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From our January 4, 2001,
edition.
Services
held for local banker Knorpp
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
One
of Clarendon’s leading citizens, Wesley Carroll Knorpp, died last
Thursday, December 28, 2000, in Amarillo at the age of 92.
Mr.
Knorpp was born on May 18, 1908, in Clarendon and was a lifetime resident
of Donley County. He married Gertrude Dorris Parr on May 19, 1932, at
Longbeach, California. She preceded him in death on May 11, 1994.
He
was employed at the Donley County State Bank in Clarendon from 1928 until
retiring in 1995 and was a bank officer.
Mr.
Knorpp was a long-time member of the Clarendon Lions Club and the
Clarendon Masonic Lodge #700. He was a member of the First Presbyterian
Church in Clarendon.
He
was one of the persons instrumental in the building and development of
Lake Greenbelt, serving on the board of the Greenbelt Water Association,
which became the Greenbelt Water Authority. He was president of the
Greenbelt board for many years.
Cremation
took place at Memorial Park Crematory in Amarillo on Friday, December 29,
2000. Arrangements were under the direction of Robertson Funeral
Directors, Inc., and Rector Funeral Home in Amarillo.
A
unique memorial service was held Saturday, December 30, 2000, in Robertson
Chapel of Memories with Dr. Buddy Hudson, family friend of Hurst,
conducting.
“Got
any good deals today?” Hudson asked, implementing a phrase that was a
trademark of Mr. Knorpp. He used to ask that rather than say hello,
friends recalled.
Friends
and co-workers of Mr. Knorpp told stories of his life and praised him for
his generosity, for being a man whose word was his bond, and for his warm
heart wrapped by a gruff voice.
“He
really wasn’t a big man,” said Hudson. “It just took all that skin
to hold his big heart.”
Mr.
Knorpp was credited with closing all of Clarendon’s banks on Saturdays.
Prior to his influence, local banks stayed open until noon on Saturdays.
He
was said to have considered his employees as his kids and provided them
with insurance and retirement benefits.
“Carroll
was my boss, and he was my friend,” said bank employee Mary Neal Risley.
Clarendon
attorney William J. Lowe also counted Mr. Knorpp as a friend, saying he
had given him one of his first jobs when he became a lawyer in the late
1940s. Lowe accompanied Mr. Knorpp on many trips to Childress for
Greenbelt board meetings.
“I
never saw Carroll get mad, and I never heard him say a bad word about
anybody,” Lowe said.
There
were no sermons, and no funeral songs were sung. The memorial service was
rather a gathering of family, friends, and admirers who had come to say
goodbye to a great man by praising the good things about him and his life.
Mr.
Knorpp is survived by one daughter, Dorris Bliss Knorpp of Clarendon; one
son, Wesley Parr Knorpp of Rowlett; three grandchildren, Niki Walker of
South Lake, Laurie Shafield of Santa Barbara, California, and Michele
Davis of Palestine; and ten great grandchildren including, Kesley, Logan,
and Miranda Walker of South Lake.
The
family respectfully requests that memorials be made to BSA Hospice, PO Box
950, Amarillo, Texas 79176-0950.
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