Name |
Etzel Willhoit |
Birth |
5 Jan 1901 |
Longrun, Marion Township, Ozark County, Missouri, USA |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
31 Jul 1991 |
Littleton, Arapahoe County, Colorado, USA |
Burial |
Woodlawn Cemetery, The Bronx, Bronx County, New York, USA |
Siblings |
1 brother and 4 sisters |
| 1. Alta Willhoit, b. 7 Dec 1891, Longrun, Marion Township, Ozark County, Missouri, USA d. 29 May 1962, Fairborn, Greene County, Ohio, USA (Age 70 years) ▻ Ralph Lonon Sanford, m. 10 Jan 1921 | | 2. Allie Fair Willhoit, b. 21 Nov 1896, Longrun, Marion Township, Ozark County, Missouri, USA d. Jul 1979, Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona, USA (Age 82 years) ▻ Ramón Gallego Michelena, m. 19 Apr 1930 | | 3. Cora Alice Willhoit, b. 26 Dec 1898, Longrun, Marion Township, Ozark County, Missouri, USA d. Feb 1985, Haskell, Muskogee County, Oklahoma, USA (Age 86 years) ▻ Hugh Murray Miller, m. 22 Jun 1932 | | 4. Etzel Willhoit, b. 5 Jan 1901, Longrun, Marion Township, Ozark County, Missouri, USA d. 31 Jul 1991, Littleton, Arapahoe County, Colorado, USA (Age 90 years) ▻ Sara Elizabeth Pringle | | 5. Clemmie Willhoit, b. 27 Jan 1904, Hammond, Ozark County, Missouri, USA d. Feb 1994, Littleton, Arapahoe County, Colorado, USA (Age 90 years) ▻ Ira Arthur Miller, m. 8 Mar 1927 | |
Notes |
- Etzel received his first violin after the family moved to Arp in Ozark County, MO. He would play for community dances. He graduated from the eighth grade at Barren Fork School. He taught at the Barefoot School (MO) and the New Hope School (AR) before moving to Hominy (OK) where he taught for five years. In 1922 he received his high school diploma and a certificate from college at Edmond (OK). While at Hominy, he was encouraged to attend the Julliard School of Music in New York. There he washed dishes and worked other odd jobs to survive. This determination and talent led to a Master's and Doctor's Degree from the Columbia University. He later went to Austria and France to study conducting and music. From 1929 to 1944, Etzel taught music at the Teanack High School (NJ) and conducted Bronx House Symphony. From 1944 to 1971, he was the Professor of Music at Central Connecticut State College at New Britain and the Conductor of the New Britain Symphony. When applying for a delayed birth certificate, Etzel wrote to the Division of Health in Jefferson City, Missouri, "When I was born, my parents spelled my first name, Etsel. Because of being addressed "Miss" and also finding it in the dictionary with a "Z", at about the age of 24, I changed the spelling of my first name from Etsel to Etzel."
Obituary: Etzel Willhoit, a founder, director, and conductor of the New Britain Symphony Orchestra, died July 31, 1991 in Littleton, CO. He was ninety and lived in Littleton.
Willhoit also had been a music professor at what is now Central Connecticut State University. He began teaching at Teachers College of Connecticut in 1944 and stayed at what became Central Connecticut State College for 26 years, serving as music department chairman for many of those years.
During his tenure, Willhoit expanded the department so a music major could be offered.
He restarted the New Britain Symphony Orchestra in 1949 and served as its director until 1967. He prided himself on never conducting a major work twice.
After retiring from CCSC in 1970, Willhoit and his wife, Sara, sold their home and traveled around the world for fifteen years, settling for a few months at a time in different locations. They eventually settled in San Diego, CA, and moved to Littleton in recent months.
Born in Longrun, MO, he got a job at age seventeen teaching music and penmanship at a Missouri school. After becoming principal, Willhoit began studying with a violin teacher in Oklahoma who recommended that he go to the Juilliard School in New York City.
He received his doctorate from Columbia University and holds a three-year certificate from the Mozarteum Academy in Salzburg, Austria. He also studied conducting in Austria, France and Mexico; choral conducting with Robert Shaw at Tanglewood; and violin at the Juilliard School.
In addition to his wife, he leaves two sons, Etzel Willhoit of Littleton and Robert Willhoit of Luxembourg; and several grandchildren.
He was buried Monday in Woodlawn Cemetery in New York City.
Published in the Hartford Courant on August 10, 1991.
|
Person ID |
i1856 |
Bryan-Martin |
Last Modified |
29 Oct 2023 |