Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Darlene Sherman enjoys time with her great-grandchildren. (Photo courtesy Deb Sherman)

She was a farmer’s wife, one whose gentle legacy will live on for generations.

Darlene Sherman brought joy and kindness to everything she did and made the prairie a more-welcoming place.

She accomplished much in her 90 years, and her family and friends will cherish their time with her.

 

Iva “Darlene” Sherman, aged 90, passed away peacefully at her home in Coupeville, Washington, on July 18, 2024.

Born on June 11, 1934, in Twin Falls Idaho, she was the daughter of Don and Iva Kilborn.

Darlene was preceded in death by her husband, Roger, her parents, and her brother, Vaughn Kilborn.

Darlene grew up on a farm in Kimberly, Idaho and graduated from Kimberly High School.

She attended the University of Idaho and majored in home economics and minored in music.

Her passion for music was not only a field of study, but a lifelong pursuit.

She met her husband, Roger, who was attending Washington State University, on a train headed for a Wesley Foundation conference for college students in Kansas.

Roger was immediately smitten with Darlene’s beautiful smile, gentle spirit, and her stunning red hair.

They married in 1956 and two weeks later Roger was stationed in Iceland serving in the Air Force.

Darlene stayed in Idaho and taught home economics.

After being apart for a year, they moved to Edwards Air Force Base, CA and eventually moved to Coupeville to work on the family farm with Roger’s dad, Clark Sherman, and his brother Al Sherman.

With her background, being the wife of a farmer came naturally to Darlene.

She enjoyed being home to raise her children, cook amazing meals for a hungry farmer (especially her famous chicken and rice casserole), and work when needed on the farm.

She supported Roger with his many community activities, including the Lions Club and the Sea Explorers.

Darlene supported the church and community with her many gifts.

She was a lifelong member of the church and joined the Coupeville United Methodist Church when she and Roger moved to Coupeville.

Music was Darlene’s passion. She was a member of the church choir for 65 years.

She performed solos, sang in duets, quartets and was a member of the community choir and the Choralaires.

Her musical talents also led to her teaching music in Sunday school.

When the church purchased a set of bells, Darlene became a 40-year member of the bell choir.

She played bells at her 90th birthday celebration at the Sunday church service just a month before she passed away.

An active member of the United Methodist Women, Darlene served in a variety of offices over the years.

She made countless meals, cookies and desserts, and for decades helped make Christmas wreaths, all for mission work in our community and the world.

She served on the church’s Music, Memorial, and History committees, and was a member of P.E.O., supporting women’s education.

For many years Darlene volunteered at Whidbey Health Hospital, greeting people and serving beverages to patients.

She also worked on the election board, greeting people who came into the school to vote, and counting ballots late into the night.

Darlene’s life was a collection of chapters that told a story of dedication, love, and kindness.

She always had time to talk and make you feel special; like she had been waiting all day to see you and now the day was complete.

She is survived by her children, Connie Tripp (Mike), and Don Sherman (Deb), grandchildren, Brad (Abbey), Jamie, Bryan (Bailey), Jeff (Leah), Tony (Shelby), 11 great-grandchildren, brother in-law Jim Sherman (Michael), and many extended family and friends whom she loved deeply.

A memorial service will be held at the Coupeville United Methodist Church on Saturday, August 24th, at 11:00 AM.

Please join us in celebrating Darlene’s life, where we will remember the joy she brought to all of us.

In remembrance of Darlene’s life, the family asks that any charitable donations be made to The Coupeville United Methodist Church memorials or the music program.

Coupeville United Methodist Church, PO Box 566, Coupeville, WA 98239.

Get the scoop two ways.

Coupeville Elementary School is hosting a back-to-school night Thursday, Aug. 29, with ice cream the big drawing card.

For all the pertinent info, pop back up to the photo above.

State cross country champ Tyler King, always signing autographs for the fans. (Photo courtesy Sarah Stuurmans)

The history, like a lot of the trails used, is a bit bumpy and uneven.

Coupeville High School has had an on and off, then on again, relationship with cross country over the years.

The Wolves boast two individual state champs, but one of those only competed in a Coupeville uniform at the very end of his career.

That’s because, for a long chunk of time, CHS didn’t have its own in-house harrier program, having shut down the sport in the ’90s.

So, when Tyler King came along in the 2000’s, while he attended school in Coupeville, he ran for Oak Harbor.

Up until his senior season, when paper shuffling between the schools kicked him out of the 4A classification that the Wildcats were part of and put him running as a one-man Wolf crew back in 1A.

King promptly closed his senior season by claiming the 2010 state title, joining 1985 champ Natasha Bamberger, who won at the B/1A level, finishing in the top eight at state in all four of her seasons at CHS.

Going through records held by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, marks for state cross country meets go back to 1959 for boys, 1973 for girls.

Though, looking up small school activity from 1977-1979 currently gets you a “404 – File or directory not found” notice. So, as usual, there will always be gaps in my research, apparently.

And that does directly affect this story, as the CHS boys won league and district titles in 1977, before finishing 5th as a team at state.

But, with no access to old Whidbey News-Times archives — they’re locked-down off-Island these days — and no WIAA info, I can’t definitively list those runners for you today.

But here’s what I have found, with a surge in the ’70s and ’80s, then a long gap as CHS largely shied away from the sport, and now the rebirth of recent years after Willie Smith, Elizabeth Bitting, Bamberger, and others revived the program.

 

CHS cross country at state:

 

1975:

Boys — 9th

Bob McClement (23rd) 13:47
Mike Ellsworth (40th) 14:05
Mike Allgire (60th) 14:21
Jeff Fielding (61st) 14:21
Tom Clark (77th) 14:40
Danny Miller (88th) 14:48
Ryan Keefe (107th) 15:23

 

1976:

Boys — 5th

Bob McClement (12th) 13:19
Jeff Fielding (27th) 13:42
Ryan Keefe (37th) 13:54
Mike Allgire (45th) 13:59
Charlie Ellsworth (74th) 14:22
Don Sherman (85th) 14:40
Tom Clark (92nd) 14:47

 

1977:

Boys — 5th

???

 

1981:

Girls — 8th

Kerry McCormick (38th) 22:06
Debbie Logan (41st) 22:16
Terri McLane (48th) 22:30
Kristine Macnab (61st) 23:17
Sharon Brown (79th) 25:11
Karen Reuss (85th) 26:22

 

1982:

Girls — 4th

Natasha Bamberger (8th) 19:08
Kerry McCormick (38th) 21:02
Debbie Logan (40th) 21:09
Kristine Macnab (55th) 22:04
Molly McPherson (66th) 22:53
Becky Seely (77th) 24:24
Kristy Brown (80th) 25:19

 

1983:

Natasha Bamberger (2nd) 18:56.3

 

1984:

Natasha Bamberger (3rd) 19:11

 

1985:

Natasha Bamberger (1st) 19:51

 

2010:

Tyler King (1st) 15:16.9

 

2017:

Danny Conlisk (124th) 18:06.90

 

2019:

Catherine Lhamon (92nd) 21:44.70

 

2021:

Mitchell Hall (58th) 18:44.40

 

Helen Strelow (58th) 24:48.90
Claire Mayne (62nd) 25:06.00

 

2022:

Mitchell Hall (19th) 17:58.90
Carson Field (74th) 19:27.90

 

Girls — 8th

Claire Mayne (42nd) 24:05.30
Helen Strelow (49th) 24:28.20
Cristina McGrath (63rd) 25:57.70
Reagan Callahan (72nd) 28:20.60
Erica McGrath (73rd) 28:21.80

 

2023:

Boys — 10th

Carson Field (44th) 18:23.40
Landon Roberts (63rd) 18:38.10
Ezekiel Allen (83rd) 19:08.40
George Spear (93rd) 19:24.90
Thomas Strelow (106th) 19:34.90
Kenneth Jacobsen (110th) 19:40.60
Axel Marshall (157th) 21:54.60

 

Noelle Western (46th) 23:28.30

“You’re coming with me, mister!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Scrub a dub dub, make it spic and span.

Showing off their community spirit and appreciation for US Navy history, a group came together Friday at Oak Harbor’s Gateway Park.

The mission was to clean the A-6 Intruder and EA-6B planes which welcome visitors to the island, while also getting rid of pesky weeds at the intersection of SR20 and Ault Field.

The group included NAS Whidbey Island sailors, Pacific Northwest Naval Air Museum volunteers, City of Oak Harbor workers, and Intruder Association members.

Back from his summer RV trip across America, camera clicker John Fisken, himself a Navy alumnus, swung by to snap the pics seen above and below.

To see everything he shot, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Events/Gateway-Park-plane-cleaning-2024-08-16

 

Cory Whitmore preaches patience. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

He’s #1 with a spike.

With softball guru Kevin McGranahan’s departure, volleyball wizard Cory Whitmore is now the winningest active coach at Coupeville High School.

Even with the 2020 season cut in half by the pandemic, the court ace boasts an 88-43 mark during his time at CHS, with trips to the state tourney in 2017 and 2023.

Boys’ basketball head man Brad Sherman, who now doubles as the school’s athletic director, is #2 with 70 wins and counting.

After that it drops down to baseball coach Steve Hilborn and girls’ basketball leader Megan Richter, at 28 and 26 respectively.

Boys’ soccer top dog Robert Wood (16) and football signal caller Bennett Richter (9) are the only other active CHS coaches with victories.

McGranahan won 111 games before exiting this summer.

This will be the ninth season at the helm of the Wolf spiker program for Whitmore, who has posted a winning mark in each campaign.

His tally:

2016: 11-6
2017: 13-5
2018: 11-5
2019: 14-5
2020: 6-3
2021: 11-6
2022: 10-6
2023: 12-7

Not counting tournaments, Coupeville is slated to play 14 regular season matches, then hopes to have a long postseason run.

That leaves open a very real possibility Whitmore could crack triple-digit wins this fall, putting a little distance between himself and Sherman before basketball gears back up in the winter.