Clarence Elmer Haught, a longtime resident of Coeur d’Alene and a retired
administrator at North Idaho College, died Monday, Oct. 31, at home after a long period
of failing health. He was 83. He was known for his woodworking and model airplane
skills.
Haught was born in Aurora, Colorado, on May 14, 1933, and moved with his
parents to Idaho a year later. The family raised some crops and dairy cattle on a series
of farms in Southern Idaho, near Twin Falls, Castleford and Buhl. Clarence attended
Castleford High School and graduated from Buhl High School in 1951. He joined the
U.S. Navy and was trained as an aviation mechanic. He served during the Korean War
on the aircraft carrier the U.S.S. Mindoro. He remembered his Navy years as the best
days of his life. In recent years, he proudly wore his Korean Veteran ball cap
everywhere he went. He was delighted when a passer-by thanked him for his service.
After he left the Navy, Clarence worked as a mechanic at Reeder Flying Service
in Twin Falls and taught aviation mechanics at Idaho State University. He moved to
Coeur d’Alene in 1963 to become assistant director of vocational education at what was
then North Idaho Junior College. Eventually, he became director and later dean of the
vocational education and he took great pride in growing the program’s offerings. He
retired in 1991 after serving 28 years.
Clarence stayed busy during his retirement, designing, building and flying model
airplanes, even representing United States modelers in a Chinese competition. He
loved working with wood and built 41 of pieces of Mission oak furniture, dozens of toys
and boxes. He turned countless wooden bowls on his lathe. His other hobbies included
shooting guns and reloading ammunition, riding motorcycles and taking photographs.
He also loved dogs, especially cocker spaniels. He’d had 16 of them over the years and
one basset hound.
Clarence is survived by his wife of 27 years, Carol; three children, Nancy, David
(Jennifer) and Debra; three step-children, Jennifer (Perry), Gail (Larry) and Branden
(Felicity); nine grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
No funeral was planned but a memorial will be held later. Remembrances may
be donations to a U.S. veterans’ group or the Kootenai County Humane Society.