Gordon Dean Hartrick

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Service Schedule
Memorial
Leslie Methodist Church
Walnut Street
Leslie, AR  72645
Saturday, April 12, 2014
3:00PM
Memorial Contributions
Leslie Methodist Church
PO Box 389
Leslie, AR  72645
Gordon Dean Hartrick

of Leslie, AR

May 13, 1915 - April 9, 2014

Gordon Dean Hartrick
May 13, 1915 • April 9, 2014

The kindest and most decent of men, Gordon was the most curious and the smartest person in any room; he had a remarkable breadth and depth of interests and knowledge, and he was filled with joy for just about everything. He cared and loved deeply.

Gordon was born 13 May 1915 in Stettler, Alberta, Canada, to Maver and Lila (Dean) Hartrick. He grew up in Canada, but finished high school in East Detroit, Michigan.

Gordon graduated from East Detroit High as salutatorian of a class of 250 after his father abandoned the family; there were no jobs, so Gordon rode the rails for two years looking for work.

Then Franklin Roosevelt started the Community Conservation Corps camps and they saved Gordon's family. Gordon and his brother Howard both worked in the CCC, and the money they sent home enabled Lila to survive and finish raising his youngest brother.

Gordon worked his way through the University of Michigan, finishing with a Master's degree in forestry. In 1940 he married Alma Seely, who was also working her way through the University of Michigan as a zoology major. Gordon took a job in far-off Ashley County, Arkansas, with The Crossett Company, the first southern logging company to hire professional foresters to implement perpetual sustainable harvest practices.

Over the years, Gordon was a church and community leader as well as a distinguished forester.

He was particularly proud of three successful projects: He started the Tri-Ed School in Hamburg, for children with disabilities; daughter Betsy was among the first students. He founded the Ashley County Sheltered Workshop, providing work opportunities for adults with disabilities. And he raised the funds to purchase the 1918 David E. Watson home in Hamburg for the Ashley County Museum.

Gordon was president of the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce when they got a shirt factory in the county. The factory employed mostly wives of seasonal woods workers, and its presence substantially improved their standard of living.

He became a Freemason of the state of Arkansas when he and Alma retired to their beloved mountain in Stone County in the Ozarks. This was not easy because he had trouble memorizing; he and Paul Drummond worked for a long time to manage the memory requirements for Masonry. He was a member of Lindsey Lodge #292 of Timbo, and an honorary member of Wiley Cove #524 of Leslie. He held every office in the Lodge, and was Historian for many years; he researched and presented Masonic history stories at every Lodge meeting.

Over the years, Gordon had a profound if quiet influence with many people. For years, a ham showed up every Christmas, from a man who Gordon had helped to quit drinking and repair his family relationships. A local Ku Klux Klan leader quit because Mr. Gordon didn't approve. A young people's Sunday school class he taught produced two Methodist preachers and several community leaders.

Among many other things, he was a member of the state Soil Conservation Board, president of the Arkansas Society of American Foresters, honored by the Arkansas State Fair Board with Gordon Hartrick Day at the State Fair, and was Arkansas Rotarian Man of the Year in 1973.

Alma died in 1996. Two years later, he was surprised to find that he had fallen in love with Cogie Ann. They celebrated 16 years of marriage a few weeks before his death.

Gordon was a saint of the church, both formal and informal. He represented his local church, first Hamburg United Methodist Church, and later Leslie UMC, at Annual Conference, for more than fifty years. He taught Sunday School from the time he was 16 until he was 96, with the exception of his time in the CCC and early on in their time in Arkansas. He kept his Sunday School book and his Bible beside his chair and worked on his lesson off and on through the week. His life was itself testimony to the goodness and love of God. He preached occasionally in rural United Methodist churches; his sermons were carefully reasoned and written out on yellow lined paper. The best sermon he ever preached, he preached in Leslie while Alma was dying of cancer. His topic was ''Are We Born to Die?'' He concluded that we are not born to die, but are born to eternal life; and so it has come to be for him.

It is no coincidence that one of his last words was "joy," spoken of his children likely both his children and the broader category, including the many foster children that he and Alma cared for (something that resulted in the Klan burning a cross in their yard, after someone saw Alma helping the child welfare worker take a black child to a doctor in Pine Bluff). He rejoiced in the delights of the world, of nature, of his friends, of his family.

He was predeceased by his parents; brothers Robert Arthur Hartrick and Howard Walter Hartrick; first wife Alma (Seely) Hartrick; son Frank Dean Hartrick and daughter Betsy Carolyn Hartrick. He is survived by his wife Cogie Ann Hartrick, children Holly Hartrick Childs of Fayetteville, Susan (John) Welch of Leslie, Alice (Michael) McBee of Leslie, Heather Hartrick of Mountain View, Nancy Hartrick Stafford of Leslie, Fred (Shari) Hartrick of Dallas, Texas, Jeanie (Herbie) Stuart of Bastrop, Louisiana, Robin (Karen) Hartrick of Bastrop, and Joe Ann Collier of Hamburg; many grandchildren, great grandchildren, loving friends and relatives.

A memorial service will take place on Saturday, April 12, 2014, 3:00PM at Leslie Methodist Church in Leslie, Arkansas. James Lann and Mike Proctor are officiating.



Memorial contributions may be sent to Leslie United Methodist Church, POB 389, Leslie AR 72645.


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5 Condolence(s)
Chris & George Mecham
St. Petersburg/Leslie, AR, FL
Liked
Saturday, April 12, 2014

Gordon, our neighbor in Oxley, our former Sunday School Teacher...our friend. We loved our time with Gordon & Cogie Ann whenever we visited or they visited at our home. We are blessed to know him and our memory of him will always be with us and he will not ever be forgotten. Gordon was and is such a bright light for so many of us, he remains that way now.
Prayers to all of his family and friends. We will see you again.....
Love, the Mechams
Chris & George

Doris Williams
Timbo, AR
Liked
Friday, April 11, 2014

Gordon was a very learned Bible scholar and I learned much from his Sunday School classes. But more than that, he was a caring, loving person. He will be missed by many for a very long time.

Syd Caldwell
,
Liked
Friday, April 11, 2014

I knew mr Hartick through Holly and remember meeting him in Harrison. So sorry for the family.

Ginger Limerick
,
Liked
Friday, April 11, 2014

My deepest sympathy to the Hartrick family in the loss of your father and grandfather. He was a lovely gentleman and it was a blessing to have known him.

Norman Smith
Mtn. View, AR
Liked
Thursday, April 10, 2014

Though I only knew Brother Gordon a few years I feel richer for having known him. He was my brother and my friend and I shall miss him dearly.