Obituaries |
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Wednesday, November 14, 2007 |
Rowan Damia Ford
Published: Sunday, November 11, 2007 1:08 AM CST
Rowan Damia Ford, 9, was pronounced dead Friday, Nov. 9, 2007.
She was born April 11, 1998 in San Diego, Calif. Rowan was a fourth grade student at Triway Elementary. She attended Stella Baptist Church, where she was active in Sunday School, Wednesday night Team Kid and Angel Food Ministries.
Rowan is survived by her mother, Colleen; two brothers, James McLeod, of the state of Illinois. and Robert McLeod, of the state of Washington.; two sisters, Janice Shaffer and husband, Adam, of the state of Florida, and Ariane Parsons, of the state of Mississippi.; five aunts, Barbara Colligan, of the state of Florida., Joyce Durbin, of the state of Michigan., Donna Pullen, of the state of Michigan., Alisha Kelly, of Missouri., and Carletta Letts, of Missouri.; one uncle, Harvey Pullen, of the state of Michigan; a niece, Mackenzie, and a nephew, Shaun.
She was preceded in death by her maternal grandparents, Robert and Grace Munson.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m., Wednesday, at Gospel Lighthouse Church, Neosho, with Rev. Glenn Ennis and Steve Moser officiating. Burial will follow at Macedonia Cemetery, Stella.
Serving as pallbearers will be Robert McLeod, James McLeod, Adam Shaffer, Carson Beets, Gerald Counts, and Ralph Jennings. Bill Alsop and Robert McLeod will serve as honorary pallbearers.
Friends mall call at the funeral home from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Tuesday, where the family will receive friends from 5 to 7 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Rowan Ford Memorial Fund, c/o Hometown Bank; or the Lafayette House, c/o Clark Funeral Home, P.O. Box 66, Neosho, 64850
Online condolences may be posted at www.clarkfuneralhomes.com.
Services are under direction of Clark Funeral Home, Neosho.
But Rev. Ennis said he believes that while Ford’s body may have been abandoned, the girl who was always on the move, always waiting outside the church door, had already ascended into heaven.
He spoke of a verse from John 1:5. It is the verse he said was found on the bookmark Ford used in her Bible.
“The light shines through the darkness, and the darkness can never extinguish it.”
Hannah fan
According to friends and family, Rowan Ford loved to watch “Hannah Montana,” the Disney television show about a teenager who is a normal girl named Miley Stewart by day and a glamorous singer named Hannah Montana by night.
Four nights a week, Ford would go to Triway’s “21st Century” program offered after school, Holt said.
She loved to learn, and although only 9, she proved herself “an incredibly hard worker” who was not afraid to ask questions if she did not understand something.
She moved easily from the world of books into the world of people.
“Rowan was everybody’s friend,” Holt said.
Judy Ennis, who taught Ford on Wednesday nights at Stella Baptist Church, said the girl was quiet but had a way of charming people.
“She would take your heart right after she met you,” she said.
When the pastor or other churchgoers arrived at Stella Baptist Church, she would be waiting, wearing her usual smile as she bounded down the stairs to greet them.
Ford, said Rev. Glenn Ennis, the pastor of the church, cared little for material things or the rat race. He described her as selfless. When she was at the church, she loved to sing, to color, to draw, to worship and, above all, to help, he said.
She set an example that others could follow, he said.
“How often do we overlook the example of a child?” he asked.
‘It happened’
Why the girl described as “everybody’s friend” and “an angel” was subjected to the torture of rape and strangulation with a cord is unknown.
Neither of her alleged killers — Spears and Collings — is listed as a registered sex offender. Both men also reportedly have children of their own.
Myrna Spears, David Spears’ mother, said Collings has an estranged wife and two children, both younger than age 10, in Arkansas.
David Spears was ordered to pay child support in the amount of $209 a month to Niccole Smith, of Fairview, for a minor child in early 2005, according to court records.
Murder, rape victim remembered by friends, pastor
Published November 17, 2007 08:52 pm - STELLA, Mo. — Her bike was her steadfast companion and she knew the roads well. Friends and others in the community of Stella would see her — a slender, brown-haired 9-year-old girl gliding along on her blue-tinted Blossom Quest bicycle.
By Derek Spellman
dspellman@joplinglobe.com
STELLA, Mo. — Her bike was her steadfast companion and she knew the roads well.
Friends and others in the community of Stella would see her — a slender, brown-haired 9-year-old girl gliding along on her blue-tinted Blossom Quest bicycle.
Rowan Ford was careful to steer clear of heavy traffic, preferring quieter side streets that took her around the town’s tree-clad slopes and to the home of her best friend, Tyler, who happened to live across the street from Ford’s second home: the Stella Baptist Church.
A friend recalled at her funeral last week that Ford “just kept going and going and going.”
There’s speculation in hindsight now, speculation after Ford went missing nearly two weeks ago, speculation that intensified after Ford’s body was found, that the Stella girl spent so much time riding around town because she was keeping away from something.
Her stepfather, David Spears, 25, and Spears’ friend, Chris Collings, 32, have each been charged with first-degree murder, forcible rape and statutory rape in connection with Ford’s death.
When she wasn’t on her bicycle, Ford could be found in the after-school program at Triway Elementary School four nights a week. She was often at school early. She also was early for church on Wednesdays and Sundays. And then there was, of course, the bicycle, and all the riding around town.
But that’s hindsight, speculation after the brutal facts.
There’s little in the record that hints at trouble.
The only hot-line calls ever placed about Ford and her family were about head lice, according to the Missouri Department of Social Services. Those cases did not warrant further action because investigators said Ford’s family addressed the issue.
And local authorities, including those who knew Collings long before Ford vanished, said neither he nor Spears had much of a criminal record to speak of until they were arrested Nov. 9.
Family background
Ford came to Southwest Missouri from California, along with her mother, Colleen Spears, whose road had not been easy.