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Richard Lowe - World War II

Richard Lowe grew up during the Great Depression on a southern Illinois farm, then spent World War II in the Navy. He served on the destroyer USS Wadsworth, which saw action in several of the most important naval battles in the Pacific theater. Following the war he returned to Illinois, went to college on the G.I. Bill, and spent a long and productive career teaching ag. and ag business courses both at the high school level and to farmers in the St. Elmo area of southern Illinois. In that capacity, he helped modernize Illinois farming during an era when farm yields were exploding.

Interview Links

Abstract

Interview Session 01 (Audio)

Early life on the farm, Navy training and initial experiences in the Navy

Interview Session 02 (Audio)

Navy experiences during WW II in the Pacific and return to ag education

Interview Session 03 (Audio)

Life as a high school agriculture teacher and agricultural innovations


Photos

Caption
The Lowe family in the early 1940s. Pictured are (top row, left to right) Carroll, Richard, Don, father Charles Cecil (CC), mother Agnes; (front row, left to right) Clara, Doris, Dorothy, and Mary.

Where:
Unknown

When:
early 1940s

Ownership:
Narrator's photos



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