Houghton
Furr, 85, Lincoln,
died Wednesday (3/15/06) at his home. Born in Lincoln (10/6/20) to
Archie M. and Mattie Belle (Houghton) Furr. As a child he enjoyed
reading, music and his bicycle. He took piano lessons every day before
attending Prescott
School. Houghton was
fortunate to travel the world with his widowed grandmother, Nellie Houghton, as
her escort in the late 1930s. He attended Irving Junior High and graduated from
the former Teachers College High School. In 1936 he started at the University of Nebraska, where he majored in math and
French. Elected to Phi Beta Kappa and was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
He lettered in swimming and track and also wrestled. He gave his first of many
organ concerts at First-Plymouth
Church in April of 1937. Upon his graduation from the university,
Houghton went on to Harvard
Law School.
He graduated in 1943, second in his class. While in law school he was elected
editor of the Harvard Law Review, despite seldom attending due to his interest
in learning to fly airplanes. Also, he developed a new interest in consuming
seafood, a rarity in Nebraska.
He attended numerous music concerts, where he developed further interest in
playing the organ as well as the piano, his real love. As a concert pianist he
won Best Artist at a Lincoln Symphony contest in 1946, and his good friend
Robert Anderson won the following year, and the two performed a concert at
Carnegie Hall in New York.
He married Marion Jones in 1941 at Sheridan
Lutheran Church.
They had a son, Houghton Jr., in 1942, and a daughter, Lyn, in 1945. Marion died in 1946. Houghton joined the Army Air Corps in 1943.
His job was teaching pilots to fly - in French! He was stationed at Turner
Field in Georgia, then in Tennessee and then to Florida, where he received his Navy wings.
After returning to Lincoln
he was a law professor, teaching constitutional law at the university and also
teaching vocal music for seven years. In 1955 Houghton was asked to join the
Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Company as secretary-treasurer, retiring 36
years later as vice president and treasurer.
He was an avid hunter and fisherman and played squash for many years.
Houghton was active in many civic organizations including the United Way. He
donated blood regularly and exercised often at the YMCA. He was an active
member of "the Club. "Houghton performed as
a pianist for the Lincoln Symphony in 1963 and served on its board in 1965-66.
In 1981 he met Joan Owen, who was visiting from New York. The two were married on Jan. 8,
1982, at Saint Paul United Methodist
Church in Lincoln. Houghton was the church organist at Saint Paul's for 40
years. Houghton and Joan continued to travel, mostly to France, and to
revisit many exotic locations throughout the world. Houghton Furr was in every way a most
spectacular human being.