Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Next article
ANITA F. SMOOT
Time to read
3 minutes

SAMUEL JORDAN BELL

July 24, 2024 - 00:00
Posted in:
  • SAMUEL JORDAN BELL

A calm, stoic man, Samuel Jordan Bell, who admittedly preferred nature over people, passed away on June 20, 2024 at his home in Bandera, Texas. Born in Crystal Springs, Mississippi in 1931 to Lucille and Samuel Otto Bell, as a youngster and teen, Sam could be found most days behind a mule and a plow on the family farm, where they grew primarily tomatoes and cabbage. His early life was like that of many rural, farm, youth in the 1930s— full of a lot of hard work and exhaustion. He didn’t care too much about formal schooling and preferred to be outside learning from nature. After 8th grade, he and formal school parted ways and he worked fulltime on the farm. (If you have ever read the book by Jimmy Carter called “An Hour Before Daylight” about his life growing up in Plains, Georgia during the same period, it describes a lot of my dad’s early life. He said the only difference was that the Carters had a lot more money than the Bells did.)

1950 proved to be a life-changing year for Sam when he joined the US Airforce and was found to have an amazing aptitude for mechanics. He was quickly assigned to the first jet airplane mechanics division, which was a fasttrack, hot-shot, mechanics unit solely dedicated to the development of the B-47. It was thought that the way the US could win the Korean war was to get long-range jet bombers into the Korean conflict. Sam’s Unit was dedicated to the development of the B-47 Stratojet, the first swept wing jet bomber and the first to be designed to carry nuclear weapons. When the jet made its first, cross-Atlantic flight from the US to a base in England, Sam and the rest of the mechanics unit went along to England with it. He spent most of the Korean war in England where they supported air missions to Korea.

After an honorable discharge from the Airforce in 1954, Sam had a “right place at the right time” moment because he had the skills desperately desired by US commercial airlines who were only then beginning to acquire jet airplanes. In 1955, he began a 38-year career with Delta Airlines, starting out in Dallas, then Arlington, VA, and finally Baltimore. He was made the youngest aircraft maintenance foreman in Delta history and ran a tight ship at Friendship International Airport in Baltimore (now Baltimore-Washington International Airport- BWI) for most of his career. He retired from Delta in 1990. With his privilege to travel for free anywhere in the world, he did! Through his work he had great stories of times when he would stand in for Delta station managers in Caracus, Venezuela, Havana, Cuba, Montego Bay, Jamaica, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. He was caught in two coups de états, both in Caracus and in Havana when Castro overthrew Batista in 1959.

Sam married Hazel T. Bell of Austinsville, Virginia in 1954. They had one daughter, Samuela Adeen Bell, and the family lived in Annapolis, Maryland. Sam and Hazel were divorced in 1982. In 1985, Sam Married Eva Mae Lunney, of Darlington, Maryland. The couple lived in Ridgely, Maryland for many years and then moved to Bandera, Texas, where they called home for the last 28 years. Sam was a gentleman farmer and had a cow-calf operation, was a ranch caretaker, and had a hay business for many years. Mostly Sam just loved the quiet and beauty of the Texas Hill Country, and watching the “daily parade of white tail and axis dear” across the back 40.

Sam was dearly beloved by his daughter, Samuela (Adeen Bell) Orth-Moore. They had many grand adventures traveling the world together over the years, ---Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Greece, Japan, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand, Kenya, Ghana, and Ethiopia. They also enjoyed trail riding in the Appalachian Mountains, and were known, back in the day, to be pretty good at “flat footing,” a type of dance similar to clogging. Sam (known as Papa to the Orth-Moore grandkids) was beloved by his grandchildren, Cassidy (Cass), Shea (Shady), Jordan (Jdub) and Tessa (TG) Orth-Moore. He had a nickname for most people. We will all miss his “Papa jokes,” “sittin and spittin” on the back porch in July, and peanut parties. We will all miss his uncanny ability to diagnosis the problem with a car engine just from listening to it over the phone from the side of the road. He has helped to fix cars remotely from as far away as Kenya! His grandkids also would like to acknowledge him as the best and most patient driving instructor of all time, teaching them each to drive in the “barbwire truck” (so named because it was held together with barbwire!).

Sam and his wife, Eva, enjoyed trail riding and traveling across the country in their motorhome for many years, looking for a place to finally settle. They found their happy spot in Bandera and remained there. Sam loved being on his ranch and watching his cows. He was able to do that pretty much up until his passing.

Sam is survived by his wife, Eva Mae Bell, his daughter, Samuela Adeen (Bell) Orth-Moore and her husband David; his siblings Montora McDonald (and her husband Billy); and Otto K. Bell; (Sam was proceeded in death by sister Martha Haggan). Sam is also survived by his step-children, Vicki Gilbert Alldredge, and Scott Gilbert; step-grandchildren, Benjamin and Emma Gilbert, and Jeff Kelly; Alexandra Mascolo Caruso, and Matthew Mascolo. Great-grandchildren Colton Caruso, and Dominic Mascolo. His trusty little side-kick, Heidi, “Red Dog,” will really miss him.