Max Entrikin
Privacy Level: Private with Public Biography and Family Tree (Yellow)

Max Entrikin

Max M. Entrikin
Born 1930s.
Ancestors ancestors
Brother of and [private sister (1930s - unknown)]
Descendants descendants
Died 2010s.
Problems/Questions Profile managers: Kie Zelms private message [send private message] and Lyn Entrikin private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 26 Mar 2019
This page has been accessed 342 times.

Biography

Max was born in 1933 to Frank Entrikin and Pearl Luiena Gump. He married Elaine Snyder in 1952. Max and Elaine had three children. They divorced in 1977 after 25 years of marriage. Max passed away in 2017.

Obituary

"Donald "Max" Entrikin, 83, passed away January 3, 2017, in Topeka, Kansas. Born in Abilene, Kansas, February 10, 1933 to Frank Entrikin and Pearl (Gump) Entrikin, he grew up on the Entrikin farm 17 miles southwest of Abilene. He graduated from Dickinson County Community High School in 1951. Max proudly served as a radio operator in the United States Army from December 1953 to December 1955. He attended Kansas State University, graduating with a degree in Electrical Engineering in 1959. After graduation, he worked for Collins Radio and General Dynamics. Max moved to northern Ohio in 1962 to work for the space program (NASA) at Lewis Research Station and at Plumbrook Station. While a resident of Port Clinton, Ohio, Max earned his Professional Engineer (PE) license and was elected President of the School Board. In 1973 he continued his government career as Chief of Electronics with the National Weather Service (NOAA) in Kansas City. In 1990 Max received the Meritorious Service medal from the Department of Commerce for developing and administering the Special Engineering Projects Office (SEPO) during his career at NOAA.

After retiring from government service, Max started a home inspection business, KESCO, in Lawrence, where he also served on the City Planning Commission and wired houses for Habitat for Humanity. He enjoyed woodworking and running a sawmill business with his brother-in-law. Together, they milled many board feet of lumber, much of it black walnut from the Entrikin farm. Max used some of the sawmill lumber to build Mission style furniture and custom pieces that are treasured by his family. Max was also known for his creative "junk" welded lawn sculptures that adorned his Lawrence home.

In 2001, Max bought a 40 acre farm near Eskridge, Kansas, where the view of the Flint Hills to the west rivaled that of his boyhood home. Always a farmer at heart, Max enjoyed his vegetable gardens, his restored Ford tractor, his dogs and the Caterpillar bulldozer he used to excavate and reinforce his farm ponds. Max designed and built a giant trebuchet, "Mad Max," delighting his large family by hurling a variety of test projectiles in his brome field. Max still holds the hedgeball chucking record and trophy for distance in his class-1,113 feet-at the Eureka Kansas Hedgeball Chuckin' Contest. Max designed, milled and built many operational model steam engines, a hobby he continued to enjoy after moving to Topeka in 2012.

In 2003, Max married his loving wife, Nancy, who survives him. Max also leaves two daughters, Kie (Ron) Zelms, O’Fallon, Illinois and Lyn Entrikin, Maumelle, Arkansas; sister, Nadine Griffin, Salina, Kansas and Nancy’s daughter, Marsha (Jim) Power, Overbrook, Kansas. A son, Michael Brent Entrikin, predeceased him.

Also surviving are Max’s five grandchildren, Zach (Megan) Zelms, Alison Zelms, Megan Goering, Hobbes Entrikin-Goering, and Ben Goering; his two great-grandchildren, Madison and Molly Zelms; Nancy’s two grandchildren, Maggie (Mike) Hall and Bailey Bixler and her two great-grandchildren, June and Vada May Hall.

Max and Nancy’s children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren will deeply miss Max’s wisdom, guidance, political commentaries, and abiding love for them all.

Max Entrikin left a legacy of hard work, high standards and principle. He believed that success in any task is possible with determination, planning and hard work. He was an example to all who knew him."

[1]


Sources

  1. Personal recollection of events witnessed by Kie (Entrikin) Zelms as remembered 26 Mar 2019.

Only the Trusted List can access the following:
  • Max's formal name
  • full middle name (M.)
  • exact birthdate
  • birth location
  • exact deathdate
  • death location
  • images (1)
  • private siblings' names
  • private children's names (3)
  • spouse's name and marriage information
For access to Max Entrikin's full information you must be on the Trusted List. Please login.


Is Max your relative? Please don't go away!
 star icon Login to collaborate or comment, or
 star icon contact private message private message a profile manager, or
 star icon ask our community of genealogists a question.
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Max: Have you taken a test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.
Comments: 1

Leave a message for others who see this profile. If you prefer to keep it private, send a message to a profile manager: private message private message
There are no comments yet.
Login to post a comment.
Entrikin-74 and Entrikin-21 appear to represent the same person because: Clear duplicate. My father and yours. Needs to be merged into Entrikin-21.
posted by Kie (Entrikin) Zelms

Featured German connections: Max is 23 degrees from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 25 degrees from Dietrich Bonhoeffer, 23 degrees from Lucas Cranach, 22 degrees from Stefanie Graf, 23 degrees from Wilhelm Grimm, 20 degrees from Fanny Hensel, 25 degrees from Theodor Heuss, 14 degrees from Alexander Mack, 31 degrees from Carl Miele, 20 degrees from Nathan Rothschild, 21 degrees from Hermann Friedrich Albert von Ihering and 22 degrees from Ferdinand von Zeppelin on our single family tree. Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.

E  >  Entrikin  >  Max Entrikin