Edna Bell-Pearson passed peacefully on Friday morning January 22, 2021, at the age of 100- and 44-days Vintage Park Care Center where she had been residing in an independent living apartment in Louisburg, Kansas. Edna was married to Carl Ungerer from 1945 to 1959. She reunited with the Ungerer family in recent years, upon publication of her memoir,
Headwinds, which details the four years after World War II when she was married to Carl Ungerer, with whom she helped build the first airport in Marysville, Kansas. At a time when the flying industry was really starting to "take off", Edna was a very accomplished pilot, making many flights across the Kansas countryside.
Edna Bell was born to Elizabeth Evangeline (Bessie) Booth and Fred Hunter Pearson on December 9, 1920 in Hooker, Oklahoma. Edna was the oldest of four children, three younger brothers who predeceased her.
Her website lists her careers “other than writing” as everything from babysitting, housekeeping, and dog walking, beginning as a teenager, to being a co-operator of the first airport in Marysville, Kansas, as detailed in her 2020 Kansas Notable Book,
Headwinds, a farmer/rancher, real estate promoter, radio and TV news reporter and more. Edna’s talents were broad and varied, and her skill at writing stories that captured readers was surpassed by few.
As well as hundreds of published stories, articles, essays, and poems, Edna was most noted for her first book,
Fragile Hopes, Transient Dreams and Other Stories, a southwest Kansas saga which was chosen during the Kansas sesquicentennial year as one of the “150 Best Kansas Books.” In 2020,
Headwinds, a Memoir (Meadowlark Books), was selected as a Kansas Notable Book. Edna was a regular contributor to
Kansas! Magazine and
Grit Magazine for more than a decade. She wrote flying columns for the
Marysville Advocate in the late 1940s, and a weekly business column for the
Dodge City Daily Globe in the 1970s. Her work as stringer, reporter, feature writer, and editor appeared in the
Jonesboro Sun (Arkansas),
Kansas City Star,
Spokane Chronical/
Spokesman Review,
St. Louis Post Dispatch, and others.
In Edna’s own words: “I don’t profess to be a great writer, but a dedicated scriber/scribbler, and considering the quality/quantity of work I’ve put out over the years, I think I’m safe in signing myself off as a bona fide writer/author.
“A question often asked is how or when or why I became a writer. I didn’t “become” a writer; I was born a writer. I don’t remember when I wasn’t writing. I don’t know where my writing genes came from. To my knowledge, no other member of my family, immediate or in the distant past, has shown the slightest interest in putting pen to paper. I’ve been told that, from the time my chubby hands could negotiate a pencil, my favorite pastime was sitting with pencil and paper, deeply engrossed in scribbling. I wrote my first poem when I was five, a silly, poorly composed, rhymed thing which I still have, forever preserved, in my grandmother’s commonplace book.
“For the most part, I lived with my grandparents until I was eleven. Grandma was a great teacher; she instilled in me a love for the Bible (Grandma was very religious) and a love of reading. She loved poetry and, though she never wrote any herself, I think she hoped I’d turn out to be a poet. When I was born, Grandma and Granddaddy bought me a “Birth” day present—T
he Books of Knowledge. I still have the complete set—well worn—in the original case. As a child, I spent hours daily, lying on the floor in the living room, one or more of the books open before me. I virtually devoured the stories and poems, but I also spent a lot of time on astronomy, French, and geography.
“Grandma and
The Books of Knowledge must have educated me well, because I skipped both the second and the fourth grades. However, I evidently used all my stored knowledge in my earlier years because once I became a fifth grader—although I still got lots of A’s—I was just an average student.”
Edna never did stop writing and had a work in progress, entitled
A Tribute To A Man Folks Didn't Like Very Much. Edna also had plans for five additional books about her life, with the working titles of
In the Beginning; Living off the Land; Highways and Byways; Friends and Lovers; and
Old Like Me. Graveside services will be Friday, January 29, 2021 at 10 a.m. at the Hooker Cemetery, Hooker, Oklahoma. Arrangements by Roberts Brothers Funeral Home, 207 N. Swem, Hooker, OK 73945.
Graveside Service
Hooker Cemetery
Friday, January 29, 2021
10:00 AM
Highway 64
Hooker, OK 73946
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