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Kenneth Darrell “K.D.” Pool Sr.

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Kenneth Darrell “K.D.” Pool Sr.

Birth
Needmore, Bailey County, Texas, USA
Death
17 Aug 2006 (aged 75)
Cleburne, Johnson County, Texas, USA
Burial
Cleburne, Johnson County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Funeral services for K.D. Pool, 75, of Cleburne, Texas, will be conducted at 10 a.m. Monday, Aug. 21, 2006, at the family home, 1301 County Road 429. The Rev. Ed Shipman will officiate. Burial will follow in Rosehill Cemetery. The family will receive visitors from 5-7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006, at Rosser Funeral Home.

Serving as pallbearers will be Cal Aaron, Karl Baumgartner, Leroy Jones, Jim Landreth, Jim McKenzie and Steve Thomas.

K.D. Pool died Thursday afternoon Aug. 17 at his home in Cleburne, Texas, at the age of 75 having "been blessed to have lived a life most people can't even dream of." He was born in Needmore, Texas, on May 13, 1931, the son of A.R. Pool and Alma Seals Pool.

A young man of 12 decided he wanted to have new clothes and new shoes to wear to school. Foretelling the man he would become, this young man decided that he would take responsibility. So he arranged to work for a neighbor helping to milk their cows, but he had to do his own chores on the farm where he lived first each day. That young man then begin to trade a windmill, a pony, a car and so the story of K.D. Pool began.

K.D. spent his life envisioning, building and nurturing business enterprises that spanned dozens of companies, states from the Mississippi to the Pacific Ocean, and numerous industries. As is true of real life, not everything went the way he wanted or expected. But he persisted so long as there was a chance and when there wasn't he stood up and started anew. Nearly 30 years ago K.D. found his place in life, a small community in North Texas called Cleburne. He came to help a friend and found a home.

If we only acknowledged the business of K.D. we would miss most of the picture. Ultimately, K.D.'s life was about people particularly it was about the guy next door. While he encountered the famous and powerful, it was the real people who make up a community he attended to. He built business to provide them with homes, cars, carpet and financing.

He had faith in those people and in his ability to judge them. The stories of how K.D. gave people a chance are literally innumerable. He did so not with an attitude of handouts but with an expectation that they take personal responsibility and treating them with dignity when they did so.

K.D. built his Cleburne businesses serving the housing needs of those with less income and those who needed a fresh start. He organized a group of like-minded business owners that became known as the "Buyer's Group" providing them with the ability to leverage their collective size to negotiate more effective pricing from vendors allowing them to offer the homes at lower prices.

He eventually orchestrated the sale of those businesses to a large national corporation. Not being one to sit by and watch life go by he then began to take homes that needed work and refurbishing and to offer those homes back to those who needed them. He leaves K.D.'s Land Company as a thriving enterprise under the guidance of his son and in the hands of his devoted employees with homes in communities all around Cleburne.

Throughout this rich and often tumultuous life he was accompanied by a wife he adored, Gaila Pool. They had two sons, Ken and Vince. He and Gaila held on to each other as they faced the early death of Vince from a random act of violence. He also became a doting grandfather to Melissa and Nick the children of Ken. At the time of his death he was fine tuning that skill with his great-granddaughter Kelsey.

The parties and good times that were had by visitors to K.D. and Gaila's home were things of legend. He reveled in sharing good times with friends. He also had a real love for traveling and always counted himself blessed for all of the world he got to see from Europe to Russia to China to the Holy Lands.

Knowing his life was coming to an end K.D. and Gaila contacted Happy Hill Farm Academy. This was a local program they had supported for several years. Happy Hill Farm Academy serves at-risk children. "Giving our children a chance to grow up in a Christian setting is the future for our community" according to K.D.

This summer they donated their 149-acre home and farm with miniature horses to Happy Hill Farm Academy to serve as a Johnson county campus to expand the ministry they so admired. It was his last gift to the community he called home.

K.D. is survived by all the lives he touched and by Gaila his wife and partner of 56 years; his loving son, Dr. Ken Pool and his wife, Terese; his grandchildren, Melissa Pool, Nick Pool and Brendan Hieber; Melissa's daughter, Kelsey; Tawnee Bicknell with her husband, Shawn, and their children, Audree and Boston; and loving relatives too numerous to name.

K.D. asked those who wish to make a donation in lieu of flowers consider donating to the Gaila and K.D. Pool endowment fund at Happy Hill Farm and Academy.

Condolences may be e-mailed to the family at [email protected].

Rosser Funeral Home

1664 W. Henderson St.

Cleburne, TX 76033

817-641-4800

www.rosserfuneralhome.net
Funeral services for K.D. Pool, 75, of Cleburne, Texas, will be conducted at 10 a.m. Monday, Aug. 21, 2006, at the family home, 1301 County Road 429. The Rev. Ed Shipman will officiate. Burial will follow in Rosehill Cemetery. The family will receive visitors from 5-7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006, at Rosser Funeral Home.

Serving as pallbearers will be Cal Aaron, Karl Baumgartner, Leroy Jones, Jim Landreth, Jim McKenzie and Steve Thomas.

K.D. Pool died Thursday afternoon Aug. 17 at his home in Cleburne, Texas, at the age of 75 having "been blessed to have lived a life most people can't even dream of." He was born in Needmore, Texas, on May 13, 1931, the son of A.R. Pool and Alma Seals Pool.

A young man of 12 decided he wanted to have new clothes and new shoes to wear to school. Foretelling the man he would become, this young man decided that he would take responsibility. So he arranged to work for a neighbor helping to milk their cows, but he had to do his own chores on the farm where he lived first each day. That young man then begin to trade a windmill, a pony, a car and so the story of K.D. Pool began.

K.D. spent his life envisioning, building and nurturing business enterprises that spanned dozens of companies, states from the Mississippi to the Pacific Ocean, and numerous industries. As is true of real life, not everything went the way he wanted or expected. But he persisted so long as there was a chance and when there wasn't he stood up and started anew. Nearly 30 years ago K.D. found his place in life, a small community in North Texas called Cleburne. He came to help a friend and found a home.

If we only acknowledged the business of K.D. we would miss most of the picture. Ultimately, K.D.'s life was about people particularly it was about the guy next door. While he encountered the famous and powerful, it was the real people who make up a community he attended to. He built business to provide them with homes, cars, carpet and financing.

He had faith in those people and in his ability to judge them. The stories of how K.D. gave people a chance are literally innumerable. He did so not with an attitude of handouts but with an expectation that they take personal responsibility and treating them with dignity when they did so.

K.D. built his Cleburne businesses serving the housing needs of those with less income and those who needed a fresh start. He organized a group of like-minded business owners that became known as the "Buyer's Group" providing them with the ability to leverage their collective size to negotiate more effective pricing from vendors allowing them to offer the homes at lower prices.

He eventually orchestrated the sale of those businesses to a large national corporation. Not being one to sit by and watch life go by he then began to take homes that needed work and refurbishing and to offer those homes back to those who needed them. He leaves K.D.'s Land Company as a thriving enterprise under the guidance of his son and in the hands of his devoted employees with homes in communities all around Cleburne.

Throughout this rich and often tumultuous life he was accompanied by a wife he adored, Gaila Pool. They had two sons, Ken and Vince. He and Gaila held on to each other as they faced the early death of Vince from a random act of violence. He also became a doting grandfather to Melissa and Nick the children of Ken. At the time of his death he was fine tuning that skill with his great-granddaughter Kelsey.

The parties and good times that were had by visitors to K.D. and Gaila's home were things of legend. He reveled in sharing good times with friends. He also had a real love for traveling and always counted himself blessed for all of the world he got to see from Europe to Russia to China to the Holy Lands.

Knowing his life was coming to an end K.D. and Gaila contacted Happy Hill Farm Academy. This was a local program they had supported for several years. Happy Hill Farm Academy serves at-risk children. "Giving our children a chance to grow up in a Christian setting is the future for our community" according to K.D.

This summer they donated their 149-acre home and farm with miniature horses to Happy Hill Farm Academy to serve as a Johnson county campus to expand the ministry they so admired. It was his last gift to the community he called home.

K.D. is survived by all the lives he touched and by Gaila his wife and partner of 56 years; his loving son, Dr. Ken Pool and his wife, Terese; his grandchildren, Melissa Pool, Nick Pool and Brendan Hieber; Melissa's daughter, Kelsey; Tawnee Bicknell with her husband, Shawn, and their children, Audree and Boston; and loving relatives too numerous to name.

K.D. asked those who wish to make a donation in lieu of flowers consider donating to the Gaila and K.D. Pool endowment fund at Happy Hill Farm and Academy.

Condolences may be e-mailed to the family at [email protected].

Rosser Funeral Home

1664 W. Henderson St.

Cleburne, TX 76033

817-641-4800

www.rosserfuneralhome.net


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