Don Anderson was born at home on May 29, 1907 to Elsie Nenno Anderson and William Chester Anderson in Springfield,
Minnesota. He was the oldest of three children. His two younger siblings were girls. Margie, five years younger than Don,
died in a tragic car accident at age nine. Kathleen, ten years younger than Don, is
eighty years old (in 1997) and living in the Kansas City area.
Don's paternal grandfather came to the United States from Norway. He was a blacksmith and owned several farms. He was
the sheriff of Brown County (the county seat was New Ulm). Don's father, Bill, was a barber. He owned two shops in
Springfield and then one in Mankato when the family moved there around 1922.
Don's maternal grandparents were John Nenno (a Civil War veteran who had been injured in the war and lived on a disability pension)
and Margaret Ellen Lynch. John Nenno was of Alsace-Lorraine ancestry, which could be French or
German depending upon your political leanings. Margaret Ellen was Irish Catholic, and she ran a boarding house in New Ulm.
Don's mother, Elsie, was one of twelve children and lived to be nearly 102 years old. She died on April 27, 1991 - eleven days short
of her 102nd birthday.
Don grrew up in Springfield, attending the public schools except for grades six or seven. At that time he was switched to the Catholic
school so he could make his first communion and be confirmed. He went back to the public school in eighth grade because Elsie
thought the public schools were better at the time. His family moved to Mankato his sophomore year in high school. He stayed in
Springfield living with an uncle so he could complete the school year and then joined his family in Mankato. He graduated from
Mankato High School in 1925.
For the first year after high school Don worked as a laborer in Montana for his uncle Bill Roscoe's construction company. In the fall
of 1926 he staarted college at the University of Minnesota. During his summers and also the school year of 1927-28 he worked
construction for Bill Roscoe. His means of transportation between Minnesota and Montana was to "ride the rails with the hobos".
He was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity while in college and graduated in 1931 with a degree in Civil Engineering. He paid
his entire way through college earning money working construction for his uncle, waiting tables - two years at the Delta Zeta sorority
house and two years at a fraternity, advanced ROTC and boxing for money on the side (receiving $25.00 for a three round bout).
While in college, Don started boxing. He won two Golden Gloves tournaments as a 160 lb. middleweight. During his sophomore year
boxing became a college sport. He fought both intercollegiate and interfraternity bouts. He won the University of Minnesota
middleweight championships three years in a row. He also fought and won light heavyweight bouts and was crowned fraternity light
heavyweight champion. He was known for knocking out his opponents. He also did some boxing for pay on the side to earn spending
money. In those days the rules weren't quite so strict, and many of the collegiate boxers did this boxing under a different name.
Don met his future wife, Aleen Rigg, while working on one of his uncle's construction jobs in Montana. His first cousin, Marguerite
Roscoe, who was an Alpha Gamma Delta sorority sister of Aleen's at Montana State University, introduced them in 1928. They
were engaged almost 3 years before they were married January 12, 1932.
They had four children:
|
Mona Joan - June 8, 1939
LaDonna Mary - October 17, 1939
Stephanie Ann - August 14, 1943
Donald Nicholas - May 10. 1948 |
Afteer his college graduation in 1931, Don went to work for his uncle Bill Roscoe as foreman running jobs in both Montana and
Wyoming. He did this until 1941 when the U.S. entered World War II.
While in college, Don became good friends with two of his Sig Ep fraternity brothers from El Paso, Texas - Tom Hansen and Jim
Dunn. They talked about going into the construction business one day after they got out of college. This would not happen until
1948, though, because of the Depression and the onset of World War II.
Don had a commission in the Army Reserve due to his ROTC involvement in college. It had to be renewed periodically. He chose
not to renew it, but instead applied for and received a Commission in the Civil Engineering Corps of the Navy. He became a Senior
Grade Lieutenant in the Navy Reserve in 1939. During this time he continued to work for his uncle, and he and Aleen had two little
girls - Mona and Donna. War broke out in Europe in 1939, and when a "national emergency" was declared in 1941 he was called
up for active duty. Pearl Harbor was bombed December, 1941, and the U.S. entered World War II.
His assignment was to represent the Navy's interest in building dry-docks by civilian construction companies at Naval shipyards.
It was his job to see that these construction companies got the job done properly, on time, and did not overcharge the Navy.
His first tour of duty was to oversee three Naval shipyards in the New York City area - 1941 to 1943. From 1943 to 1945 he was
in Everett, Washington. In 1945 he went to Inyokern, a Naval base in the middle of the California Mojave Desert. Besides the
Navy presence in this area, the Army was building a rocket testing station in conjunction with the Manhattan Project (the
development of the atomic bomb). This is an interesting aside and everything was top secret. At the end of the summer of 1945
he was sent to Richmond, California where he was to supervise the building of three floating vessels which were to be sunk in
Tokyo Harbor to be used as protection for U.S. forces in a land invasion on Japan. The invasion was never to be because the U.S.
ddropped the bomb on Japan and World War II ended. After the cancellation of the building of the three vessels, he was saent to
Europe and North Africa to salvage and repair a dry dock the British were towing across the Atlantic which had broken loose in
the mediterranean and gone aground in Algiers. Don's family traveled to each assignment with the exception of his European
assignment, and also during the war in 1943 Stephanie was born. After the repair of the dry dock was completed in 1946,
Don left the Navy as a commander for civilian life.
In 1946 he moved his family to El Paso, Texas. His old college friend, Tom Hansen, arranged for him to get a job with the
Lee Moore Construction Company in El Paso. Tom was working for Lee Moore at the time. Don worked for Lee Moore
for two years, and in 1948 while working on a government canal job in California, he and Tom worked out their business plans
to go out on their own. Don Jr was born in El Paso at this time.
Two bridge jobs came up for bid in Phoenix, Arizona, and Lee Moore agreed to let Don and Tom bid
the jobs in his name. So they were now realizing their college dream of going into business on
their own. Don moved his family to Phoenix during the summer of 1948. Tom ran the office and the
business end of the company out of El Paso, and Don ran the jobs. Jim Dunn joined them in 1949.
They formed two construction companies - Western Constructors, Inc. in Phoenix and Hansen,
Anderson, and Dunn in El Paso. They did work in Arizona, New Mexico, and west Texas. They built
highways, bridges, underpasses, overpasses, and some earthen dams in Arizona and mostly bridges
in El Paso. In Arizona they built stretches of I-10, I-8, Black Canyon Highway, I-40 and I-19
to Nogales. During his years in the construction business, Don was a member of the Associated
General Contractors, and he served for their Board of Directors for several years.
After forty years of marriage in July of 1972, Aleen passed away very suddenly leaving a big
void in his life. In 1974 while attending a wedding at the Camelback Inn he met a widow,
Marjorie Staples Lee. She had also been widowed quite unexpectedly in May of 1972. They were
introduced bt an old famly friend, Frank Middleton. They dated for two years and were married
on April 9, 1976. They have now been married for 21 years (in 1997).
In 1976 Don, aged 69, and Tom and Jim decided to retire from their very successful 28 years
in the construction business. They liquidated their companies by selling off their equipment
and retired. Both Tom and Jim have passed away.
Don had kept physically active all these years keeping up, although in a modified form, with
the exercise regimen he followed in his boxing days. His knees may be a little tired, but he
does keep walking and working out. It is because of this and his good genes that he looks
far younger than his 90 years.
We wish him many, many more years of happy healthy life.