Posts Tagged ‘Oliver Sullivan’

To Serve with Honor

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

December 26, 2009
To Serve with Honor

Prayer can be a state of relaxation. My Dad used to swear by prayer as being essential for human life. Dad was an Agnostic who said he never once experienced something that proved to him of God’s existence.

“To whom do you pray then, Dad?”

“It doesn’t matter. It is the act of praying that is the important part.”

Most likely Dad would have had a few more things to say on that topic. Then he’d have closed with his usual question,

“Do you understand?”

I probably asked him to tell it to me one more time, to make sure I got the lesson. And I’d probably have proposed that there had to be something being prayed to or else it wouldn’t work. He’d have allowed that it might or might not be important depending on the person involved.

Dad was a mathematical genius. He attended one year at Montana State University in Bozeman studying Electrical Engineering. He worked that summer for the Rural Electrification Association (REA) running a survey crew or doing Electrical Engineering work of some sort. Then he attended one year at Caltech. Out of money he returned to Montana until he enlisted in the Army Air Corps.

He went one year at Caltech before the War. Then he came back from his duty station in the Weather Corps in Cairo, Egypt where he assisted the OSS in gathering intelligence from the coffee shops near Al-Azhar University.

Upon the recommendation of his OSS friend Joe, Dad read a newly translated version of the Koran. Joe, who new all of the Arabic dialects commonly spoken, said this particular translation best captured the essence of the Koran’s cultural teachings in its translation into English. Dad studied that Koran and swore that it was the most beautifully written book he ever read.

Having completed a year at Caltech, done his duty for his country by enlisting in the Army Air Corp (he later washed out and became an MP Sergeant (Military Police) for a time because he lacked the vision skills necessary to be a pilot, he returned to USA and went back to school on the GI bill. He received a Bachelor’s degree, from Stanford University, then returned to Montana to attend his father’s funeral, where he met Mom.

My Grandfather on my father’s side died about a year before I was born. Dad was attending his father’s funeral when he met my Mom who was there with her sister who was married to Dad’s younger brother Webb.

Dad’s name was Oliver and his younger brother was Webb (Wilber) and his youngest brother was Bob (Robert). They all joined up with the Army Air Corps, before it became the Air Force.

Webb went on to pilot many bombing missions in the Pacific. I never heard if Robert distinguished himself in the Second World War and he might even have been too young. I do remember hearing of him flying off a carrier deck in what may have been the Korean War. I’d have been six years old at the time and attending First Grade in Helena, Montana at the school that was a nine block walk towards town from the Clack Shack veteran’s housing where we lived at the time.

Aunt Pyhlis was married to Uncle Webb. They built a house in the Five Acre tracts of Livingston, Montana. I remember when the Interstate was being constructed just south of where Phyl and Webb had their place.

I think Dad said he met the Lumley girls (Alice, Ruth, Irene, Helen (my Mom), and Phylis) through their younger brother John. John was the baby of the family. Dad and John had become friends and over coffee one day John invited Dad to come with him to hear his older brother Art play the piano behind the vocals of Peggy Lane.

I think Dad said that Arthur or Art Lumley had top billing. But no matter. That was how Dad became acquainted with the Lumley girls and their older brother Art. The oldest boy Harold had died at six or seven years of age from complications after surgery.

And so it came to pass that Oliver Sullivan met Helen Lumley at his father’s funeral. He married her in June of 1949 and nine months later, by March of the following year, his only son was born, followed the next year by his first daughter, and two years later by his second daughter. Having accepted his wife’s daughter by a former marriage as his own, Oliver raised his three daughters and one son, beginning in Billings, Montana and moving to Helena, Montana upon his appointment as Commissioner of Labor for the State of Montana.

Oliver served as Commissioner of Labor for the State of Montana under Governor J. Hugo Aronson, who served from 1953 to 1961. Applying his social skills and his mathematical genius, Oliver had done political polling for Candidate Aronson’s run for political office. Oliver was appointed Commissioner of Labor in recognition of his ability to poll political opinion. His mathematical genius got him the appointment to work with the unions to keep the State out of harm.

“Go forth and serve with honor” were the only instructions Oliver received from Governor Aronson upon his appointment. Instructions from the Governor are not a trifling matter. To be given only one such instruction is an honor unto itself.

During Oliver’s term he became acquainted with the union bosses and he drank coffee with communists during the 1950’s, back when Senator Joseph McCarthy held hearings about the communists of USA who he said were conspiring to overthrow the government of the United States. Oliver is lucky he kept out of trouble in those days of communism “seeking a foothold” in USA.

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111C Oliver R. Sullivan

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

111C Oliver R. Sullivan
January 20, 2008 by Lyno Sullivan

The words “honor thy father” are important to me. This blog entry is devoted to the memory and the honor of my father, who passed away one year ago last Friday. I shall toast his 93rd birthday which occurs this coming Sunday, January 25th. Please read my letter if you wish but be sure to view the pictures and read the newspaper clipping at the end, which begins my father’s story.

I hand wrote the following letter. I have edited in additional information concerning my recent work presenting his ideas on coal to oil, science, technology, mathematics, politics, economics, and so on and so forth.

My dearest father,

Well, you died one year ago, on January 16, 2008 at the age of 91, nine days before your 92nd birthday. Next Sunday I plan to celebrate your 93rd birthday. I cannot give you a traditional birthday present but I thought to create a blog entry, so that my friends can get to know you by way of this written story.

In the year since your last birthday I wrote a blog post explaining most of what you taught me concerning coal to oil science and its economics. I advertised that blog entry at digg.com and received compliments for the usefulness of what I had written. I called the article “Coal to Liquid Fuel, Plastics, and Concrete”
http://peaceengine.com/blog/2009/01/16/1127-coal-to-liquid-fuel-plastics-and-concrete/

and I posted it at digg
http://digg.com/general_sciences/Coal_to_Liquid_Fuel_Plastics_and_Concrete

I wrote that story and now I want to tell the backstory because it is far more important than what I wrote. I remember you telling the coal to oil story beginning perhaps twenty years ago. Over the years until your stroke in May of 2007 you taught me everything I incorporated into that article. I got almost everything you had explained into that one article, except your work on using biological systems to harvest rare-earth metals from mine tailings.

To do that writing I must study your notebooks because you had your stroke partway through your Internet research. (Yep! Using wikipedia at the age of 91–my father was a marvel of clean living). Fortunately, you explained how you were working your way through the periodic table, studying your biochemistry books, and seeking the specific bacteria or algae with an affinity for each common and rare-earth metals. I can replicate your research pattern and quickly produce results suitable for a survey of the field biochemical and biological solution for all mining slurrys. I recently wondered about using variations of these systems to remove earth metals from the flyash byproduct of the coal to liquid fuel process.

I published the survey of field and now I am writing this letter to append to the work so that all readers might know that your work over the last twenty years has been my inspiration. I will soon begin the next phase of the publication of your stories, ideas, and your journals of discovery.

In these days of turmoil and fear, your visions, of the future of USA, will be a voice of calming. You were ever the optimist; people need more optimism.

It was difficult to watch a man of your stature grow old and transition through your mind loss caused by your massive stroke. I spoke to you by phone a few hours before you died and explained to you that that you were not able to return to your former mental abilities and that, as we had agreed, I was to see you through to a merciful end. I told you as your daughter held her phone to your ear, that you could go when you were ready and a few hours later you did as I had said.

“Dad,” I said, “you said that you did not want to live without your mind intact. I believe your mind is gone and is not coming back. You can die when you are ready. I love you. And I will love you until the day I die.”

In memory of a great man:

This blog entry contains photographs and clippings from the life of Oliver R. Sullivan. of Laurel, Montana.

Oliver with his dog
Oliver with his dog

Oliver with his brothers
Oliver with his brothers

Oliver with his brothers and a friend
Oliver with his brothers and a friend

Oliver with father and brothers
Oliver with father and brothers

Oliver 1942 Williams Field as Aviation Cadet
Oliver 1942 Williams Field as Aviation Cadet

Oliver with friend Eddie La Prath 1943
Oliver with friend Eddie La Prath 1943

Oliver returns from WWII
Oliver returns from WWII

Oliver R. Sullivan
Switchman Files For Legislature

Seeks Nomination On G.O.P. Ticket

Oliver R. Sullivan, a switchman at Billings for the Northern Pacific railway, filed his petition Saturday with the clerk and recorder for one of the six Republican nominations for representative in the state legislature.
Sullivan, who lives at Laurel, said that this is the first time he has sought public office. He is a veteran of the Second World war with four years’ service in the army as a meteorologist and weather observer, a year of his service being in North Africa.
The candidate is a native Montanan. He was born at Whitehall, Jan. 25, 1916, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Sullivan, and a few years later moved to Laurel with his parents. He graduated from Laurel high school in 1933, and is a formet student in engineering at Montana State college, and in mathematics and physics at California Institute of Technology. He also attended Stanford university last summer.
After two years at the state college, Sullivan entered the employment of the Montana Power company at Laurel and worked for the company in 1936 and 1937. He was an engineer for the Montana conservation board rural electrification branch in 1939 and 1940. When he entered the army in 1942 he had been with the Northern Pacific at Billings for two years. He is a member of the Billings lodge of the Brotherhood or Railway Trainmen.
Sullivan resides with his mother at Laurel. His father died of a heart attack two months ago.

Oliver runs for political office
Oliver runs for political office

To be continued . . .