He graduated from high school in 1940 and moved to Lane City, Texas that same year. He moved to San Diego in 1941. There he met his wife, Ola in a swinging door, knocked her down, picked her up and after 71 years were still together. He was in San Diego when Pearl Harbor was attacked. He went into the Army Air force in March 1943. Doc was discharged from La Guard General in New Orleans after eighteen months and one day in the Army. He went back to his former employer, but in Fort Worth instead of San Diego. Doc was quickly promoted to inspector for the U.S. Government.
When the war ended, he was one of the first twenty veterans on the Texas A&M University campus. Doc majored in agriculture education and graduated in two years and eight months. Doc taught in Huntington, Redland, Wharton, the Dominican Republic, Gause, Texas A&M University and Boling. Because of health related conditions, he retired after thirty-one years.
Who would have ever thought he would live to his nineties? He has been active in Church, Rotary as a Paul Harris Fellow, City Government, Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture, Wharton Beautification Commission, Chairman of the Southern Pacific Railroad Depot Restoration Committee, and murals to name a few. When asked why he does so much, he said he would rather wear out than rust out.
In addition to his parents, his sisters, Mary Elizabeth Barfield Foster, and Katherine Dell Barfield Ritter preceded him in death along with brothers, Earnest Lee Barfield and Huey Herd.
Burial was held in Evergreen Memorial Park Cemetery in Wharton.
He graduated from high school in 1940 and moved to Lane City, Texas that same year. He moved to San Diego in 1941. There he met his wife, Ola in a swinging door, knocked her down, picked her up and after 71 years were still together. He was in San Diego when Pearl Harbor was attacked. He went into the Army Air force in March 1943. Doc was discharged from La Guard General in New Orleans after eighteen months and one day in the Army. He went back to his former employer, but in Fort Worth instead of San Diego. Doc was quickly promoted to inspector for the U.S. Government.
When the war ended, he was one of the first twenty veterans on the Texas A&M University campus. Doc majored in agriculture education and graduated in two years and eight months. Doc taught in Huntington, Redland, Wharton, the Dominican Republic, Gause, Texas A&M University and Boling. Because of health related conditions, he retired after thirty-one years.
Who would have ever thought he would live to his nineties? He has been active in Church, Rotary as a Paul Harris Fellow, City Government, Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture, Wharton Beautification Commission, Chairman of the Southern Pacific Railroad Depot Restoration Committee, and murals to name a few. When asked why he does so much, he said he would rather wear out than rust out.
In addition to his parents, his sisters, Mary Elizabeth Barfield Foster, and Katherine Dell Barfield Ritter preceded him in death along with brothers, Earnest Lee Barfield and Huey Herd.
Burial was held in Evergreen Memorial Park Cemetery in Wharton.
Family Members
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Advertisement