Johnny Brooks Casparis passed away on
January 1, 2013 in Austin, Texas at the incredible age of 104 ½! At a very early age, he was baptized into the
Methodist Church in Johnson City, Texas.
He attended Johnson City High School and graduated on May 8, 1925. He and Lyndon Baines Johnson were
classmates. In 1924, he and Lyndon
comprised the debating team, which represented the Johnson City High School in
the Literary Events of the Interscholastic League Meet held that year in Johnson
City. They debated against a team from
Blanco High School. The subject for the
debate was “Resolved that the United States should join the League of Nations.”
Arguing the affirmative side, they won all three votes of the judges, which
gave them the Gold Medal at the county level. They progressed to the district
meet held in San Marcos where they won the bronze medal. The following year, Johnny was again on the
debate team, but Blanco did not send a team and they won by default. A lack of school funds prevented them from
going to the district meet!
After graduating in 1925, he went to San
Antonio and entered Draughen’s Business College majoring in Business
Administration. On March 1, 1926 he
accepted a clerical position with the Western Union Telegraph Company in San
Antonio. He worked nights and went to
school in the day. He received promotion
after promotion, finally accepting the position of cashier. He retired from Western Union on August 1,
1970, after having worked forty-four years and five months – all in the San
Antonio office.
Very early in his employment with Western
Union, he became avidly interested in unionism.
For sixteen years he served as the president of the San Antonio Local
Chapter of the Commercial Telegraphers’ Union.
In that capacity, he traveled over parts of Texas, all over the United
States and three times in Canada as a delegate to state, national and
international conventions. He was also a
member of the union’s national bargaining committee for three years.
Johnny or “Cas” as his friends called him,
was not a seasoned hunter per se, but he did enjoy many, many trips to South
Texas with his best friend, Dr. Harry A. Richmond, Jr., (deceased) hunting
morning doves, bob white and blue quail, and to the gulf coast area hunting
ducks and geese.
Cas was an avid salt-water fisherman. He had a house in Port Aransas, Texas for
over forty-five years. He participated
yearly in fishing tournaments of the Tarpon Rodeo and Deep Sea Round-up and won
over forty-five first prizes in the Bay Surf Division of those tournaments.
Sports Illustrated sent a reporter to Port Aransas to interview him and take
pictures of him fishing but upon his arrival, a hurricane was offshore and the
interview was canceled.
He loved to travel abroad and made seven
trips to Europe visiting Latch, Switzerland from which the Casparis people
immigrated. He saw and was invited into
the old Casparis homestead in Latch and the Casparis Castle at Rietberg, not
far from Latch. He visited friends in
Denmark and England. Six of his trips
were made to Norway where he had a multitude of very close friends. On his 75th and 80th
birthdays he accepted invitations from the Royal Norwegian Air Force to come
there as their guest. On every flight,
he was seated in the cockpit with his friends.
On February 24, 1981, he was awarded an official plaque accompanied by
an official letter or commendation from Major General Ingar T. Narvhus of the
Royal Norwegian Air Force in return for the hospitality accorded to the
Norwegian students sent to Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio. On his 90th birthday, he was
forced to abandon all travel of any great distance because of health problems
and when his Norwegian friends learned the reason for his absence, they would
fly to San Antonio from Oslo for short visits of two days or so just to be with
him on his birthday or for other friendly reasons. They returned again to help
him celebrate his 100th birthday as well.
Cas had a multitude of friends at Sea World
in San Antonio to whom he gave full credit for keeping his old heart young and
for buoying up his spirits when they began to sag. They spent many fine hours together and gave
his twilight years an extra boost.
Johnny Brooks Casparis is survived by his
sister, Marie Casparis, his nephew’s George Casparis Sansom and his wife,
Debbie; Patrick King Sansom and his wife, Terry Kay, Tom Leezer and his wife
Sara and their families as well as by a multitude of cousins and dear friends
throughout the world. He has left an
imprint in the world that will be forever treasured by all that knew him.
In lieu of
flowers, Johnny has requested that donations be made to the Methodist Church of
Johnson City, Texas or to the Johnson City Masonic Cemetery.
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