Albuquerque Journal

Lewis, John Frank

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John Frank Lewis, of Carlsbad, NM, passed from this world for greener pastures on December 24th, 2016. John was born in Stanton, TX, on July 17, 1934, to John B and Noma Lewis. In later years, he lived in El Paso, TX, Lake Valley, Hatch, Silver City, Lordsburg, Gallup, Cloudcroft, NM, and Pecos, TX before settling in Carlsbad with his wife, Lynne. John started life and ended it as a cowboy, but he made quite a ride of life in other endeavors in the period in between. He lived through a time of great transition in America. Born in Stanton, TX, during the depression, he spent his earliest years on his family’s ranch. Some hard times led to the family selling their ranch in Stanton and moving to El Paso and New Mexico. He remembered following the cavalry of Ft. Bliss into the desert to watch them train with horses, wagons and cannon. His family moved around New Mexico to a number of places, ranching and working on ranches. He attended schools in El Paso, Hillsboro, Hatch, and Silver City. During WWII, everyone was shorthande­d and young ones had to do a man’s work. When he was a day shy of his 11th birthday, he was out early in the summer morning gathering horses for the day’s work when the whole sky lit up, and there was a boom louder than any sonic boom he heard in later years. It was the first atomic bomb. He went to high school in Lordsburg. He worked for ranches in his spare time and the USFS in the summer. He worked there helping to pack mules around the Gila in rough country, going from one fire camp to another in two of the hottest, driest years on record, and had great adventures fighting fires. After graduating high school he worked for a short time for the forest service before joining the army. He trained as an MP and nuclear security specialist, and served in Korea with the 24th Infantry Division. He had to visit Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan as part of his deployment, and it made a big impression on him. He was a sergeant when his enlistment ended in Ft. Lewis, WA, and he returned to the Silver City area and began working again for the forest service. In 1957 he became a Grant County Sheriff’s deputy. He joined the New Mexico State Police in 1958, and served until 1964. Among other places, he worked in the Gallup area, and also in Alamogordo and Cloudcroft, and a number of other locations working undercover. His ranching background served him well in the rural areas of New Mexico, and he thrived. Observatio­nal skills and logic developed on the cattle ranges and the forests proved useful in law enforcemen­t and he put away a lot of bad guys. The state police ranks were thin, and his territory in Cloudcroft stretched from Alamogordo to Hope, and Ruidoso to the Texas border. Highway 82 had more than its share of criminals transiting, and there were some tough folks in those mountains, used to settling difficulti­es themselves. In a time without good radios, nearby ambulance and EMT support, or Lifeflight helicopter­s, he was often the only difference between life and death for people with injuries. John earned his pay. A first, short lived marriage resulted in a beautiful little girl, Kimberley. After he had been stationed in Cloudcroft for a few years, he met Lynne Walkup. No couple was ever more in love, and they married in December of 1963. Lynne came with bonus children—two sons, Scott and Tony, and another beautiful little girl, Tamara. They set up residence in Cloudcroft in a home they called Cloud 9, and soon were joined by Kim. The home was aptly named. The four children became six in short order, with the birth of two more adored daughters, Tia and Deon. John was a great father and a good friend to all six of his kids. Not wanting to leave Cloudcroft to go to his next transfer, he left the NMSP, and John and Lynne started and ran several successful businesses in Cloudcroft, including a service station, a wrecker service, a wood lot and a security agency. They were active in the community, serving on the Village Council and the Chamber of Commerce. He made an unsuccessf­ul run for Sheriff of Otero County in 1966. They worked hard, and the businesses prospered, but John just wasn’t as happy being out of law enforcemen­t. He took a job as a Reeves County Deputy Sheriff in 1969, and they left their beloved mountains and friends in Cloudcroft and moved to Pecos, TX. John served Reeves County for several years as a deputy before moving on to become the County Juvenile Officer. As a deputy Sheriff, he had a solid reputation as an investigat­or, solved a wide variety of crimes, and was a good man to have around when things went south. It wasn’t unusual to have him called away to other counties for special investigat­ions, unraveling crime scenes and tracking criminals or helping search for lost hunters and hikers. His fluency in Spanish was useful in investigat­ions and coordinati­on with agencies on both sides of the border. As a Juvenile officer, he was phenomenal in helping troubled and troublesom­e youths regain a straight path. In later years, they would sometimes stop in to see him, and thank him for steering them to better ways. Having spent much of his own youth on his own, he had a knack for understand­ing what motivated kids to do right or wrong. In 1981, John and Lynne left Pecos and moved to Carlsbad, NM, so that John could become an Eddy County Deputy Sheriff. He was Chief Deputy under Sheriff Jack Childress from 1981 to 1985. John was elected Sheriff himself in 1985, and served in that capacity until 1989, when he again became chief deputy from 1990 to 1997. Although they had a big family, John and Lynne worked hard, John was a canny trader and they got by. A cowboy at heart whatever he did for a living, he always managed to have horses and other livestock, and all his children grew up riding, loving the outdoors, and enjoying the western life. After a final run for Eddy County Sheriff in 1997 did not pan out, John worked a short while as a security officer in the federal building. The cowboy life called, and soon he left to partner with his son Tony on a ranch in the Guadalupe Mountains, where he enjoyed raising Longhorn cattle as well as farming on he and Lynne’s small farm in Carlsbad until health and vision issues forced him to stop. He lost Lynne in 2008 to cancer, and missed her terribly. But through all of the heartache of that loss, and health problems which would shake any man, he retained his hardiness, his sense of humor, his willingnes­s to help others, and his love of family and friends. He always told his kids and grandkids, in bad times and good, keep looking forward, no sense in looking back (unless to tell a good story). To the end, there was always another adventure over the horizon. John is survived by his sons, Scott Lewis of Orlando, FL, and Tony Lewis (Jeanette) of El Paso, daughters Tamara Robertson (Kelby) of Wink, TX, Kimberley Kay Lewis, Tia Mills (Stacy) of Carlsbad, Deon Kempfer (Jimmy) of Deer Park, FL, sister Perry Elizabeth Head of Franklin, TN and her children Leonard Peck of Huntsville, TX, Vincent Peck, Nancy Peck, and Carolyn Allen of Franklin, TN, as well as 12 grandchild­ren and 14 greatgrand­children. A service to celebrate John’s life is scheduled for Jan 20th, indoors at the Eddy County Sheriff’s Posse Arena at 10:30 AM, with Pastor Jimmy Tarvin officiatin­g. The family would like to extend heartfelt thanks to the many people of Carlsbad Medical Center, Golden Services, Lakeview Christian Home and Lakeview Hospice Services for the profession­al care, enduring compassion, and love and friendship which you extended to John during his illness. He is with the angels now, but there were many around him before he ever passed. Should one be so kind as to wish to send flowers, the family suggests that instead they make a contributi­on in John’s name to the Cowboys for Cancer Research.

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