Biography:
Samuel Lee Bowman III, 80, of Little Rock, passed away peacefully on June 14, 2023 at his home.
Lee grew up in McGehee, Arkansas, on Wolf Drive, and would wake up with pecan trees, a creek and the sound of running trains behind his bedroom. He grew up in a neighborhood with Prewitts, Warricks and others, rode bikes, ate packed lunches, gave and received black-eyes, and worshipped the Cardinals. He loved playing baseball, basketball, and football for the McGehee Owls.
Leaving behind a high-school determination to crush Dumas and Lake Village in sports, he went off to the University of Arkansas. In June 1962, his mother Francis Walker ("Pee Wee") Bowman was killed in a car accident. It was a an enduring loss, but one that cemented a bond with his siblings and his father. He continued to graduate with a degree in business administration, majoring in banking and finance in order to follow in the footsteps of his father Sam.
His first job out of college was as a clerk with the McGehee Bank. There it is thought that he developed his obsession with writing in perfect rows and columns. If balancing a checkbook can be romanticized, it would be by reference to his perfect organizational style. He strove but failed to pass this skill onto his sons.
He went on to a successful career in banking and investments. Redeeming a 50 cent coupon delivered Lee the same dopamine hit as receiving a 500 dollar dividend. We will never know why, but it made us all smile.
He loved and respected his older sister Anne so much that never was heard even a teasing comment about her. Anne took up a grandmother's role in many respects and Lee's children looked forward any kid-free vacations so that they could stay with their aunt Anne and her husband Winston Sloan in Fayetteville.
He did a poor job of concealing his deep pride and admiration for his younger brother Bill, who ran the bank for which he served as a director for many years. He begrudgingly acknowledged that Bill was far better than he was at golf, and then only when pressed. He loved everything about McGehee and some of his happiest times was driving there from Little Rock to serve on the board of the Bank his father and brother had run.
He served as a mentor and friend to his children, nephews, nieces, and grandchildren, and introduced them to Cat Stevens and Neil Diamond unashamedly.
His memory for names, dates, and stories delighted us all. As we chuckled, some of us wondered if there were any embarrassing events which we had chosen to forget but that he still held in reserve. He loved nicknames, and he doled them out at the same rate that he accumulated them. "Harry", "Generalissimo Harrissimo", "Leebo", "Big Hoss", "Short Arms", "Bobo", "Big Leebowski", were some of his. "Rhino", "Avetron", "Dogboy", and "Tigi" are a small sample of his substitutes for our real names.
Leebo passed away peacefully at his home, survived by his children Lee Foster Bowman, Jason Sikes Bowman, Mary Bowman Ritchey, Kim Miros, his wife Susan Gregory, and 14 grandchildren. He loved them consistently and deeply, as he did all of his friends and family.
A gathering of friends and family will be held on Thursday, June 15 at Ruebel Funeral Home from 5:00-7:00 pm. Please play "Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show" at home regardless of whether you can come.