Tag Archives: Robert Lawrence Hess 1924-2017

Hunting – A Rover story by Robert Lawrence Hess

The Hess family orchard and farmhouse were located in Benton Harbor, MI
The Hess family farm in Benton Harbor, MI where Robert Hess grew up in the 1920’s and 30’s

Hunting 

(written for children who like to hunt) 

Linda transcribed this story as it was told to her by her father, Robert Hess. 

I had a dog named Rover. Rover was my hunting dog, he was always hunting for something.  Sometimes, he would hunt for me, and occasionally we would hunt for each other. 

Hunting is the very best thing to do, because when you hunt, you never know what you will find. Rover  and I used to find many interesting and sometimes scary things. 

As I said, Rover could talk. There was a reason Rover could talk. Long ago, while hunting for a way  home, we happened to find a happy old elf, hunting for his suitcase lost in the field. As I think about it,  the elf wasn’t happy when we first found him, but he was happy when we left him. Elves life to reward  people, and this fellow knew that nothing would please me more than to be able to understand what  my hunting dog had to say. So that is why Rover could talk. 

Talking-hunting dogs make for a very interesting hunting trip. A hunting trip with Rover was something  to look forward to and almost always something to remember. 

One time my hunting dog and I went hunting in the big woods. The thing about the big woods was  mostly how big they were and being big made the other side seem very far away. I had an old truck and  when we hunted on the other side, we put our tent, food and anything else we might use into the truck.  We then drove to where we thought we ought to hunt. 

As I said, when we hunted we never knew for what we were hunting. This was nice, because it was  always such a surprise to find what we were hunting for. 

On this trip, we did not find anything in the beginning, but as we thought about it, one never finds  anything in the beginning because finding always comes at the end. 

After the beginning but before the end, we became very hungry, and so we got out our food. We built a  hunter’s dinner. Just then along came a black bear of great size. Rover and I decided that the bear must  have been hungry too. We decided this because he ate all of our hunter’s dinner. We also decided that  we must be bear hunting, and so I had Rover bring my gun. Just as I was going to shoot this bear, Rover  

said, “Wait!” I could see that Rover had an idea and he wanted me to wait until he thought of it. 

Meanwhile, I asked the bear if he would get into the truck, thinking to myself that he might be too heavy  to lift if I shot him where he stood. The black bear seemed not only happy but anxious to step into the  truck, for his bear nose told him that the rest of the hunter’s food was in the truck. Rover and I always  took a lot of food because hunting always made us very hungry and we never found anything to eat.  The bear got into the driver’s seat instead of the back of the truck, and while Rover was thinking, the  bear kept stuffing our food into himself until he became very fat. 

Meanwhile, Rover decided his idea was not very good, and since we had no food left we decided that  we had been bear hunting and that now we had one, we decided to go home.

The only problem was that it was impossible to get the bear out of the driver’s seat because he had  become so fat.  

Rover, embarrassed because he could think of nothing else, decided he was anxious to get home and so  suggested that we teach the bear how to drive, and that way we would not have to wait for the bear to  become thin again. So I taught the bear how to drive, and bumping into only a few trees, we left the big  woods. 

On the open road, the bear’s foot seemed to grow heavier until the truck was really speeding. Along  came a police car with a loud siren. I don’t know what was more exciting… to be driven by a bear or to  watch a policeman talk to one! 

Someday, I’ll tell you what we did with the bear. 

The End.

Robert Hess – obituary May 2017

OBITUARY

Professor Emeritus, Robert L. Hess, PhD of Ann Arbor died peacefully on May 19, 2017. His wife, Gretchen Ream Hess, proceeded him in death on November 1, 2006. Dr. Hess is survived by his three daughters, Mary Ann (Tim) Whitmer, Linda Claire Groshans and Kathryn Sue (Chris) Barnes. His six grandchildren are Amy (Drew) Wiesner, Michael Groshans, Kristina and Charles Whitmer, Blake and Kevin Barnes, as well as his great grandson, EJ Wiesner.

Dr. Hess was born in New Jersey on September 29,1924 and moved to the family homestead in Berrien County Michigan in 1930. There he attended a rural, 2 room school for his first 8 grades and graduated from Benton Harbor High School in 1942.

Dr. Hess enlisted in the U.S. Navy’s V-12 officer training program. Assigned to the University of Michigan, he received two B.S.E. degrees in 1945 and was assigned to the Midshipman program at Columbia University. He was commissioned as Ensign in October 1945 and married his fiance, Gretchen Ream, in Bethlehem Church, Ann Arbor in December 1945. He served on a heavy cruiser at sea and later as division officer on a pair of light escort carriers. Upon release from active World War II service he returned to Ann Arbor, the home of his wife where, in 1958 he was appointed to a full professorship.

Dr. Hess’ academic and service accomplishments were outstanding. The respect that he gained from his peers is only reflective of the credit he had given to them during his devoted service. He held many academic honors and served the nation as a consultant to the World Health Organization, to the Army Science Board and served as the personal representative to the Chief of U.S. Army Intelligence where he led teams of scientists though field reviews of Army’s Combat Surveillance capabilities both in Europe and in Korea. In addition he was selected to be a member of President Nixon’s first National Highway Safety Advisory Committee. He served with distinction at the University of Michigan where he is honored by a bronze bust in the lobby of the University of Michigan’s Transportation Institute, of which he was the founding director in 1965. In the Pentagon, corporate offices, the classrooms and laboratory he represented the best to his students, peers, academic associates and to his country. The Department of the Army awarded him the Outstanding Civilian Service award and medal.

A memorial service to celebrate his life will be held at First Presbyterian Church of Saline on July 22, 2017 at 10:30 AM.