Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Friends honor memory of 4 killed in explosion

- MARY HIGHTOWER

Though silent, Don Bragg’s office speaks volumes. The awards on the walls attest to his profession­al excellence as a forester and researcher, but it’s the crayon drawings that show where his heart was.

“When you go in his office, the walls are full of awards,” said Mike Blazier, dean of the College of Forestry, Agricultur­e and Natural Resources at the University of Arkansas at Monticello. “When you walk up to his office door, there are crayon drawings from his children. Right over his desk there’s a big yellow constructi­on paper posting that says ‘I love you daddy,’ which was from his son when he was 4.

“For everything he accomplish­ed, it was his children that were most dear,” Blazier said.

Don, his wife, Hope, and two of their children, Kenny, 22, and Elizabeth, 19, of Monticello, are being remembered by their friends and colleagues with great affection and respect.

The family was killed in a house explosion on Dec. 30 in Michigan, a blast that also injured their son Stephen, 16, and Hope Bragg’s father Richard Pruden. Both remained hospitaliz­ed Jan. 3. Investigat­ors are calling it a “fuel-air explosion.”

Don Bragg was a project leader for the U.S. Forest Service with an office at UAM. Hope Bragg was a STEM instructor for the Arkansas Cooperativ­e Extension Service’s 4-H program.

The two imbued their children with a love of science, technology and history, and the family shared those interests together on hikes, archeologi­cal digs and 4-H youth developmen­t activities.

Blazier knew Don Bragg for more than two decades. In forestry, their careers often crossed. He remembered Don

Bragg as being inquisitiv­e and insightful, an excellent scientist and a bit of a sci-fi movie nerd.

Hope Bragg also loved learning. She had begun to pursue a Ph.D., and in December had been awarded a scholarshi­p to help accomplish that goal. Her smile and enthusiasm for archeology, astronomy and other realms of science were infectious, friends said.

“Hope Bragg was incredibly passionate about science, about technology, and she loved to get youth excited about that,” said Debbie Nistler, assistant vice president for 4-H and youth for the Cooperativ­e Extension Service. “She lit up when she had the opportunit­y to get youth excited about science.”

“Don was her perfect partner,” Blazier said.

Nistler said Hope Bragg’s 4-H colleagues will be working in her memory on the projects she held dear.

“The best way for us to feel like we’re doing something in her name is to make sure that SeaPerch and Tech Changemake­rs, her archaeolog­y program and a special program for the eclipse on April 8 carry on her legacy in science education,” Nistler said. “We are also planning that scholarshi­p for the Bragg family since education was a focus for all of them.”

Nistler said plans are in the works for a scholarshi­p in Hope Bragg’s name, as well as a special memorial at the C.A. Vines Arkansas 4-H Center in Ferndale. Each year, thousands of Arkansas youth take to the center’s rolling wooded acres to learn about life skills while catching a fish or escaping the summer heat in the pool.

The center will be home to four more trees, each will be planted in memory of Hope, Don, Elizabeth and Kenny Bragg, all of whom spent time at the center, Nistler said.

GoFundMe fundraiser­s have been set up for Stephen Bragg, https://gofund.me/d32eff21, and Richard Pruden, https://www.gofundme.com/f/richard-pruden-medical-expenses.

The Cooperativ­e Extension Service is part of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact a local Cooperativ­e Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Mary Hightower is with the Uni

 ?? (Special to The Commercial/Angie Freel/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) ?? Don and Hope Bragg are shown at the Arkansas Agricultur­al Hall of Fame lunch in Little Rock.
(Special to The Commercial/Angie Freel/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) Don and Hope Bragg are shown at the Arkansas Agricultur­al Hall of Fame lunch in Little Rock.
 ?? Agricultur­e) (Special to The Commercial/University of Arkansas System Division of ?? Arkansas 4-H instructor Hope Bragg (left) and her daughter, Elizabeth Bragg, are pictured Feb. 11, 2023, during the Wonders of Waterfowl workshop for 4-H.
Agricultur­e) (Special to The Commercial/University of Arkansas System Division of Arkansas 4-H instructor Hope Bragg (left) and her daughter, Elizabeth Bragg, are pictured Feb. 11, 2023, during the Wonders of Waterfowl workshop for 4-H.

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