W5NF 1926 - 2019
Benjamin G. 'Ben' Lockerd
Ft Smith, AR

QCWA # 11119
Chapter 176
W5NF - Benjamin G. 'Ben' Lockerd
First Call: W5MGG in 1947       Other Call(s): W7NAH KØAZX

Benjamin Lockerd
Benjamin Gordon Lockerd, born Jan. 15, 1926, in Portales, New Mexico, to Gordon and Addie Lockerd, passed away Feb. 23, 2019, in Fort Smith at the age of 93.

Ben grew up on the family farm near Mangum, Oklahoma, with his brother, Jim, and two sisters, Sybil and Marjorie.

He joined the Army Air Corps during World War II and was stationed in Alaska as a radio operator. Family legend has it that he relayed the message that Emperor Hirohito had surrendered. He was called up again by the Air Force during the Korean War.

Ben married Julianne Marie Clark in Great Falls, Montana, in 1949. Their fruitful marriage produced six children, Rebecca Doll and her husband Thomas of Casper, Wyoming, Sister Marie Paul Lockerd RSM of St. Louis, Ben Lockerd Jr. and his wife Micheline of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Clark Lockerd and his wife Jan of Houston, Joe Lockerd and his wife Diane of Golden, Colorado, and David Lockerd and his wife Linda of Cincinnati; 15 grandchildren, and (so far) 20 great-grandchildren. He is also survived by a sister, Marjorie Hall of DeKalb, Texas; and a brother, Jim Lockerd and his wife Sarah of Lawton, Oklahoma. He was preceded in death by a sister, Sybil Richardson. He was a loving and hard-working father who taught his children the value of education and work. After Judy's untimely death, he married Wanda Ledbetter, who preceded him in death.

Mr. Lockerd pursued a long and successful career as a radio and television engineer. He established the first television station in western North Dakota, KDIX, Dickinson, and he later worked many years for KTWO in Casper. Longing to return to the southern lands of his youth, Ben moved to Fort Smith in 1971, where he continued his radio and television career and also expanded into rental property ownership and management.

Throughout his life, Ben was a ham radio operator, becoming one of the most accomplished operators in the world. He received a prestigious DX award for communicating with ham operators in every nation in the world and was granted a coveted two-letter call sign, W5NF.

Ben will be remembered by family and friends for his warmth, his charm and his brilliant mind, which continued to burn with a bright light to the end. He was recognized far and wide as an extraordinary autodidact, capable of figuring out how things worked and of repairing and improving them.

Funeral Mass will be 2:30 p.m. Monday at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church with a private interment at the U.S. National Cemetery in Fort Smith. Family will greet friends from 2-2:30 p.m. Monday at the church. Arrangements are under the direction of Fentress Mortuary.

To send an online tribute, go to www.fentressmortuary.com .

Published in Times Record on Feb. 25, 2019


02-25-2019, 04:45 PM
W5NF, Benjamin G. Lockerd, has become a Silent Key.
He was a longtime DXer in the Fort Smith, Arkansas, area and was 93 years old.
Some of his friends say they had not heard him on the air in a long time.
He had 333/348 in the DXCC Mixed standings.