William H. Bowen

William H. Bowen


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Nov 12th, 2014

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Biography: William H. Bowen, a farm boy from Altheimer who built far-reaching careers in law, banking, government, business and education, died Wednesday, November 12, 2014. He was 91. Bowen was a senior partner in Arkansas?s largest law firm, president of the state?s largest bank, chief executive officer of a health insurance company and dean of the state?s largest law school, which was later named the William H. Bowen School of Law. He was a friend and adviser to Bill Clinton and managed the governor?s office for a year while Clinton was away running for president and also a friend and adviser to Dale Bumpers and David Pryor when they were governors and United States senators. He occasionally mused about a political career, backing away in the most serious contemplation in 1964, after a front-page article in the Arkansas Gazette listed him as the leading prospect to succeed Gov. Orval E. Faubus, who for a while was not expected to run again. Bowen served on countless business, professional and civic boards and state and national governmental advisory boards. He was a Navy pilot in World War II, survived a series of training crashes, and he had an extended career in the Naval Reserve. President Clinton appointed him to the Employers Support Committee for Guard and Reserve visiting Bosnia and Germany while chairman of the committee. Also, he was awarded the Secretary of Defense Outstanding Service Medal. In a 2006 memoir that recounted the grueling hardship of life in the Mississippi Delta, for families like his own but more so for blacks who were banished to the dark recesses of the social and economic order, Bowen counted himself a lucky man. ?I have lived during a remarkable period in our nation?s history as the agricultural-driven society of my childhood gave way to the turmoil of the Depression and World War II, and the social upheaval of the aftermath,? Bowen wrote in The Boy from Altheimer. ?Although I grew up in a section of the country that was among the poorest in the nation, I nevertheless benefited from the stability of my family and community life. Growing up in a time and place where individuals had little control over the capriciousness of nature and the land, I was lucky to guide my own destiny.? William Harvey Bowen was born May 6, 1923, in Altheimer, a farm town of 450 in the often flooded lowlands east the Arkansas River and Plum Bayou in Jefferson County. His father, Robert J. ?Bob? Bowen farmed, managed a cotton gin and ran a general store, among other occupations, and his mother, Ruth Falls Bowen, was a schoolteacher. He was one of six children. His sister, Lois Rhene, died of flu at the age of three during the raging pandemic at the end of World War I. Brother John, a National Guard artilleryman, drowned at sea in the battle for the Aleutian Islands in World War II. Two months later, another brother, Pat, died of a ruptured appendix. Bill?s oldest brother, Bob, also a WWII veteran, settled in Altheimer as a cotton gin manager and mayor for over 20 years. His younger brother, Jim, enlisted in the Navy at 16 and served on a destroyer in the China Sea, and was a long-time SW Bell executive. The memoir described the serial ordeals of the community and his family in the 1920s and 1930s, of living for weeks on the second floor of the local school during the great flood of 1927, when he was four; of the succeeding droughts that ruined farmers and drove them from the land and President Herbert Hoover?s declaration that it was not the government?s function to help them; and of the Great Depression that left neighboring tenant farmers, black and white, penniless and starving until the government finally delivered relief. Bowen graduated from high school in 1941 and hitchhiked to Henderson State Teachers College at Arkadelphia for a year until the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Bowen joined the Navy in December 1942 and trained to fly from carriers in the Pacific, but the war ended before he could put his training to use. He left the Navy and enrolled at the University of Arkansas in 1946 and then in its law school. He married Connie Wanasek, a student and an employee of the registrar?s office. He graduated from law school in 1949, worked briefly for a Pine Bluff law firm, and then did graduate study in tax law at New York University. In 1950, he became law clerk to Judge Bolon B. Turner of the U.S. Tax Court in Washington, D.C. and two years later joined the Trial Section of the U. S. Justice Department?s Tax Division as special assistant to the attorney general. He tried tax cases in federal district and appeals courts across the South, including Arkansas. In 1954, he joined the Little Rock law firm of Mehaffy, Smith and Williams as a trial tax specialist, switching from defending the government to defending taxpayers. The firm had seven lawyers. It would soon become Mehaffy, Smith, Williams, Friday and Bowen. It is now Friday, Eldredge and Clark and has 85 lawyers. Bowen became general counsel for the Arkansas Bankers Association and in 1970 Richard C. Butler approached Bowen about succeeding him as president of Commercial National Bank, then the fourth largest bank in Little Rock. He became president in May 1971 and began an aggressive campaign to build the bank. He borrowed a casket from Griffin Leggett Funeral Home and put it on the table in the bank?s boardroom. He asked all the bank?s principal officers and board members to bury their attitudes of complacency?just being satisfied with being a friendly neighborhood bank?by dropping an artificial flower in the casket. The bank went after depositors and its assets, net income and shareholder equity leaped. Bowen appointed a national advisory board to the bank, and each year it published a lengthy analysis of growth issues in the state with recommendations about how the state could move forward. In 1983, after a protracted fight with competing banks, Commercial and First National Bank merged into the successor First Commercial National Bank, as Arkansas?s largest bank and its first multi-bank holding company. Bowen became board chairman and president of both the bank and the holding company. For 22 years, he taught an annual course on ethics in banking at the Stonier Graduate School of Banking at Rutgers University in New Jersey. He retired in 1990. When Clinton decided in the summer of 1991 to run for president, he asked Bowen to become his chief of staff. The governor would soon be spending nearly all his time out of the state and he wanted a strong hand running affairs for him. Meantime, in the 1990s, when the competition of hospitals and health maintenance organizations reached a fever pitch, Bowen became president of a new HMO, Healthsource Arkansas, a partnership of Healthsource, Inc., of New Hampshire and the St. Vincent Infirmary medical system. But, after two years, Bowen returned to the law. Faculty members at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Law urged the chancellor to make Bowen the dean for two years to build the school?s development program while it made a national search for a new dean. At the age of 72, Bowen became the dean in July 1995. After he stepped down, in 1998, Bowen gave the school's largest gift in its history, to establish the Bowen Scholars Program. In 1999, the school?s faculty renamed the school the William H. Bowen School of Law. Early in his legal career, Bowen was president of the Little Rock Chamber of Commerce. He was president of the Pulaski County Bar Association, member of the Arkansas Bar Association and the Arkansas Bankers Association as well as serving as chairman of the board of the Arkansas Arts Center. He was on the Federal Advisory Council to the Federal Reserve and a member of the Arkansas Business Hall of Fame. A lifetime member of the Methodist Church, his church home for 60 years was the First United Methodist Church of Little Rock where he taught what became the Bowen-Cabe Sunday School Class for over 25 years. Survivors are his wife, Connie; children, Cynthia Blanchard (Charles) of Russellville, William Scott Bowen and Patty Barker, both of Little Rock; grandchildren, Mary Pat Hardman (John) of Fayetteville, Charles (Chip) Bowen Blanchard (Leslie) of Russellville, Charles Scott Bowen, Lesley Benjamin (Paul) of Austin, Tx., Andrew Bowen, Will Barker (Lauren) of Houston, Tx., Henry Barker, Mary Katherine Barker, and John Barker. Also survived by 6 great-grandchildren and special friend, DeAngelo Mabry. The family thanks all the wonderful people at Fox Ridge for their care and support over the last 3 years. Visitation will be from 4:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m. on Sunday, November 16, 2014 at Ruebel Funeral Home, 6313 W. Markham, Little Rock, AR 72205. Funeral services will be at 10:00 a.m., Monday, November 17, at First United Methodist Church, 723 Center Street, Little Rock, AR 72201. In lieu of flowers the family asked that memorials be made to First United Methodist Church of Little Rock, fumclr.org.

Condolences(34)
Audrey Burtrum-Stanley & Jim Stanley, Jr.
#34
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
We join the Arkansas chorus who sing the praises of the late-Bill Bowen - his business skills, legal abilities, Christian ways and gracious friendship. Occasionally we were would share a table at Franke's with his pal, Bill Terry and Mr. B. They were almost a 'tag team' telling remarkable tales of past events or switching gears and offering analysis of the au currant day's headlines... We were honored to have shared those memorable times. Now when we are at the Law School, we will look up towards the name and smile because 'WE KNOW WHY.' Our condolences to all who loved and admired him.
John W. Ahlen
#33
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
My lasting first memory of Bill Bowen was formed in 1984, the third time I met him. It wasn?t until later that I realized, as someone pointed out, that it didn?t matter what the occasion, Bill always rose to the top ? with his insights, relevant questions, historical perspectives, humorous aside, or ? in my recollection ? the focus of his attention. I came to understand that as important as my memory is to me, it is but one of the innumerable stories that mark his life and define a wonderful man.

In January 1984 and I was waiting to see Bill Bowen at his office in First Commercial Bank. The day before, I unexpectedly had been offered, and had quickly accepted, the position of president of the Arkansas Science & Technology Authority. After a restless night at the then-Excelsior Hotel, I had second thoughts about my decision. I had been told there would be no job offers, when invited back for the second interview, but that was not the way it had played out. I needed to discuss my hasty decision to accept the position, but the chairman of the board was now out of state; the vice chair, however, whom I had met twice before, could see me.

Bill Bowen graciously received me, made me feel at home and comfortable in his office, and asked how he could help.

?Things were moving pretty quickly yesterday,? I said. ?There are some things I should have asked about, but didn?t have the chance.?

?I may need more time to wrap things up at work back home than I thought. I?d like to push my starting date back a little.? Bill Bowen said, ?Take as much time as you need.?

?I didn?t think to ask about moving expenses. Will they be covered?? Bill Bowen didn?t hesitate; he picked up the phone and made a call. When he hung up, he said, ?We?ll take care of them.?

?I?m active in a national engineering society and have committed to serve as an officer for the next two years,? I explained. ?It will take time away from the office and there will be out-of-state travel. I hope I can continue those activities after I move . . .? Bill broke in, ?Your activities and visibility are important for Arkansas. We can make your continued participation a condition of your employment.?

The concerns I had had melted away. When I left his office, I knew I had made the right decision accepting the position.

Whenever I tell this story, I usually begin by saying I wouldn?t be in Arkansas had it not been for Bill Bowen. He had a profound impact on my life and career, which changed direction dramatically that day. Bill continued to be a sounding board, give good advice, and serve as a role model for me long after he rotated off the Authority?s board of directors. I will miss his humor, insights and stories, and the way he would place his hand on my arm when he was making an important point.
WILLIAM E EARL III , FRANCES MARKS EARL , ELIZABETH
#32
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
HE WAS A GREAT FAMILY FRIEND AND WE HAVE ALOT OF MEMORIES THAT BILL WAS PART OF, THE STATE WILL MISS HIM .
Melanie Bell
#31
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Bill Bowen was an inspiration to many and his legacy will endure. As one of the first Bowen Scholars he took time to inspire and encourage throughout law school. I was afraid he would be disappointed when I chose to turn down more prestigious offers in favor of becoming a military attorney but he beamed with pride and told me about his time in the Navy. While other law schools barred military recruiters Bill Bowen encouraged me and in the wake of September 11th he congratulated me for becoming an officer as well as an attorney. I am forever grateful for his kindness, generosity & integrity. He was one in a million! My deepest condolences for his family and friends.
Joe W. Crow
#30
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Mr Bowen was a gentleman from start to finish. He was always gracious and Kind to everyone. No one else I have known has surpassed Mr Bowen's list of accomplishments or the positive impact he has had on Arkansas and those with whom he came into contact.
Patrick Bowen
#29
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
My deepest condolences to the Arkansas Bowen family for our loss. Memories of Uncle Bill go back to our childhood, listening to his ghost stories on the front porch of the Altheimer home and then to his always gentle humour, southern charm and sincere kindness.

He has always represented to me what it means to be a true gentleman and my life has always been richer for having been touched by his. I share your sorrow at Bill's passing and am sorry that we haven't been closer over the years.

My prayers are with you all.
Pat Bowen
Bev Lambert
#28
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Over 20 years ago, my friend Bill Bowen called to ask me to teach is Bowen-Cabe Sunday School Class, since he would be out of town that Sunday.
It was such an honor to teach that day.

I chose as my theme his favorite hymn, "Amazing Grace" by John Newton. So, today in tribute to Bill, I offer this verse:

"Yea, when this flesh and heart shall fail,
and mortal life shal cease,
I shall posess, within the veil,
a life of joy and peace."
Patsy Pack
#27
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
It was great to get to know Mr. Bowen and DeAngelo when they came on Tuesday and Thursday at the Clinton Presidential Center and to go eat at 42 Restaurant. Every volunteer on these two days will certainly miss seeing them. My sympathy to the family.
Pat Heine
#26
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am

To The Bowen Fmily,

Mr. Bowen was a wonderful, kind and caring man to all his staff and employees at Commerical Bank. He always had time to chat a minute and want to know how things were in our worlds. His smile and kindness has never been forgotten by me after many years of leaving the bank. May God wrap his arms around each of you and give you the strength needed at this time.

Sincerely, Pat
Judge Rhonda Wood
#25
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Thank you for your service to our country, to our state, to our Little Rock community, and of course to our law school now named in your honor. It was a privilege to be a student during your tenure as Dean.
June B Cross
#24
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Bill Bowen was a great friend to my parents, J B and Sarah Cross, a neighbor and generous friend throughout my life. As I grew up he was always fun to be around at family events. When I started as a new lawyer he provided help, advice and contacts. I was proud to know him and the state of Arkansas is a better place for his hard work. I know this is a great loss to his family.
J B (June) Cross, Jr
Bob Davidson
#23
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
I remember first meeting Mr. Bowen at his desk on the first floor of the First Commercial Bank Bldg. downtown in the late 1980's, on my way to Franke's Cafeteria for lunch. I also remember standing beside him at the Old State House the day Bill Clinton announced he would run for President. Bill and I went to lunch at Franke's after the announcement and discussed how we thought Clinton would do in in the primaries and how he would be as President if elected. I saw Bill occasionally after that and remember his kindness and cordiality each time I would see him. He was a true and gentle man. Although I was not a close friend, he made me feel like I was, and every occasion when his name would come up, I told everyone what a great man he was - he will be missed greatly by all who knew him. My condolences to his family.
Holly Dickson
#22
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Dean Bowen was my dean all three years of law school. I can still picture him gliding down the halls with a smile, kind word, and time of day for all of us young peas in the soup of life. After graduation, he continued to have his kind words, smile and the time of day for me anytime and anywhere I saw him. He set a good example for young students and lawyers as to how to be a fine lawyer, and established, well respected member of the community but still be an incredibly warm, human being. I was fortunate to get to know him and will miss him. My heart, thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends.
Inez Clark
#21
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Although, I did not have the privilege to meet Dean Bowen, nevertheless, I have been blessed by his humble, yet far reaching efforts to build excellence in his every endeavor. As a student at the William H. Bowen School of Law, Dean Bowen's positive influence and now is spirit is ever present to give quiet encouragement to succeed.

My life is richer because of Dean Bowen.
Rita Mitchell
#20
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
To Connie and Mr. Bowen's beloved family,
We all teared up when we read of Mr. Bowen's passing.
Always kind, gracious, respectful, humble ...
Even in times of conflict and disagreement, he was firm but kind, a sterling trait of our best leaders.
From his law practice, to his banking days to his signature law school, he was down to earth and wonderful throughout.
While attending his book-signing, we often heard him declare, "I am the luckiest man in Arkansas, if not the world".
And we would whisper ...No, sir ... WE are your lucky students and admirers!
The Lord bless and keep you all in this difficult time;
We deeply mourn our and Arkansas's loss.

In gratitude,
Rita Mitchell
Glen Shaw
#19
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
My condolences to the Bowen family. It was my privilege and honor to have known Mr. Bowen when I was the Chief of Security at the Regions Center in downtown Little Rock. We always greeted each other with a military salute, and many time we passed the time away chatting about everything under the sun. My fondest memories of him will be that he was a very much real, down-to-earth man...he was everything he appeared to be, no trickery or falsehood. The world is a little darker now without his light in it. Too bad values & morals such as his have become so rare in modern society. Until we meet again Sir; Salute!
James W. Moore
#18
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Dear Connie and your Family- Your husband and his law partners gave this Delta raised young lawyer from Shelby County Tn. a job when he needed one. My young wife and I moved to Little Rock in 1963 and were literally "adopted" by you, your husband, and the rest of the now Friday Law firm.I remember the warmth and humor of Bill and the familial atmosphere of The Firm.Bill as the leading tax lawyer of his day created the so-called "professional corporation" in Arkansas allowing doctors and other professionals to incorporate and take tax advantage of corporate status.It became a model I believe for the rest of the country. Bill,like the other partners of his day, were role models for me and the other young lawyers of the firm to follow.

It was a privilege and high honor Connie to know and practice law with Bill and my deepest condolences to you and your extended family on his passing. Love JIm
TONY WILKINS
#17
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Arkansas has lost a treasure. Worked at First Commercial for several years and Mr. Bowen would always greet employees with a warm smile and friendly hello and handshake. He may not have known you personally but he made you feel as if he did. Thank you sir for you service and contributions to Arkansas and the country.
Our thoughts and prayers to his loved ones.
paul whitley
#16
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Without question, William Bowen exhibited the most noble qualities as a family man; business and political leader; a giver motivated by the love he taught about in his Sunday School. I served on the board at Russellville First National Bank when Charlie Blanchard was president. Mr. Bowen's daughter Cynthia is married to Charlie.

Don and Andrea Campbell
#15
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Patty and all of the Family,

We are so sorry for the loss you are feeling right now. Please know we are praying for all of you and hope the pain of your loss is replaced by the joy of your dad's life with all of you and the grace he is experiencing now. Don and Andrea.
Eddie & Sue McCoy
#14
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Our thoughts and prayers are with you.
Gene Manning
#13
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Mr. Bowen was a "good man" and bore all the traits of greatness that have been described above by others. I worked for him for fifteen years at First Commercial Bank in Little Rock. He never failed to call me by name, followed by a firm handshake. My sincere condolences to his family and friends.
Dana Love
#12
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
I have known Mr. Bowen my entire life. He taught me to water ski when I was maybe 8 years old, he gave me a job when I was in college and he continued as a mentor after my father, his former law partner, died much too young. His grace, warmth and friendship led my family to ask him to give the eulogy for my father, a gift that left an enormous impression on a 21 year old at such a horrible time. I loved him, as well as his entire family, very much and wish them peace after such a tremendous loss. Mrs. Bowen and Patty, I am thinking of you especially tonight.
Sam Perroni
#11
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Bill was a true credit to the legal profession and dear and faithful friend to the law school. His presence on this earth will be felt for many, many years to come. My heartfelt condolences to his family.
Bob Rogers
#10
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
It was an honor to be in his presence at First Commercial when he would walk the halls downtown. My thoughts and prayers are with the family and friends of this wonderful leader and generous man.
John DiPippa
#9
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
When I was Dean, Bill often called to talk about ways he could help the law school. I never tired of hearing his voice at the other end of the phone announce "John, this is your friend Bill Bowen."

Rest in peace, friend.
William S Roach
#8
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
When one was near William Bowen, his presence could be felt. He is one of the few men I can truly say that made me feel like I was in the shadow of a greatness. He was gracious, a gentleman and a scholar, and a true friend. Never too high and mighty to shake your hand with genuine care and empathy. He inspired me to seek the best for myself in my life's goals, and to not let setbacks control the direction of my life moving forward. He will be missed greatly.
Dan Shelton
#7
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Patty and family,

We are so sorry to hear of your father's passing. What a wonderful man he was! Our thoughts and prayers are with you.

Daniel, Susan, and Dan
Stephanie Crimarco
#6
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
I began law school at UALR in 1995. As a 1L, I remember Dean Bowen sitting in some of our classes to see how things were going for us. I thought that a very nice and genuine gesture. I also saw him in the halls, and he always said hello. I'm very glad to have been in law school during his tenure.
Stephanie Crimarco
Jessie Burchfield
#5
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
As a Bowen Scholar, I will always be indebted to Dean Bowen for the gift of my legal education. What I appreciated even more was his genuine warmth to each of us at the law school. It was always a pleasure to encounter him when he visited the building. My condolences to the family.
Jessie Wallace Burchfield
Pam Rios
#4
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
When I first met "Mr. Bill" Sept. 2013. He always greeted me with a "Hello, Darlin'" & a smile.
Knowing him has enriched my life.
My prayers for comfort go to the family & special friends.
I know he will be watching & protecting all who cared for him.
Bill Marshall
#3
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
If I could have been even 1/10 the man that Mr. Bowen was, I would die feeling like I was a good person and successful. I worked with Bill on the merger of First National Bank and Commercial National Bank when I first started practicing law at House Holmes and Jewell. I continued to work with him of and on with various matters and he was a true professional and a very kind and gracious person. He was a role model for me, and I am sure he did not know that. I will miss him and I know his family is sad. However, they should be so proud of him and luck that they were related to him. Bill Marshall
Dianna L. Kinsey
#2
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Bill, thank you for being such a wonderful human being. We began our time at UALR Bowen School of Law together in 1995. Your gentility and love and respect for all humankind will always be remembered and appreciated. Dianna
Patti Bell
#1
Mar 15th, 2019 11:44 am
Mr. Bowen was always such a welcoming and warm man. When I first came to work at his law school, he went out of his way to make me feel at home. I always enjoyed walking the halls with him and the privilege of hearing his stories.

I will greatly miss him. My condolences to the family.

Sincerely,
Patti Bell

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