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For
years, most people in Washington County knew that if you had
a clock that needed repaired, Glenn Armstrong was your man.
Through time and experience, Glenn was able to fix about any
clock imaginable. “I fixed one of my own and then someone
found out and asked me to fix theirs. It mushroomed.” At
any given time, he could have up to thirty clocks in different
states of repair. Now, time has a different meaning for Glenn
and those who knew him. Glenn passed away on May 27, 2004,
but his generosity and legacy will live on in our community
throughout time, through the Glenn Armstrong Touch Tomorrow
fund in the Washington County Community Foundation.
Glenn was born on March 14, 1912 to Stephen
and Ada (Sherwood) Armstrong. His mother succumbed to Tuberculosis
when Glenn was six months old. Shortly after her death, Glenn’s
grandmother, Amanda Sherwood, assumed responsibility for his
care and raised him. Much later, in 1975, Glenn would be treated
for Tuberculosis as well.
Glenn graduated form Hardinsburg High School
in 1930. After graduation, he worked several jobs, including
working at the Charlestown Powder Plant prior to WWII. In 1936,
he married Georgia Roll.
At age 33, Glenn went into the family business,
Armstrong Hardware, which was opened by Steve Armstrong, Glenn’s
father, in 1914. “I had worked in the store for years
in my spare time,” Glenn once said. “When WW II
ended, the Charlestown Powder Plant (where he had been working)
closed down.” The timing was right for both Armstrong
men since Steve Armstrong was ready for semi-retirement due
to failing health. He later died in 1948.
“During WWII, merchandise was scarce,” Glenn
once commented. “As things became available we stocked
more and more. We specialized in garden seed and spring plants.
We had our own brand of seed.”
In 1972, Glenn’s first wife, Georgia,
passed away. At the 1972 and 1973 Hardinsburg High School Alumni
Banquet, Glenn spoke with Bernice Jones Mattox. Her husband
had passed away in 1969. At the 1974 Alumni Banquet, he asked
if they could sit together. And so started a second, beautiful
chapter in both their lives. “We have been together ever
since,” stated Bernice. After eight dates, they were
married on August 8, 1974. “I told Glenn that I had been
praying to meet a good Baptist Deacon. He said, ‘Well,
God must have been all out of those, because he sent me, a
Methodist Sunday School teacher. I think our marriage was made
in heaven.’”
Glenn, being the sentimental, thoughtful type,
saved many things including a card Bernice sent him after their
first date and receipts from their honeymoon trip to Florida.
Throughout the rest of their marriage, they managed to travel
to all 48 continental states. They also traveled to Mexico,
Canada and Nova Scotia. “We enjoyed traveling with Taft
and Francis Morgan. Sometimes we would drive 600 miles in a
day” recalled Bernice.
Two weeks after returning from their honeymoon,
Glenn and Bernice received a special treat form all their friends,
including members of the Lion’s Club and the Methodist
Church. Early one evening, they heard police sirens and the
banging of pots and pans. The noise grew steadily louder and
they realized that they were to be “victims” of
the old fashioned custom of “Charivari.” Being
good sports for their friends, Glenn gave Bernice a ride around
the town square in a wheelbarrow from the store.
Glenn and Bernice ran the store for many years. “People
would come in and say, ‘I love this store. It’s
just an old-fashioned hardware store. You don’t see these
much any more,’” related Bernice.
Glenn and Bernice employed many people throughout
the years. Often times, Glenn would make an effort to hire
high school boys who needed to earn money for college. “The
boys were always a big help,” recalled Bernice. “We
would buy about six or seven tons of seed each year. I don’t
think we could ever have gotten all the packaging done without
their help. We started stamping the packages as soon as planting
season was over. In January we would make at least three trips
to Noblesville to buy the seeds. Then we started packaging
the seeds in .25 oz packages and up.”
One of the young men employed by Glenn and
Bernice, Brett Shull, later wrote to Glenn and Bernice, “I
went from being a child to a young man during those four years
at the store and having the two of you as role models during
that time was indispensable to my becoming the person I am.
I learned that we are all unique in some ways but in the important
ways we are all the same… people want to be happy, healthy,
to laugh to love and feel loved. I figured much of this out
waiting on the customers that came in the store and watching
the way you treated everyone with kindness and respect.”
In 1989, after 75 years of family ownership,
Glenn and Bernice sold the hardware store. “I hadn’t
planned seriously to retire although at my age I thought it
was time for retirement” stated a 77-year-old Glenn. “A
fellow (Cecil Miller) just came in and asked me what I’d
take for it. I told him and he said, ‘I’ll take
it.’ And that was that. It’s been a very pleasant
experience. If it hadn’t been for the customers, we wouldn’t
have lasted that long.”
After his retirement, Glenn continued to repair
clocks and served on the Mid-Southern (Salem Savings and Loan)
Board of Directors, a position he started in 1958. He was also
a life-long member of the Salem Lions Club and taught Sunday
school for 50 years.
“He was a beautiful person and everybody
loved him,” stated Bernice. “Glenn always said
that Washington County gave him a lot and he always wanted
to give something back.”
Many people will benefit from Glenn and Bernice’s
generosity and thoughtfulness. Through the creation of the
Glenn Armstrong Touch Tomorrow fund, grants to non-profit organizations
in Washington County will support numerous worthwhile community
projects. Glenn’s wish to give back to the community
will come true, year after year, forever.
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