
Globe-trotting diplomat Andy Mair, one of Wellington (Colorado)’s proudest sons
and biggest boosters, died April 25, 2009, at age 95.
Mair always credited the superior education he received in Wellington
(Colorado)
schools for giving him the foundation for an adventurous career that
carried him across the globe in the service of six presidents.
Yet through it all, Mair remained part of the place where he was raised.
“I’m just a sugar beet farmer from Wellington (Colorado),” he was fond of
proclaiming.
Indeed he was. A photo on the cover of last year’s inaugural edition of
the Colorado Farm Bureau’s magazine captures a strapping Mair at the
wheel of a tractor towing an overflowing wagon of beets. That close
connection with agriculture was an enduring theme in his life.
Based on his success building the Farm Bureau locally and statewide, he
was appointed to the Department of Agriculture’s Denver office of
conservation and stabilization.
In 1969, he was appointed deputy assistant secretary for international
affairs and commodity programs, working to improve worldwide food
supplies and distribution.
Then in 1973, Mair became coordinator of the Food for Peace program,
responsible for distributing hundreds of millions of dollars in food to
developing nations.
In between, he worked for the State Department with postings in Italy,
Afghanistan and Turkey.
Mair was preceded in death by his wife of 57 years, Norma. They had two
daughters, Carolyn Cady and Peggy Klinkerman.
Dan MacArthur interviewed Mair for a profile published in August 2008.
“Wellington High School meant the world to Mair” is available online at
www.northfortynews.com/Archive2008.htm.