Lemuel Douglas Middleton was born January 27,1923 in Clay County, Illinois. He was born on a farm between the towns of Xenia and Iola to Mark Middleton and Nina (Gullett) Middleton. He was the first surviving child of that marriage. He was preceded in passing by his sister Phyllis, brothers John, Joseph, Robert and his wife of 73 years, Agnes (Jaeger) Middleton. He is survived by his youngest sister Harriet, two sons Kenneth Douglas Middleton and wife Catherine of Scurry, Texas and Mark Anton Middleton and wife Carla of Double Oak, Texas. He had five grandchildren, Amy Margaret, Andrew Douglas and Robert Michael, Heather Lauren and Annice Tonya.
Doug completed high school and joined the Civilian Conservation Corp in May 1940. He entered active duty with the United Sates Navy on January 10, 1941. He was honorably discharged August 27, 1946. While in the Navy he served on several small radar picket boats and the Patrol Craft PC 463 in the Panama Canal Zone, the European-African zone, and Asiatic-Pacific zone. He served on the hospital ship USS Solace. He was a Signalman 2nd Class and went ashore with the Marines on Okinawa, where he was on VJ Day.
He was sent to Dickinson, North Dakota in 1944 to attend college to earn a commission. It was in Dickinson that he met and married Agnes Jeager on the 16th of September, 1944. He went from North Dakota to the Pacific where he saw the war end on Okinawa in August, 1945. He finished his second enlistment as a Signalman 1st Class and was discharged August 27, 1946.
On returning home he worked for a short time for Halliburton in the Illinois oil fields and then began a long career in the insurance industry. He joined Mid-States insurance company as an auto collision adjuster in St. Louis. Doug moved his family to Texas in 1948 and worked in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area eventually settling in Arlington, Texas in 1952. He left Mid-States as superintendent of claims in 1969 and went to work for USAA in San Antonio, Texas. He moved to San Antonio in 1971 and made it his home for almost fifty years. He led disaster task force teams all over the world for USAA. After retiring from USAA he became a consultant to the auto body shop industry.
In its second year, Doug joined the Inter-Industry Council for Collision Repair, ICAR, an organization designed to coordinate training between the auto manufacturers, collision repair shops, materials manufactures and insurance companies in order to deliver quality repairs to car owners and fair profits to the industry. He was still serving ICAR into his late 80's!
While doing all of that, he was on the board of the Texas State Technical Institute in Waco, Texas, The Masonic Lodge in Ft. Worth, The Boy Scouts of America, The National Rifle Association, The Texas State Rifle Association, The Patrol Craft Sailors Association, and many, many Patriotic organizations.
He was a great father to his sons Mark and Skip, good to his grandchildren, cared for his family, loved his wife to the end and was a good friend to many people on his journey through life.
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
2:00 - 4:00 pm
Parker-Ashworth Funeral Home
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