Cover photo for Floyd Holmes's Obituary
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1916 Floyd 2021

Floyd Holmes

January 13, 1916 — February 13, 2021

Floyd Arthur Holmes (or Arthur Floyd Holmes, it was never clear which) passed away peacefully at his residence at Grandwood Assisted Living in Grove, OK on February 13, 2021, exactly one month after celebrating his 105th birthday.  Floyd to family, and ‘FA’ or simply ‘Holmes’ to his friends, was born on the family farm near Prescott, KS, the third child of Arthur and Florence Holmes.  He was preceded in death by his wife of 55 years, Carroll, his two older siblings, Hazel Grigsby and John Holmes, and two younger siblings, Ned Holmes and Mildred Holmes, who died in childhood.  He is survived by his youngest sister Florine O’Rourke of Lawrence, KS; six nephews, two nieces, and many grand-nieces and nephews and their descendants.

Floyd was remarkable in many ways, not least by his energy, sense of humor, and amazing memory.  Well past his centennial year he could still name all the US state capitols, all the counties in six states, and the names of almost all the members of the sports teams he competed against as a student, and the names of the minor league baseball players whose teams he followed during his.  As though to emphasize his remarkable mental acuity, he spontaneously recited, verbatim, the poem When the Last Picture of the Earth is Painted by Rudyard Kipling for family and friends at his 102nd birthday celebration.  He used to be fond of saying that he spent the first 30 years of his life getting an education, the next thirty working for someone else, and the last thirty playing golf and enjoying himself.  Even he did not foresee his longevity.

After attending a one-room grade school and graduating at 16 from high school in Prescott, KS (Class of 32), Floyd worked at farming and tried his hand at the wheat harvest in western Kansas.  But his innate curiosity soon led him to attend Fort Scott Community College and then Kansas State University, where he obtained Bachelor and Masters degrees in entomology.  He was proud of the fact that on a class field trip while at K-State he discovered the largest known fossil of a dragon fly.  Half of the fossil resides in the collections at K-State and the other half at Harvard’s Museum of Natural History.  In 2016 he was honored by K-State for his still legendary discovery.  He was a proud KSU Wildcat and endowed a scholarship in entomology at K-State for a graduate student working on economic entomology issues that would benefit agriculture.  It was while he was a student at K-State that he met the love of his life, fellow student Carroll Buck.  While on leave from the army he and Carroll were married in Garnett, Kansas in 1943. He quickly returned to duty and spent most of the rest of his wartime service in the Pacific theatre with the army medical corps.

After discharge from the army following the war, Floyd secured a position with DuPont chemical company as a pesticide specialist.  In many ways a dream job, it kept him outside, working with people, and on the move.  He and Carroll had posts in Yakima, Washington, Brigham City, Utah, Oberlin, Ohio, South Bend, Indiana, and finally and longest, in Los Gatos, California.  Active, well-known, and a leader in his professional role in California, he and Carroll were equally well known at many of the leading golf courses in California.  He was particularly pleased at their recognition for each of them having made a hole-in-one on the same hole at the same course in the same year.

Following his retirement, he and Carroll elected to relocate closer to family.  They built their retirement home in Buffalo Shores on Grand Lake near Grove, Oklahoma so, as Floyd said, they could golf and fish at their leisure.  They stayed in Buffalo Shores until Carroll’s death in 1998.  At that time, Floyd moved into Grove.  Despite the loss of Carroll, Floyd’s enjoyment of travel did not diminish, and for a number of years his traveling companion was his sister-in-law, Eileen Funk, who had lost her husband some years before.

In 2015 Floyd moved to Grandwood Assisted Living in Grove, OK.  In 2017 he was pleased and honored to serve as Grand Marshall of the Grove Christmas Parade, and this year Grove’s mayor declared his 105th birthday Floyd A. Holmes Day.  A fitting tribute to the acknowledged ‘Oldest Man in Oklahoma’.

The family wishes to extend our heartfelt and sincere appreciation for the extended care provided to Floyd by the remarkable staff of Grandwood Assisted Living and by Hospice Compassus during his final days.

A memorial graveside service will be held 2 pm Saturday, April 24, 2021 at the Holmes Cemetery.  Online condolences can be left at www.schneiderfunerals.com.  Arrangements:  Schneider Funeral Home and Crematory, Pleasanton Chapel.

To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Floyd Holmes, please visit our flower store.

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Saturday, April 24, 2021

Starts at 2:00 pm (Central time)

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