Mary
Louise Bingham
1945-2004
A Remembrance
Born on Louisiana Avenue in St Louis on September 7, 1945, Mary Louise (Hoerr) Bingham was the first child of Doris and William N. Hoerr. They raised her in Affton, a near south suburb of St Louis, with sister Trudy Jo, now living in the family home. Mary Lou, as she was always called, had a gift for playing the flute and piccolo, which she carried through HS Band, Orchestra and All County Band, on to college and later to church services here in Norfolk.
As high school studies
were readily mastered, Mary Lou was
challenged by her father in constant daily debate. These language and
thinking
skills served well to support entrance to a rigorous liberal arts
college
education at Carleton College in Northfield Minnesota. During college,
Mary Lou
focused on U. S. History, with a successful defense of a comprehensive
exploration of the concept of “frontier”, as a guide to the growth of
American
society, from East to West, across North America.
Focus on a conceptual
Frontier, as means to understanding
communities, synched neatly when Mary Lou said to Mr. Qualey: “I’m not
suited
to teaching history. What else can I do?” His answer was to suggest
Urban and
Regional Planning. During her graduate work in this field at the
University of
Wisconsin, Mary Lou married Robert William Bingham, her college
sweetheart,
then a young naval officer. They made their home in Hampton Roads,
Virginia.
During her second year of
grad school at Wisconsin, prior to
and during visits with Rob in Norfolk, Mary Lou thoroughly researched
her
target city. Rob recalls that she knew Norfolk’s history from the time
of its
charter by the King of England, continuously to modern times. She also
traversed the city, carefully learning its streets, neighborhoods and
institutions.
Hired by the Norfolk
Department of City Planning as its
first non- University of North Carolinian and as its first female
professional
city planner, Mary Lou was launched into her career. One of her dreams
was to
“never get in a rut!” The lifeblood of a vibrant city assisted Mary Lou
in her
quest for perceptions that might contribute to making Norfolk a better
place to
live and work and play.
The young couple was
blessed by the arrival of two wonderful
children, Ned Nellis Bingham in 1979 and Jill Paisley Bingham in 1982.
Mary Lou
faced the child-care vs. job conundrum. Her response was a housekeeper
days,
and intense parenting, evenings, and weekends. The results speak for
themselves. Son, Ned, is a Computer Science graduate of Earlham
College.
Daughter, Jill, will graduate in Physics this year from Carleton
College. She
made them in her image as powerful and compassionate people.
Mary Lou lived as an
example by moving her community into
better shape than it was when she found it. Among her many
accomplishments,
such as being the lead staffer for millions of dollars of HUD grants,
she
particularly valued her experience doing property title research back
to the
original land grant in support of the Ghent Historical Zoning. She
wrote the "Vision
2000" document that set the stage for the 1992 General Plan of Norfolk,
for which she was the overall coordinator. She took quiet pride in the
fact
that her documents were the source of much of the language by which
others
decided to describe the city and its future, when they wanted to place
themselves in compliance with a charitable, yet precise, view of
Norfolk’s
history.
Always performing over
and beyond anything asked of her,
Mary Lou had a unique talent of knowing the solution before anyone even
asked
the question. Her skill at analyzing situations enabled her to give
invaluable
advice to all those around. She was devoted to her family, pouring
herself into
past, present and future. We have a huge and carefully screened
genealogical
family database, of her construction. We have memories of her staying
up late
to help with papers and science projects. We remember her being at our
soccer
games, tournaments, band and orchestra events. Even from hundreds of
miles
away, she was involved. Up through this year, she was able to travel
and attend
at least four of Jill’s D-III soccer games in Minnesota each year.
While
impossible to put all our joyous memories into one document, we see her
smile
and hold her close to our hearts.
Upon retirement from NDCP
in 1999, Mary Lou continued her
intense focus on her children’s progress in college. With the onset of
illness,
she made an extraordinary journey to be at Ned’s graduation. She
attended some
of Jill’s major Ultimate Frisbee tournaments. To the end, she was
actively
monitoring Jill’s progress and acceptance into graduate school in
Applied
Science at the College of William and Mary. She was the most creative
and
tactful influence on Ned’s continuing job search during a difficult
period for
his industry. Her children will miss her guidance.
In the last months of her
life, in addition to watching over
her children, Mary Lou focused support on Rob’s new career as a teacher
of
physics. She would not let him quit to help solve her problems.
Our memories are filled
to the brim with her steadfast love
and excellence of achievement. She would have us move on with
making the
world a better place for all.