bmonthly November 2021

Page 26

FEATURE SPONSOR STORY

Rags to Riches Hard Work and Determination Were Key for Kenneth Pfaff by Debbie Neece, Bartlesville Area Jistory Museum Sometimes it takes a community to save a child and Bartlesville has long been about community. Kenneth Pfaff was not born to riches but through grit and determination, he overcame poverty to become a notable Family Practice and Emergency Medicine Physician as well as a Lt. Colonel in the U.S. Reserve Medical Corps. Pete and Fannie Pfaff struggled to raise five children during the depression and Oklahoma dust bowl days. Life was extremely difficult and the family moved often in search oil work. They settled in Bartlesville in 1928 and Ken, last of the five children, was born at the Memorial Hospital in 1930. Three years later, Fannie died of appendicitis, leaving three minor children: Emma (10), Thurman (7) and Kenneth (3). Their father could not care for the children so they were sent to the Methodist Children’s Orphanage in Newton, KS. Emma was adopted by a Bartlesville couple, while Thurman (12) and Kenneth (9) returned to Bartlesville and became one of five sets of brothers under the care of the Kiwanis Boys’ Club from 1939 until they lived at the Y.M.C.A., 1943-1949. Ken was deeply humbled and appreciative of Jo Allyn Lowe and Fenton Bisel, role models who offered desperately needed mentoring guidance. He worked the front desk, dispensing towels and locker keys to pay for his Y.M.C.A. room and when Terry McGowan promoted boxing events at the Municipal Stadium, Ken boxed on the card as “Mickey McGowan.” At sixteen-years-old, he dropped out of school to join the 82nd Airborne Division and received his parachute wings at seventeen with thirteen jumps to his record. He returned to Bartlesville, lived at the Y.M.C.A. and graduated from College High School in 1949. At eighteen, he stood before Washington County Judge J.T. Shipman, with Fenton Bisel at his side, petitioning the court for legal adult status granted to 21 year old adults. The peti26

bmonthly | NOVEMBER 2021

tion was granted and Ken set forth on adulthood. He returned to military service (1951-1953), married and had three children. While struggling to support his family, he completed his education at Denver’s University of Colorado School of Medicine, graduating in 1963 with his Doctor of Medicine degree. He was an A.B.F.P. board certified family medicine physician and certified in trauma and cardiac resuscitation, serving for thirty-three years. Service ran deep in his being. From 1990-1991, he was medical officer for the 82nd Cavalry (Mechanized) Heavy Tank Battalion, Oregon Army National Guard on twenty-fourhour standby for Desert Storm. In Kenneth’s own words: “Through those hard depression years, with its day-to-day subsistence and poverty, the example of Jo Allyn Lowe, Fenton Bisel, Pop Brewer and many other community leaders who served on boards of civic groups and by their steadfast compassion leavened the harshness of life, and by the precept of their lives taught us that the highest calling in life is human service. In my life, that was the impossible dream of medical practice, the highest calling of all. What a wonderful gift these men gave to the children of Bartlesville. They exemplified the current concept in education—that no child shall be left behind.” Kenneth Pfaff died in 2012 and I am proud to have been his friend … he left the world a better place.


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Articles inside

Giving Back: Grave Interest in Honoring the Dead

6min
pages 83-84

Tell Me Something Good: Heaven on Earth

2min
pages 79-82

Funny You Should Ask: The Things We Do for Love

6min
pages 76-78

Knowing Nowata: Emma McGruder

3min
pages 73-75

On the Osage: Putting Fairfax on the Map

2min
pages 67-68

A Fresh Perspective: WWII Hero Lived a Quiet Life

4min
pages 65-66

Sports: Bartlesville Has Got It All

3min
pages 59-60

Unsung Heroes: Al Rohleder

3min
pages 61-62

Once Upon a Time: Taking the Right Turn

2min
pages 63-64

Business Spotlight: The Dynamic Trio

4min
pages 57-58

Entertainment: Aaron Ray Vaughan

2min
pages 55-56

Now You Know: Vietnam Fallen ... Roll Call

1min
pages 48-50

Local Business: Cosmetics that Last

2min
pages 53-54

From the Heart: Have Courage to Change

4min
page 41

Looking Back: Horse & Buggy Doctor

2min
pages 51-52

A Good Word: THANKS is life GIVING

3min
pages 42-43

Military Careers: Colonel Ken Suggs

7min
pages 36-37

Feature Sponsor Story: Rags to Riches

2min
pages 26-27

Chick-fil-A Events Calendar

11min
pages 31-34

Feature: Vietnam War

22min
pages 16-25

Meeting a Need: Veteran Resources

2min
page 35

War Stories: The First Fallen Soldier

2min
pages 13-15

Profile: Sharon Reese

4min
pages 8-10

In Memory: Chapel of Grace

3min
pages 11-12
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