Obit: Nysted, Orville E. (1925 – 2014)
Contact:
stan@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Nysted, Holmes, Halling, Dahlby, Auth, Noeldner, Ursen, Finet
----Source: Tribune/Record/Gleaner (Abbotsford, Wis.) 13 Aug 2014
Nysted, Orville E. (10 NOV 1925 – 3 AUG 2014)
Orville E. Nysted, 88, a long-time resident of Colfax, left this earth for his
Heavenly home on Sunday, Aug. 3, 2014. Arrangements are being made for a
memorial service to be held at the United Methodist Church in Colfax.
Orville Edward Nysted was born on Nov. 10, 1925, in Bessemer, Mich., to Peter
and Tilla Nysted. When he was five years old, the Nysted family moved to Loyal,
and he grew up there. A member of the graduation class of 1944, he cut high
school short by enlisting in the U.S. Navy as soon as his 17th birthday in l943.
Unique to the patriotic days of World War II, his graduation diploma was
presented to his mother at the 1944 graduation ceremony as his other classmates
received theirs.
During his three-year term in the Navy he took his “boot” training at the Great
Lakes Naval Training Center and then served at the U.S. Naval Hospital at Great
Lakes. His next service was aboard the USS Hornet but he was reassigned to the
COMSERPAC at Pearl Harbor. He served there until he had nearly enough points to
qualify for discharge and was assigned to the USS Pocomoke, a seaplane tender.
Once the Pocomoke was “mothballed” at the Naval Yards in Philadelphia he was
returned to Great Lakes for discharge. In the fall of 1946 he began his college
years at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minn. As a junior at St. Olaf, he met
and fell in love with Mildred J. Holmes, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Lee Holmes of
Loyal, and they married the following summer. On graduation from St. Olaf they
moved to Des Moines where he had a job with the Home Insurance Company in its
crop insurance department. With the beginning of the Korean War, being a Naval
Reservist, he was recalled for active service in the Navy. In 1952 he received
his second honorable discharge and immediately moved to Iowa City, Iowa, where
he had registered at the University of Iowa to work on his masters degree in
education. In 1953 a job offer from the Home Ins. Co. persuaded him to return to
the crop insurance business, this time as a special agent working out of
Minneapolis. Two years later he was offered a job by Anchor Casualty Co. to
establish a crop insurance department for them. He enjoyed the challenges of
starting a new business. In 1964 he and wife, Millie, purchased and moved his
family to a farm near Colfax. He continued to commute to his office in St. Paul.
As the result of a merger in the company he worked for, Orville was able to
purchase the crop insurance department he had built and managed for many years,
and he organized North Central Crop Insurance Co. In 1978 he moved the company
to Eau Claire so he could be closer to the farm. He declared that the 14-year,
82-mile (one way) commute to St. Paul had at least proved that he was a
determined, stubborn Norwegian. North Central Crop Insurance had become a
substantial crop insurer doing business in five local states. Orville’s position
in the crop insurance industry extended beyond just running his own company and
included executive positions in the three major national crop insurance
organizations. These were the organizations that coordinated efforts to properly
establish premiums, properly pay claims, and improve the multi-peril insurance
program. He was also a member of an international crop insurance organization
which included Congresses in England, Germany, Switzerland, Holland and Italy.
He also joined with 11 other crop insurance executives in a State
Department-sanctioned trip to Japan and China to discuss crop insurance with
interested people in those countries. Mike Mansfield was then the ambassador to
Japan and he set up a meeting with the crop insurance people in Tokyo. In
Beijing, China, they met with Chinese statisticians who had preserved data from
their work thru the turmoil of the Mao Tse-tung era.
Both he and Millie enjoyed their many travels to Europe and even the Far East.
Orville retired in 1989 and he and Millie got involved in RVing. With
fifth-wheel trailers and motor homes they traveled most of the great USA.
Escaping the cold Wisconsin winters became part of their “sno-bird” lifestyle
throughout the past many years. Orville was a member of the American Legion, the
Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the United Methodist churches in Colfax and Sun
Lakes, Ariz. He loved to sing and was a frequent soloist. He was a charter
member of the Dunn County Barbershop Chorus and sang with the Desert Chordsmen
Barbershop Chorus in Sun Lakes. He loved to garden and his home in Arizona and
his farm home were accented with flowers. Orville was an outspoken Christian and
could recite examples of where God in his life had taken him by the hand and
directed him through problems and opportunities. He strove to lead a life that
would please the Lord. His faith assured him that Jesus had already paid the
price to provide him a place in one of those mansions in Heaven for eternity.
Survivors include his children, Kathleen (David) Holling, Mooresville, Ind., and
David (Bonnie) Nysted, Elk Mound; four grandchildren; five great-grandchildren;
three sisters, Mary Nysted, Birchwood, Jeanne Dahlby, Birchwood, and Wanda Auth,
Colfax; and one brother, Leonard Nysted, Highland Park, Ill.
Orville was preceded in death by his beloved wife, Millie; his parents, Peter
and Tilla Nysted; one brother, Julius Nysted; and three sisters, Margaret
Noeldner, Pearl Ursin and Violet Finet. Memorials may be directed to the Colfax
United Methodist Church, Colfax; or Hospice of the Valley, 1510 East Flower St.,
Phoenix, AZ 85014.
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