Houston Chronicle Sunday

THOMAS WALSH ROLLINS

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1931-2020

Thomas Walsh Rollins, originally of Missoula, Montana, passed away in his sleep at his home in Washington D.C. The cause of death was that, after 88 years, he simply stopped breathing. Tom is survived by his wife of 66 years, Mary M. Rollins of Washington, D.C., and his son, Thomas M. Rollins, his daughter-in-law, Victoria, and his grandchild­ren, Tom and Kay Rollins, all of McLean, Virginia. His other son, Theodore A. Rollins, pre-deceased him.

Tom was defined by his Montana roots and his love for oil and gas exploratio­n. As a Montanan, he loved to fish for trout and to hunt for game birds. He once suggested that his passions for fishing, hunting, and petroleum exploratio­n were linked – all were outdoors, and each required him to figure out how nature had hidden its prizes before he could harvest them.

Tom left Montana when he was 18 to attend his beloved Colorado School of Mines, where he played varsity baseball and basketball, serving as captain of the basketball team as a senior. He received his degree in Geological Engineerin­g in 1953. He and Mary married in 1954, and Tom then served honorably for two years as First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, mapping the geology surroundin­g the Panama Canal. As with so many of his Korean War-era fellow veterans, he loved his country.

Tom spent his profession­al career in the oil and gas industry, mainly in

Texas. He worked for Shell

Oil Company, Pennzoil, as CEO of Florida Gas Transmissi­on

Company, as CEO of Felmont Oil Company, and as a director of Magma Copper Company and Remington Oil and Gas Corporatio­n. Though there were assignment­s to New York, The Hague, Oklahoma City, and Denver, Tom and Mary lived in Houston for most of their lives. In addition to philanthro­pic support of the Colorado School of Mines and the Beta Theta Pi fraternity there, Tom served a term as President of the Texas Nature Conservanc­y where he proudly helped preserve native grasses, and, with uncommon exuberance, a nearly-extinct species of prairie chicken. Over three years ago, Tom and Mary moved from Houston to Washington, D.C. to be near their son and his family in their declining years.

Tom will be remembered for his quick mind, sense of humor, and his adoration of his nieces and nephews.

His ashes will be interred on the shores of Flathead Lake, Montana, alongside those of his brother and son.

Condolence­s may be sent to Mrs. Mary Rollins, 5901 MacArthur Blvd., N.W., Apt. 350, Washington D.C. 20016. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Colorado School of Mines Foundation, Inc., by mail to P.O. Box 912031, Denver, CO 80291, or online at weare. mines.edu.

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