Funeral services for
James Thurman Furry, 96, of Brownwood, will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday, May
4, 2016 at the Heartland Funeral Home with Rev. Shanna Neff officiating.
Interment with Military Honors will follow in the Windham Cemetery. The family
will receive friends from 5 to 6 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.
Mr. Furry passed away
Friday in Brownwood surrounded by his loving family.
James Thurman Furry was
born on Dec. 22, 1919 in Byrds to Claude Franklin and Bertha Ann Mallone Furry.
On Dec. 8, 1940 he married Odessa Mae McGuire in Grosvenor and she preceded him
in death on Feb. 24, 1997.
James entered the Army
Air Corps on Nov. 29, 1943 in Dallas. After proudly serving our country during
WWII, he was honorably discharged as a Corporal at Sheppard Field on Nov. 2,
1945. He attended Daniel Baker College in Brownwood, worked in the oil industry
and was a Petroleum Engineer with Russell Engineering in Abilene, when he
retired in 1981.
Survivors include three
daughters, Thurlene Joy Price and husband Roy of Cloudcroft, N.M., Linda
Darlene Payne of Brownwood and Judy Kay Trollinger and husband Michael of
Brady; a daughter-in-law, Ginger Furry of Silver City, N.M.; nine
grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; and numerous great-great-grandchildren,
nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by his son, Larry Wayne Furry of Silver City, N.M.; three sisters, Thelma Adele
Furry St. Ama, Jewell Elizabeth Furry Wyatt and Emily Claudean Furry Windham;
and by one brother, Charles Troy Furry.
James was The Three Sisters' 5th cousin. His gggg grandparents were Charles Powell Jr. and Leah Goldman through their son Dr. David Powell. Around the time of the Civil War, David Powell migrated from Northern Missouri to Collin County, Texas.
James' descendant from David Powell is:
1. David Powell / Lucinda Shoemaker
2. William Elliott Mallone / Mary Polly Powell
3. David Powell Mallone / Martha Ann Byrd
4. Charles William Mallone / Emily Taylor
5. Claude Franklin Furry / Bertha Ann Mallone
6. James Furry...
James, in his own words, from our Powell Times and Lines newsletter, 1995.
I was born and grew up on the farm owned by my
Great-Grandfather Mallone. I lived the
good ole country life that I love to re-live in my thoughts. I was back and forth between Brownwood and
that farm until I entered the service.
Odessa [his wife] lived between these two placed.
My grandfather Charles William (Buck) Mallone lived in the
house where I was born. I was his first
grandchild and he was my buddy. He taught
me to hunt and fish, where to set my traps, to train my dogs, and where the ole
catfish was hiding and how to catch him.
The only time I ever heard Granny and Granddad have words was when he
traded a fat hog for a little old pot-bellied bluetick hound pup for me. Granny almost ran us off the place.
I spend 35 years working in the oil fields, the last 15
years as aa production supervisor. I had
no training, I just went out and did the job.
I had been trained in business and accounting. My brid of 54 years and I raised four great
children. After our last child was born,
1951, I started doing family research and have been hooked on it every since.
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