Forrest Lee Ramser, "The Captain," 85, of Watkinsville, Ga., died Sept. 14, 2010, following an extended illness.
Mr. Ramser was born March 13, 1925, to Fred and Margaret Wallace Ramser in Alliance, Ohio. Following graduation from Alliance High School in 1943, Mr. Ramser immediately entered the United States Navy and served in the U.S. Navy Submarine Service in the South Pacific Theater as an electrician's mate during World War II. He served on the USS Razorback and the USS Pufferfish and was present at the signing of the Peace Treaty with Japan in 1945.
He married Helen Margaret Greek on Jan. 5, 1947. They had been married for 60 years at the time of Mrs. Ramser's death in August 2007. Three children were born to Forrest and Helen: Janet Lee of Watkinsville, Ga., Mark Alan (Jean) of Zionsville, Ind., and Fred Milton (Betty Jo) of Goshen, Ind. Surviving Mr. Ramser are his three children; his grandchildren, Christine N. Brubaker (Janet Rountree) of Nicholson, Ga., Laura K. Brubaker Sparr (David) of Watkinsville, Ga., Forrest Michael Ramser (Courtney) of Winter Garden, Fla., Adam N. Ramser of Indianapolis, Ind., Seth P. Ramser of West Lafayette, Ind.; and Kyle B. Ramser of Santa Rosa, Calif.; and his great-grandchildren, Skylar M. Sparr, Zachary E. Sparr and Forrest Matthew Ramser.
Upon his discharge from the Navy, Mr. Ramser returned to Alliance, where he married, bought a panel truck and rug cleaning equipment and started his first business with money saved in the Navy. In 1953, he began work as a billing clerk at United Cooperatives and was assistant manager of the Farm Hardware Department when he left in 1955 to move to Milford, Ind. During his years at United Cooperatives, Mr. Ramser met Howard Brembeck, founder of Chore-Time Equipment Inc., Milford, Ind., a manufacturing business whose innovations in the mechanized feeding and watering of poultry changed the face of the poultry industry. The business was started in the basement of Mr. Brembeck's home, and Mr. Ramser was Chore-Time's first employee and shareholder. He was the senior vice president of Chore-Time Equipment Inc., and CTB Inc.; executive vice president of CT Sales Inc.; and president and managing director of Chore-Time Elite, N.V., Maldegem, Belgium, until 1985.
In 1968, Chore-Time decided to open a southern division in Georgia to be near the expanding commercial egg and poultry industry. Mr. Ramser agreed to move from Indiana to build a manufacturing plant on 441 South in Watkinsville, which is now the Oconee State Bank Operations Center. The Ramsers and their son, Fred, moved to Athens in August 1970. Mr. Ramser held the position of senior vice president of Chore-Time Brock Inc., Watkinsville, Ga., until 1985.
Seeing the market potential in Europe and Asia, Chore-Time Elite, N.V., Maldegem, Belgium, was established in 1967 to manufacture mechanized poultry and pig raising systems. CT Elite split from the parent company in 1985, and Mr. Ramser took ownership. Defying the advice of marketing experts, the company's name was changed to Roxell N.V., and the company's signature colors of red and white were changed to yellow and gray. Always an innovator in the poultry and swine manufacturing industry, Roxell N.V. purchased A. Stevens N.V., St. Niklaus, Belgium, an injection molding plastics manufacturer. The new company, EFG, N.V., manufactured the molded plastic feeding, watering pans and parts for Roxell N.V. and other businesses. Roxell N.V. purchased SIPCO Co., Springdale, Arkansas, in 1991 and Roxell, Inc. was formed to bring the innovative ideas and products of Roxell N.V. to the North and South American market.
In 1997, Mr. Ramser, the chairman of Roxell N.V., sold his interest in the businesses to the managing partners of Roxell N.V. and his three children. CTB International, the original founding parent company, bought Roxell N.V./Inc. in 1999 and brought those companies back into the CTB fold. These and numerous other agricultural companies owned by CTB International were then purchased by Warren Buffet's investment company, Berkshire Hathaway.
During his 40 years in Georgia, Mr. Ramser was actively involved in numerous civic and philanthropic endeavors. When Athens Country Club froze its membership in 1978, Mr. Ramser posed the question, "Where would business leaders looking to move their industries to the Athens area recreate?" Seeing a need, Mr. Ramser gathered a group of community leaders to form Jennings Mill Associates in 1979, who put together Jennings Mill Country Club. Out of this was also formed J. M. Athens, which built Jennings Mill, a 640-acre residential country club community and the first planned unit development in Athens-Clarke and Oconee County. Since 1985, he had partnered with and mentored the founders and partners of Select Trees, Bogart, Ga., a wholesaler of large sustainable shade trees to landscape architects, developers, contractors, government institutions and commercial enterprises. Mr. Ramser was instrumental in encouraging the Select Trees Group to establish the Select SustainablePlus Tree Trust, which has donated thousands of sustainable trees to nonprofits, municipalities and community organizations.
Mr. Ramser was a member of Athens Christian Church for 40 years and served as an Elder there and at Christian Church of Milford, Ind. For more than 25 years, he served on the Board of Directors of Atlanta Christian College, Hope Haven of Northeast Georgia, and The Salvation Army Advisory Board. He was a director of the National Bank of Athens, Trust Co. Bank of Northeast Georgia, SunTrust Bank, the Southeastern Poultry Association, Chickmaster Incubator Co., the Poultry Manufacturers Council, Highlands Golf Limited, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia. He was a member of Jennings Mill Country Club and at one time held memberships to Athens Country Club, Athens, Ga.; Highlands Country Club, Highlands, N.C.; and Wildcat Cliffs, Cashiers, N.C.
Mr. Ramser was recipient of the Salvation Army's "Others Award" in 1985 and a lifetime member of their Advisory Board.
He was honored by the alumni of Alliance High School with the Distinguished Alumni Award in 1992. Atlanta Christian College bestowed upon him the Founders Award in 1997, and Standard Publishing and Milligan College recognized Mr. Ramser with the Leaders in Christian Service Award in 2003.
Visitation will be held
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from 5 to 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 18, 2010, at Lord and Stephens West, 1211 Jimmy Daniel Road, Bogart, Ga. Funeral services will take place at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 19, 2010, at Athens Christian Church, 1200 Forest Heights Drive, Athens, Ga.
A second funeral will be held in Alliance, Ohio, at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2010, at Cassaday-Turkle-Christian Funeral Home, with burial following in Alliance City Cemetery. Friends may call one hour prior to service.
Memorials may be made to the Forrest L. and Helen M. Ramser Scholarship, Atlanta Christian College, 2605 Ben Hill Road, East Point, Ga. 30344, or Hope Haven of Northeast Georgia, 795 Newton Bridge Road, Athens, Ga., 30607. (9-16-10)
"God is great! God loves you, and so do I!"
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