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Loren Myrian Greiner

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Loren Myrian Greiner Veteran

Birth
Hamilton County, Iowa, USA
Death
2 Apr 2016 (aged 108)
Burial
Emmetsburg, Palo Alto County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Loren Greiner
Born: March 09, 1908
Died: April 02, 2016

U.S. Veteran In Loving Memory
Loren Greiner
March 9, 1908 - April 2, 2016

SERVICE
Friday April 8, 2016
11:00 A.M.
Martin-Mattice Funeral Home
Emmetsburg, Iowa

CLERGY
Rev. Louie Q. Gall
First United Methodist Church
Emmetsburg, Iowa

Rev. Lyle Greiner, Nephew

INTERMENT
Evergreen Cemetery
Emmetsburg, Iowa

MILITARY GRAVESIDE RITES
V.F.W. Post #2295
Emmetsburg, Iowa

The family requests that memorials be given to V.F.W. Post #2295 in Emmetsburg, Iowa.

Loren M. Greiner was the oldest of six children of Charles Greiner and Effie F. (Doolittle) Greiner, of Hamilton County, Iowa. He was born on March 9, 1908, on a farmstead near Woolstock. Greiner enjoyed a long and illustrious life as an adventurous, curious scholar of mechanics, electricity, and nature. Between 1911 and 1917, the family lived near Lakefield, Minnesota, and when they returned, it was said, all their belongings were shipped in a railroad boxcar. It was near Lakefield that Greiner said he experienced a wild ride in a wagon, behind four horses, as he, his father, and the horses, were pelted with a heavy hailstorm.

After the return to Hamilton County, the family settled on a farm south of Blairsburg, just south of what is now Highway 20. Loren attended school in Blairsburg, and graduated from high school in 1926. He was one of the first in the county to own a radio receiver; a crystal radio set he built from an oatmeal can and wire from a design he found in the Boy Scout handbook. After high school, he attended Webster City Junior College, and studied teaching during a summer at Iowa State College in Ames. After this introduction to higher education he taught eight grades in a rural one-room school. After a year of teaching he returned to Iowa State to complete his Bachelor's Degree, and a Master's Degree in 1936, with a major in Soil Bacteriology. He was always proud of his Master's Degree thesis on The Effects of Drilling Small Amounts of Fine Limestone with Legume Seed on Acid Soils.

While at Iowa State, he lived in what is now known as Gilman hall. He earned his way through college by caring for the laboratory rats.

During this time, he was deeply moved by reports of the Dust Bowl; a devastating period of severe dust storms that destroyed much of the ecology of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Western Nebraska. He was fortunate to become a planner and supervisor of soil survey and research efforts in western Nebraska, on the north edge of the dust bowl. Loren became a soil surveyor for the U. S. Soil Conservation Service, where for 32 years he surveyed farmland in Nebraska and Iowa as part of the national effort to map farmland in the entire country.

Loren served in the U. S. Army during WWII, and was in the sixth wave of Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944. He continued to serve as a radio-operator on the front lines through France, and into Germany where his unit was among the first to liberate a concentration camp at Ohrdruf. The experience deeply affected him and in later years he wrote many essays about the experience, so that younger generations might understand why the U. S. fought the war and why our nation's involvement was so important. He received five bronze stars for his valorous service. He was Iowa's oldest veteran.

Loren met Alice Sweet, a chemistry teacher in Webster City, Iowa. The marriage took place in Madison, Nebraska (1942) because Alice's teaching contract forbade her from marrying. After WWII, the Greiners settled in Nebraska, with daughter Juanita born in Wahoo, in 1946; and Keith born in Lincoln, in 1948. Living in Pawnee City, Nebraska, Greiner worked for the Soil Conservation Service a USDA agency. He was instrumental in the discovery of a water supply for the community after a drought eliminated the source of water. He named the streets of the community of 1,600, invented a tool for taking soil samples, and built a remarkable Nebraska State Fair display showing the effects of soil erosion and the benefits of soil conservation.

The family moved to Emmetsburg, Iowa in 1960. Greiner retired from the Soil Conservation Service in 1968. After retirement, he served as the Palo Alto County Sanitarian for about 10 years, where he oversaw the approval of water supply wells and septic systems. He was a pioneer member of the Emmetsburg Senior Center and advocated for issues affecting senior citizens. He volunteered for Northwest Iowa Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE) for over 20 years. He was a member of the Masons for at least 60 years. He was an amateur radio operator, photographer, and enjoyed making precision weights.
NOTE: above info from obit from link sent to me by James Wilson and is very much appreciated.
Loren Greiner
Born: March 09, 1908
Died: April 02, 2016

U.S. Veteran In Loving Memory
Loren Greiner
March 9, 1908 - April 2, 2016

SERVICE
Friday April 8, 2016
11:00 A.M.
Martin-Mattice Funeral Home
Emmetsburg, Iowa

CLERGY
Rev. Louie Q. Gall
First United Methodist Church
Emmetsburg, Iowa

Rev. Lyle Greiner, Nephew

INTERMENT
Evergreen Cemetery
Emmetsburg, Iowa

MILITARY GRAVESIDE RITES
V.F.W. Post #2295
Emmetsburg, Iowa

The family requests that memorials be given to V.F.W. Post #2295 in Emmetsburg, Iowa.

Loren M. Greiner was the oldest of six children of Charles Greiner and Effie F. (Doolittle) Greiner, of Hamilton County, Iowa. He was born on March 9, 1908, on a farmstead near Woolstock. Greiner enjoyed a long and illustrious life as an adventurous, curious scholar of mechanics, electricity, and nature. Between 1911 and 1917, the family lived near Lakefield, Minnesota, and when they returned, it was said, all their belongings were shipped in a railroad boxcar. It was near Lakefield that Greiner said he experienced a wild ride in a wagon, behind four horses, as he, his father, and the horses, were pelted with a heavy hailstorm.

After the return to Hamilton County, the family settled on a farm south of Blairsburg, just south of what is now Highway 20. Loren attended school in Blairsburg, and graduated from high school in 1926. He was one of the first in the county to own a radio receiver; a crystal radio set he built from an oatmeal can and wire from a design he found in the Boy Scout handbook. After high school, he attended Webster City Junior College, and studied teaching during a summer at Iowa State College in Ames. After this introduction to higher education he taught eight grades in a rural one-room school. After a year of teaching he returned to Iowa State to complete his Bachelor's Degree, and a Master's Degree in 1936, with a major in Soil Bacteriology. He was always proud of his Master's Degree thesis on The Effects of Drilling Small Amounts of Fine Limestone with Legume Seed on Acid Soils.

While at Iowa State, he lived in what is now known as Gilman hall. He earned his way through college by caring for the laboratory rats.

During this time, he was deeply moved by reports of the Dust Bowl; a devastating period of severe dust storms that destroyed much of the ecology of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Western Nebraska. He was fortunate to become a planner and supervisor of soil survey and research efforts in western Nebraska, on the north edge of the dust bowl. Loren became a soil surveyor for the U. S. Soil Conservation Service, where for 32 years he surveyed farmland in Nebraska and Iowa as part of the national effort to map farmland in the entire country.

Loren served in the U. S. Army during WWII, and was in the sixth wave of Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944. He continued to serve as a radio-operator on the front lines through France, and into Germany where his unit was among the first to liberate a concentration camp at Ohrdruf. The experience deeply affected him and in later years he wrote many essays about the experience, so that younger generations might understand why the U. S. fought the war and why our nation's involvement was so important. He received five bronze stars for his valorous service. He was Iowa's oldest veteran.

Loren met Alice Sweet, a chemistry teacher in Webster City, Iowa. The marriage took place in Madison, Nebraska (1942) because Alice's teaching contract forbade her from marrying. After WWII, the Greiners settled in Nebraska, with daughter Juanita born in Wahoo, in 1946; and Keith born in Lincoln, in 1948. Living in Pawnee City, Nebraska, Greiner worked for the Soil Conservation Service a USDA agency. He was instrumental in the discovery of a water supply for the community after a drought eliminated the source of water. He named the streets of the community of 1,600, invented a tool for taking soil samples, and built a remarkable Nebraska State Fair display showing the effects of soil erosion and the benefits of soil conservation.

The family moved to Emmetsburg, Iowa in 1960. Greiner retired from the Soil Conservation Service in 1968. After retirement, he served as the Palo Alto County Sanitarian for about 10 years, where he oversaw the approval of water supply wells and septic systems. He was a pioneer member of the Emmetsburg Senior Center and advocated for issues affecting senior citizens. He volunteered for Northwest Iowa Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE) for over 20 years. He was a member of the Masons for at least 60 years. He was an amateur radio operator, photographer, and enjoyed making precision weights.
NOTE: above info from obit from link sent to me by James Wilson and is very much appreciated.


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