith
Howard persuaded Jean to write a weekly column articulating a conservative
viewpoint — a position that was not especially mainstream in Yellow
Springs. She titled her column, “A View from the Right,” and
wrote it for a number of years with wholehearted support and encouragement
from her husband and son.
In 1959, Dick and Jean built a home on 24 acres on
the edge of Yellow Springs on Fairfield Pike. They purchased the property
(part of Whitehall Farm) from Martha Rankin, rebuilt the dam that had
been blown in 1912, and created a pond, which attracted countless ducks
and Canada geese. They spent years converting a pasture field into a mosaic
of grape vines, berry thickets, vegetable and flower gardens, and fruit,
nut, and stately trees, including sugar maples, spruce, red oak, hemlock
and bald cypress. Dick grew many of the plants himself in the greenhouse
he built with bricks from the old St. Brigid Church, which he, Jean, and
their grandchildren gathered after the 1974 Xenia tornado.
It was here that Dick and Jean put each of their eight
grandchildren to work as they were growing up, teaching them how to weed,
paint fences, prune trees, pick apples, cherries, and raspberries and
mow grass. Dick and Jean were both extraordinary teachers who taught their
grandchildren how to enjoy hard work and appreciate a job well done.
They adored spending time with their grandchildren
(and eventually their 11 great-grandchildren). Dick would tell amazing
bedtime stories to them when they were young, as they lay in a trundle
bed — stories about leprechauns and fantastic characters like the
“Flying Mouse,” the “Giant Goose,” and “Brendan
O’Callahan.” Jean, or Mama as she would come to be known,
would do word puzzles with them and read books to them and write amazing
rhyming poems on their birthdays.
Dick and Jean so enjoyed their life together. After
selling the seed business, Dick and Jean began to buy farmland. Having
been involved in agriculture his whole life, Dick especially loved the
land. He and Jean collected antique barbed wire and old farm implements
and tools, which lined his office and later their barn. They loved to
travel to Ireland to visit the places from which Dick’s ancestors
had emigrated to Yellow Springs in the 1840s. Dick and Jean were also
very active in their support of the Becky DeWine School in Haiti, run
by Father Tom Hagan and Hands Together, as well as Dr. John Peterangelo’s
humanitarian efforts in Belize.
Over three years ago, Dick was diagnosed with pancreatic
cancer, which he battled heroically. Jean was always there for him. He
was a fighter, repeatedly defying the odds and more than one doctor’s
prediction. Despite his illness, Dick never stopped working — and
never stopped looking ahead to the next venture and next project. He was
truly an optimist, who loved life immensely and looked forward to each
new day that he had with Jean and their family. For over 65 years of marriage,
Dick and Jean DeWine loved each other and took care of each other.
Dick and Jean are preceded in death by an infant son;
granddaughter, Becky De-Wine; Jean’s parents, Albert and Ruth Liddle;
Dick’s parents, George and Alice DeWine; Jean’s sister, Dorothy
Vandiver; Dick’s brother, Jerry DeWine; brother-in-law, Lee Hennessy;
Jean’s grandparents, Charles and Emma Liddle and Franklin and Mary
Perkins; and Dick’s grandparents, Tom and Mary DeWine and John and
Gertrude Budd.
They are survived by their son, Michael, and daughter-in-law,
Frances; grandchildren, Patrick, Jill (Bill) Darling, John (Michele Burns),
Brian (Kali), Alice, Mark, and Anna; great-grandchildren Michael, Matthew,
and Brian DeWine, Albert, Isabelle, David, Caroline, Justin, and Mary
Darling, and Josephine Jean and Rebecca DeWine; Dick’s sister, Mickey
(Dick) Harwood; Jean’s sister, Judy Hennessy; sister-in-law, Polly
DeWine; niece, Juliet (Chris) Waldron; nephews, Kevin (Mary), Nick, Brian
(Kelli), and Kelly (Heidi) Hennessy; and countless friends.
Arrangements are being handled by Neeld Funeral Home
in Xenia. A mass of Christian burial for both Jean and Dick was held at
St. Paul Catholic Church, 308 Phillips Street, in Yellow Springs, Wednesday,
Nov. 5, at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that memorial contributions
be made to the Becky DeWine School in Haiti, c/o Hands Together, P.O.
Box 80985, Springfield, MA 01138.
|
|