Obit: Steiner, Francis #2 (1925 - 2011)
Contact:?Audery Roedl
Email: audery@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Steiner, Petrowitz, Hales, Garbisch, Fenolio, Maastricht
----Source: The Loyal TRG (Loyal, Clark County, Wis. 30 Mar 2011)
Steiner, Francis (20 APR 1925-28 MAR 2011)
Francis C. Steiner, 85, Granton died at 6:15 p.m., on Monday, March 28, 2011, at Neillsville Care and Rehab. Visitation will be held from 4-5 p.m. (with a Knights of Columbus Rosary at 7:30 p.m.) on Friday, April 1, at Gesche Funeral Home, Neillsville, and then again on Saturday, April 2, from 9 a.m. until the time of services at 11 a.m., at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Neillsville. Burial will take place in Windfall Cemetery. Loyal American Legion Post 175 will conduct military rites at the cemetery.
Francis C. Steiner was born on Aug. 20, 1925, in Mauston, to Alfred and Dorothy (nee Petrowitz) Steiner. He attended country school and graduated from Mauston High School in 1943. He later earned a degree in agriculture from Platteville University, After high school graduation, he worked two years on the home dairy farm and w as drafted into the Army and spent his service time at Camp Joseph T. Robinson, Little Rock, Ark. Following an honorable discharge, he returned home and enrolled in Platteville University. He married Jeanette M. Hales on July 9, 1953, at St. Stephen’s Catholic Church, Chili. They lived in Granton their entire married life. He spent 39 years teaching agriculture classes at the Granton High School. He retired in 1988 and then taught in the agricultural department of Mid-State Technical College in Marshfield for 10 years. To service central Wisconsin farmers, he was a part-time state-certified seed inspector for 50 years. He was known for his public relations work, which included doing a farm interview radio show, "Let’s Visit Your Neighbor," on WCCN radio for 23 years and being a local area newspaper reporter for more than 40 years. This included his weekly quip in The County Today. He spoke at farm banquets throughout west central Wisconsin for more than 265 years. He was a lector in his church and taught a weekly catechism class when his children were young. He and his wife with the help of his family, operated Steiner’s Variety Store in Granton from 1972-82. He was active in many organizations including the Wisconsin FFAAlumni Association, which he served as Wisconsin State President in 1995-96. He was also active in the Knights of Columbus, Loyal American Legion Post 175, the Clark County Historical Society, Granton Rotary Club (a Paul Harris Fellow), National Farm Medicine Center in Marshfield (where he helped set up the farm hearing test for rural youth), Wisconsin Association of Vocational Agriculture Instructors (WAVAI), Wisconsin Retired Teachers Association, and the Granron Park Committee. He was also an active member of the Clark County Fair and served on the Fair Board from 1956-2000. In 1986, the state named him the Top Fairman of the State for his active participation in the fair. He won many awards in his agricultural endeavors, which included honorary awards and legislative citations. In 1977, he was named Wisconsin Outstanding FFA Alumni member. Other honors included 1983 Granton’s Honored Citizen; 1985 Wisconsin’s Vo-Ag Teacher of the Year; 1986 Wisconsin Easter Seal Volunteer of the Year; 2000 Granton Fall Festival’s Parade Marshall and Founder’s Award for his 50 years of service; 2000 Wisconsin VIP award for his FFA accomplishments; and 2006 Wisconsin Association of FFA Hall of Fame inductee. He spent countless hours helping his students achieve top honors and winning grand champion animal ribbons in the ring. He trained two national soil judging teams. He was just as elated to see "his" kids win as they were. He was known in central Wisconsin as "Mr. FFA." He always listed his top achievements as being named one of the top six agriculture instructors in the nation by his peers; writing a 200 page book entitled Recollections of a Country Kid which sold more than 1,500 copies; originating the well-known Granton Fall Festival which he chaired for 50 years; serving as Wisconsin FFA Alumni president; and organizing and teaching the largest farm night class in the entire state with more than 100 farmers enrolled.
Survivors include his wife, Jeanette, Granton; his five children, Sharon (Orville) Garbisch, Granton, Greg (Wendy) Steiner, White Bear Lake, Minn., Kevin (Linda) Steiner, West Bend, Shiela Fenolio, Appleton, and Ann (Jim) Maastricht, Sun Prairie; and fourteen grandchildren, Kristen, Becky, Ben, Aaron, Ellie, Peter, Andrew, Logan, Jack, Liz, Will, Chris, Darin, and Carmin. He will be deeply missed by his children as they waited each
For the down-home family newsletter he has written to them since 1976.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made in his name to funds to enhance the new Granton School Forest (located next to the school buildings); National Farm Medicine Research Center or the Parkinson Foundation.
Online condolences may be made at www.geschefh.com.
The Gesche Funeral Home, Neillsville, is assisting the family with funeral arrangements.
© Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998.
Show your appreciation of this freely provided information by not copying it to any other site without our permission.
Become a Clark County History Buff
|
|
A site created and
maintained by the Clark County History Buffs
Webmasters: Leon Konieczny, Tanya Paschke, Janet & Stan Schwarze, James W. Sternitzky,
|