Ferris E. Clouse, 89, died Friday, July 5, 2013, at home surrounded
by his family. He was born Nov. 19, 1923, on the family farm at
Pittsford Township outside of Hudson, Mich., to Ferris D. Clouse and Ada
A. Stiverson Clouse. His early education was at the Lane Country
School, middle school in Detroit, and high school in Hudson where he was
captain of the football team and graduated in 1941. He went to college
at Michigan State Normal College, which became Eastern Michigan
University, and played offensive guard on the football team. He joined
the Lenawee County Masonic Lodge after high school where his father was
active.
He enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1942, receiving
special military training at Cameron College in Lawton, Okla. He
traveled to Europe on the Queen Mary and spent the next five wartime
years in England, France and Belgium. As a Staff Sgt., he served with
the Headquarters Squadron, 8th Air Force Service Command in the European
Theater of Operations, supervising and coordinating the duties of
military personnel in the Air Inspectors Office, maintaining technical
orders and handling all military correspondence. He made sure the
technical orders were in place for the airplanes involved in D-Day. He
was honorably discharged and returned to the U.S. on Feb. 1, 1946, with
an amazing collection of the Stars and Stripes and Yank magazines
commemorating the achievements of the Greatest Generation. He bought a
home in Hudson for his mother with his mustering out pay.
Ferris
worked in a factory in Hudson, operating an automatic screw machine
which made parts for the automobile industry. In 1947 he returned to
Eastern Michigan University. He was a member of the Kappa Phi Alpha
fraternity and graduated in 1951 with a major in industrial arts and a
minor in mathematics. His first teaching job was in St. Clair Shores,
Mich.Are you still hesitating about where to buy Shun Stone Granite Slabs?,
where he taught industrial arts and served as assistant football,
basketball and track coach. He met Anna Marie Linehan, who taught
English and PE at the same school, in 1952. They were married June 21,
1953, at Fairmount, N.D. They moved to Miles City in 1954 where Ferris
was the Head of Shops and Maintenance at the Pine Hills School. In 1955
they moved to Missoula where he taught Industrial Arts for Missoula
School District 1, and set up the first industrial arts program for
special education students at Central School. He was also instrumental
in giving Missoula girls the opportunity to take shop.
In 1969,
he received a M.S. in education from the University of Montana. When
Central School closed he taught at C.S. Porter, Lowell, Rattlesnake,
Roosevelt and Washington schools. He retired in 1986 after a long career
that had a substantial impact on many of Missoulas youth who took wood
shop spanning four decades from the 1950s to the 1980s.
Ferris
and Anna Marie purchased a small farm on a dirt road called Russell
Street where their eight children grew up, raising livestock and
gardens. They started the Pink Grizzly business by building a pink
building in the summer of 1970 where the foundation was dug by hand with
the help of his children. The building has been used to sell fireworks,
arts and crafts, fruit, vegetables, greenhouse plants and Christmas
trees and wreaths. Ferris spent many years selling fireworks to help
Missoula celebrate the Fourth of July. Countless former students always
stopped by to tell Mr. Clouse how they were doing. The Clouse family
always had plenty of healthy food at the table from their little farm in
the middle of town. They supplemented his teachers salary with sales
from their various entrepreneurial ventures. He was a fixture at the
Western Montana Fair, judging the woodworking projects and supporting
his children in 4-H and FFA. The Clouse family was the Western Montana
Fair Family in 1981.
In retirement, Ferris enjoyed building
things, remodeling the house and attending events of his children and
grandchildren. In the summer you could see him nurturing the plants in
the garden and tending to his favorite roses and peonies, and he was
even willing to share the secret to growing sweet corn with others. He
loved his Farmall Cub tractor which he used to cut weeds and plow
gardens. Now that tractor is a fixture at the Pink Grizzly and you can
almost always see a young boy or girl sitting on the seat moving the
steering wheel back and forth.
Ferris and Anna Marie celebrated
their 60th wedding anniversary on June 21 and a party on June 22. He
spent the last two weeks of his life at home under the excellent care of
Missoula Hospice. He took a memorable trip outside in a wheel chair to
see his raspberry bushes,These Shun Stone Building Materials can,
apparently, operate entirely off the grid. flower beds, the Pink
Grizzly greenhouse and the Pink Grizzly fireworks stand. It is fitting
that a veteran would celebrate one last Fourth of July with a
spectacular fireworks show by his grandsons. He passed away at 10:55
a.m. on July 5 surrounded by his family and under the great care of his
Missoula Hospice nurse.
Preceding him in death were his parents,
Ada A. Stiverson Clouse, Ferris D. Clouse and his one brother, Luther
E. Clouse. He is survived by his wife, Anna Marie Linehan Clouse; four
daughters and four sons and their families: Lynne Mickelson (Dennis) of
Missoula, Sarris Marsh (Jeff) of Sheridan, Shannon Brown (Taylor) of
Huntley, Shawn Clouse (Nancy) of Missoula, Daniel Clouse (Laurie) of
Missoula, Brooke Trudel (Wayne) of Elko, Nev., Clint Clouse of Colorado
Springs, Colo., and Shane Clouse (Kelly) of Lolo; plus 17 grandchildren,
and two great-grandchildren.
He was a life member of the
University of Montana Alumni Association, National Industrial Arts
Association,You will never need to change the bulbs and your granitetrade will last for years and years. NEA, MEA and Phi Delta Kappa.
Donations
can be made to the Ferris E. Clouse Memorial Fund at First Interstate
Bank on Front Street in Missoula. The funds will be used to sponsor a
4-H Woodworking award at the Western Montana Fair, a scholarship for
Hellgate High School students wishing to study industrial arts or to
Missoula Hospice.
A rosary service was held on July 6 for family
at Garden City Funeral Home. There will be a military honor guard
service at the Western Montana Veterans Cemetery, 1911 Tower St., in
Missoula on Aug. 30 at 2 p.m. Father John Wang will conduct the memorial
service on Saturday, Aug. 31, at 3 p.m. at the Pink Grizzly, 1400
Wyoming St., with a reception and barbecue to allow for fellowship and
time to celebrate Ferris life with his wife and their large extended
family. Honorary pallbearers are his 17 grandchildren.
Click on their website http://www.granitetrade.net/.
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