Elmer and Virginia Leistikow

Elmer George Leistikow, son of Herman and Frieda (Kreb) Leistikow, was born May 14, 1916, in Bremer, Iowa.

Virginia Manley was born June 13, 1917.

Elmer married Virginia and they had 6 children:

Elmer John Leistikow Born in April 1947 in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Donald Charles Leistikow Born in November 1948 in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Wayne Brown Leistikow Born in October 1952 in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Bruce Norman Leistikow Born in September 1954 in Cedar Falls, Iowa..
Dean Alan Leistikow Born in September 1956 in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Elizabeth Ann Leistikow Born in June 1959 in Cedar Falls, Iowa.

Elmer worked for John G. Miller and Cardinal Construction companies, led Boy Scout Troop 17 for many years, and attended the First United Methodist Church.

Elmer died October 5, 2008. His obituary speaks of a good husband and father, and an active, generous contibutor to his community.

About Elmer George Leistikow

Elmer George Leistikow, builder, scoutmaster, family man, friend, and leader by example was born May 14, 1916 to Herman and Frieda Leistikow in rural Bremer County, Iowa. He died peacefully October 5, 2008 with family near Fort Collins, Colorado, from probable West Nile Virus complications. He is survived by sons and daughters-in-law: Elmer of Fairbanks, AK; Donald of College, AK; Wayne and Janice of Fort Collins; CO, Bruce and Frances of Davis, CA; and Dean and Kathleen of Scotch Plains, NJ; brothers Emil and Mervin; and eight grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 53 years Virginia, daughter Elizabeth, two brothers, a sister, and his parents.

Elmer was a man of hard work, skill, care, good humor, and simple pleasures. Despite several cleft palate operations and lifelong speech, eating, and elbow impairments, he enthusiastically built towards a better world.

Elmer was quietly proud of his construction coworkers, scouts, friends, buildings, music and harmonicas, diverse pets, photography, gardens, devoted family, and other good works. He led construction workers building Iowa, Alaska, and Gulf Coast apartment complexes, schools, churches, and several John Deere Waterloo and other government/commercial buildings. Elmer enjoyed many workers he hired, often trained, and counted as friends. Elmer cited “never losing a worker” as his proudest accomplishment in fifty years of often risky building projects primarily for Cardinal and John G. Miller construction companies.

In his 30 years as scoutmaster of Kingsley School’s Troop 17, Elmer motivated hundreds of boys and men. He maintained friendships with many Boy Scouts whom he had encouraged to awards, National Jamborees, Canada, hiking, canoeing, and personal growth. He led volunteers in building the main lodge at Boy Scout Camp Ingawannis and in Jamboree backstage craftwork.

Elmer was Waterloo Father of the Year in 1965 and a Boy Scout Silver Beaver Award recipient. A farm boy with an eighth grade education, Elmer and his wife inspired his children to eight grandchildren, four doctorate degrees, two professorships, one Super Bowl health commercial, farming and rafting, Peace Corp service, recycling, and other activities. Elmer saw potentials in people, hard work, nature, and each of his 33,758 new days. With them he worked to build a better world.



First published January 18, 2016. If you have comments, corrections or additional information or pictures you would like to contribute, feel free to contact Dave Nims.