Daniel Roy
Dobyns, 93, passed away at his daughter's home in Kalispell on Oct. 2, 2004.
Dan was born in 1910 to Frances (Sullivan-Dobyns-Benedett) and
Luther Dobyns in Cut Bank. His father and baby sister, Dorothea, died in the influenza epidemic of 1918 and were buried together in Cut Bank. In the years that followed, Dan, his mother and sister, Janay, lived in Cut Bank,
Browning,
Shelby and St. Paul, Minn.
He married Leona Grace
Fenn in 1929, worked in a grocery store, read meters and then began learning the plumbing trade with Walt
Tillman of
Shelby. He served on the city council in the 1930s. Since Dan wanted to work outdoors they moved to a farm on the Marias River south of
Dunkirk in 1940, where he built a home using local stones. In addition to farming, they carried the mail on the Star route out of
Dunkirk from 1945 to 1958.
To accommodate his growing family and to have a vehicle for work, Dan put together what was possibly the first crew cab in the early '40s, calling it "The Cadoodle Wagon." He cut a car into three sections, put a narrow sitting space behind the front seats and welded the front and back sections together. By adding a fifth wheel hitch he could haul a hay rack or a trailer for livestock or a flatbed with a cement mixer, tools and materials for a job.
When the Marias River flooded and covered their home in 1948, Dan and Leona moved to the present farm location on higher ground where he built a brick home. As electricity came to neighboring farms, Dan modernized many homes, doing both the plumbing and the excavation work. He sometimes jokingly claimed that his mission in life was to make the outhouse obsolete.
Dan and Leona enjoyed traveling to visit their families and friends and took an especially memorable four-week trip into Mexico in "Old Itchy Foot," a Metro van that Dan had converted to a small but comfortable motorhome. He had a great love of music, entering a harmonica contest at the age of 10. Although the harmonica was probably his favorite instrument, he also played the accordion, guitar, banjo, piano and organ. He was an avid reader with an inquiring mind and a fascination with words, both
English and Spanish.
Leona passed away in August of 1970, the saddest day of his life. Dan continued to farm and to do some traveling in the U.S., also touring England,
Scotland and Ireland, where he kissed the
Blarney Stone. For the most part, winters were spent in the
Los Angeles area where his mother and oldest daughter lived. He had a natural talent for working with wood and made a wall clock for each of his children and a grandmother clock for his mother. In his own inimitable style Dan built his coffin from recycled materials (the base is an old door), added shelves and used it as a linen closet in his bedroom. His daughter, Jesse, trimmed the interior with blue poplin that Dan had purchased at a thrift store in
Burbank.
Late in life he began an active correspondence. These were always written on recycled paper, filling the page from top to bottom with his unique erratic typing, with his humor and upbeat outlook on life and with his love of people, his memories and his dreams. All were mailed in recycled envelopes.
Dan sold the farmland in 1998, saying that it was not fun any more. He moved to his daughter Danette's home in Kalispell in 2003, where he made many new friends, continued to read everything in sight and to peck out letters on his typewriter. A stroke in February of 2004 took his sight but not his gentle, courteous, honest and open spirit or his loving concern and gratitude for those who loved and helped him.
Dan thought of each of his children as an unbelievably precious gift from his devoted wife, Leona, and consciously strove to help each according to their need and his ability.
He is survived by his children, Danette of Kalispell,
Pat (Jack
Baum and Jack Sharp) of Great Falls, Jesse and Bill Sallin of Lincoln, Juanita (Bob
Decker and Ted
Brickell) of Seattle, Bill and Linda Hallenberg, Junetta
Bleeker, Kris Gregory of
Shelby and Dan L. of Spirit Lake, Idaho; his sister and brother-in-law, Janay and Virgil
Morgan of Tucson, Ariz.; and by numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren as well as by many fine, loving friends.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Leona, and daughter Peggy (Walter
Bass and Ed Rierson-2002).
Graveside services will be held at the
Dunkirk Cemetery at 2 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 4.
With all our love, to a cherished father, a sensitive and truly gentle man.