by Rick Norton
California, USA
Dad’s life seemed typical of his generation. He graduated from high school during the depression and worked for a large corporation. He enlisted in 1941, served in the Pacific and Europe.
On returning he met his soul mate, married and had three children. Again at his prior employer, he needed to continue his education. With his full-time job, home maintenance, and attending to his family, he attended college in the evening and obtained his BS degree Summa Cum Laude.
With we three kids on our own, Dad and Mom retired to the Florida panhandle. Two years later Mom died, in 1990.
Northwest Florida has no palm trees or yachts. It’s semi-agricultural. Education is often a luxury, with attendant illiteracy. Dad rattled around his house, tried golf and failed to see why some become addicted, then saw an ad requesting literacy volunteers.
Dad helped a prisoner learn to read, a parole requirement. He helped another man learn to read because his literate wife was going blind. Then he found his true calling.
Dad began as a volunteer teacher’s aide in a third grade class, helping children with spelling and grading papers. He graduated to the fifth grade, helping with spelling and math. Again Dad graduated with his class into sixth grade. As the school converted to departmental teaching, Dad assisted the math teacher.
We kids only knew what Dad told us. During chilly winters he lamented unfortunate kids in just T-shirt and shorts. He was saddened by children with nothing under the Christmas tree. He loved the kids and school and hated summers, so he tutored.
Called “Grandpa”, he even wore a hat emblazoned “Call Me Grandpa”. He said the kids kept him young.
At eighty eight, after ten years commuting 30 miles to school in his sputtering 1979 Chevy, his legs weakened. He was admitted to a Rehabilitation Center for physical therapy to improve his muscle tone. One spring afternoon during a nap, he passed away peacefully.
At his memorial service, his students eulogized him with a 15-minute video tribute. They compared him to George Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life” for the 1200 student lives he touched. He inspired “his kids” to learn.
At the reception we heard: Thanks to your dad… “My son got his first A in math,” “My son won the spelling bee,” and “My daughter won the citizenship award”. Plus, none of “his kids” came to school in winter without at least one pair of pants, a warm shirt and jacket. Nor did Santa miss any house, despite Dad’s fixed income.
He received numerous awards from the State of Florida, the county and schools. The Chamber of Commerce named him Citizen of the Year. We found newspaper clippings and video tapes of TV interviews.
His work was done without fanfare, from the richness of his heart. I hope to live as long, die as peacefully and leave half the legacy. I also hope his life inspires you as it has me.
THIS IS AWSOME
Sorry! Hit the thumbs-down button by accident! He is a wonderful person and I wish I could be the guy he was. -Tom
You can Tom.
Thank you
Well, drats. Someone has to be cutting onions around here.
TeeHeeHee 🙂
Well ya gave me a chuckle with that comment. Well. Done. !!!
What a wonderful role model! What a blessing to so many!
What a wonderful story. It brought tears to my eyes, not because this generous man died, but for what he accomplished with his help. I would die happy if i could have his legacy. What joy your stories bring. There are many people similar to this man. Let me find a way to be more like him ?
A great story of all times. It add values to our lives. Thanks
This is a great story and very helpful for my school work.
I’ve read this over three times, and I don’t see the name of the person being honoured! Am I blind, or is it really not there?
The author’s father, so all we have is “Dad” (or Grandpa 🙂 ) Norton.
Thanks, Leo, I figured that out.
It just seems so odd: the author wants to honour someone, yet doesn’t give the person’s name.
I was going to use this in our church newsletter, but without a verifiable source, it goes in the category “nice story, but could be just fiction.”
Hi Leo,
Since much I have learned about computers I learned from you, I am fully confident that if I could find this info, that you could have – but I don’t have hundreds (thousands?) of people coming to me with their computer questions every day (and when they, I “refer” them to you!)
This is what I found as a verifiable source for “Grandpa” Norton:
http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00028312/00028/4x
In case the link does not work for some reason, you can find him by using the following information. The article appeared in Washington County News (Florida) on April 9. 2005. “Grandpa’s” full name is Richard T. Norton, born July 20, 1916 in Elizabeth, NJ. He passed away on April 1, 2005. He spent most of his years volunteering at Roulhac and Chipley schools.
Thank you for all you do – not only with regard to technology, but also to sharing healthy and positive news stories!
Carl
It made me cry. :'( I am at work right now.
The story of your dad was inspiring. It inspired me most to do good, to help others and to strive hard. How i wish I meet him and became one of his students if not I WANT HIM TO BE MY GRANDPA.
Thank you for the story. Very uplifting