|
Edwin F. Flowers
April 26, 1930 - January 27, 2022 |
Edwin F. Flowers died Thursday in Morgantown, according
to a release from the state Supreme Court Tuesday afternoon. He was 91.
“I am terribly saddened to hear of the passing of one of our own.
His exemplary career stands as a monument to his personal dedication to
the law, as well as to the citizens of West Virginia,” said Chief
Justice John Hutchison. “He was a true leader and will be sadly missed.
I want to extend my sympathies to his family and to all of his friends
and colleagues.”
Flowers was born April 26, 1930, on the family
farm in New Manchester.
He received a bachelor’s degree from West
Virginia University in 1952 and a law degree from the WVU College of Law
in 1954.
While attending WVU, he served as president of the
student body, president of his Sigma Nu fraternity chapter, and Cadet
Colonel of the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps Wing. He was a
member of the WVU championship debate team; the WVU Marching Band; and
was active in numerous honorary organizations, including Mountain, the
highest honor given to WVU students and graduates.
He was awarded
Most Loyal Faculty & Staff Mountaineer in 1999 and, in 2000, was
inducted into the Order of Vandalia, an award for the most loyal
servants to West Virginia University.
After law school, he was
assigned to active duty in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps at Nellis
Air Force Base in 1954.
The following year, on April 9, 1955, he
married Eleanor (Ellie) Ellis, his wife of 66 years.
After his
military service, he returned to the Northern Panhandle to practice law.
In 1969, then-Governor Arch Moore appointed him Commissioner of
Welfare for the State of West Virginia. In 1975, he was appointed by
Moore to the Supreme Court of Appeals to fill a vacancy following the
resignation of Justice James Marshall Sprouse. He served on the court
until December. 31, 1976.
In 1977, Flowers became United States
Bankruptcy Judge for the Southern District of West Virginia. From 1983
to 1997, he was vice president for institutional advancement at West
Virginia University, a position that embraced the government and public
relations of the university and coordinated its communications,
publications, alumni relations, and the fundraising efforts of its
independent foundation.
He was a commissioner of Volunteer West
Virginia, the West Virginia Commission for National and Community
Service, from 2009 to 2012.
“I knew Ed Flowers as DHHR
commissioner, when he was a bankruptcy judge, and, of course, as a
Supreme Court Justice,” said Justice William R. Wooton. “He was a friend
and a genuinely good man. I extend my deepest sympathies to his family
and friends.”
In his retirement, Flowers enjoyed writing and
publishing books, attending WVU football and basketball games, being
actively involved in WVU alumni organizations, studying the Civil War as
a member of the Mason-Dixon Civil War Roundtable, and mentoring WVU
students, especially his great-nephew, Jackson Flowers.
“Former
Justice Flowers has left such a tremendous legacy within our state
government and judicial system, as well as our nation’s federal court
system,” said Justice Tim Armstead. “He and his wife Ellie have also
done so much to improve and advance his beloved alma mater, West
Virginia University. Few West Virginians have had such a positive and
lasting impact on our state, and he will be missed by so many. My
thoughts are with his wife Ellie and his family through this difficult
time.”
Justices Beth Walker and Evan Jenkins also offered
condolences to the family.
Flowers is survived by his wife, Ellie
Flowers; daughters, Ann Flowers and Melissa (Ty) Newberry;
grandchildren, Adam (Ashley) Flowers and Kathryn (Sean) Hendricks; and
great-grandchildren, Matthew Hendricks and Jack Flowers
Nixon
Funeral Home in Newell is in charge of arrangements, with visitation
planned for noon to 4 p.m., February 21 at the Erickson Alumni Center at
West Virginia University. The funeral will be held February 22 at the New
Manchester Christian Church.
--Weirton Daily Times, February
2, 2022
|