This memorial website was created in the memory of our loved one, Russ Knerr born on October 21, 1953 and passed away on April 15, 2011. We will remember him forever. A Celebration of Russ Knerr’s life was held on May 14th, 2011 at the Solana Beach Presbyterian Church at 1:00 p.m. Family and friends gathered to pay tribute and honor the memories of a man who meant so much to all of us. The family kindly requests that should you choose to donate in Russ's honor, direct donations to:
San Diego Hospice and The Institute for Palliative Medicine
4311 Third Ave
San Diego, CA 92103
Donations to be made in honor of Russ Knerr
A Gift in Memory of Russ Knerr to:
The UCSD Foundation
Attn: Pam Werner, Director of Development
Moores UCSD Cancer Center
200 W. Arbor Drive, #8982
San Diego, CA 92103
Gifts to be "Designated for melanoma research"
Russ was a humble, honest and kind soul, caring father, loving spouse, worthy son and a giving friend. Russ imparted a special wisdom and a special brand of humor to all who listened. His view of life was always unique, inquisitive and positive. In our lives, few special people pass before us - one of those was Russ - who brought joy to to others and gave his all to his family and those of us who were lucky enough to be his friend.
George Russell Knerr, III, age 57, of Del Mar, CA, passed away on April 15, 2011 after a 17-year battle with malignant melanoma. Russ was surrounded by his loving family. He was born October 21, 1953 in St. Louis, MO, son of G. Russell Knerr, Jr. of Naples, FL, and Marilyn Martin Knerr, of Mechanicsburg, PA. Russ attended Camp Hill High School and was a graduate of the Mercersburg Academy and Bucknell University. He received his Masters degree from the American Graduate School of International Management in Glendale, AZ. Russ was a wonderful husband, father, and grandfather, and loved by all who knew him. He was a kind, humble, valiant and honorable man. He will be greatly missed by his family and friends. He is survived by his parents, his wife Lynn, daughter Katy, granddaughter Charlie, his sister Virginia Mayfield and her son John Mayfield of Fort Worth, TX.
Please continue to share your memories, photos and tributes to Russ to preserve and honor his memory.
Tributes
Leave a tributeAs I look back over the last ten years, I know that you would be so proud of Katy. I see you in her and it makes life a little easier. She is kind and smart, & even a little nerdy like you. She digs into something until she figures it out, whether it's a data analysis problem, a new project she has to manage or figuring out how to grow a garden. And she doesn't give up or give in easily.
The one thing I am truly grateful for is that you got to meet Charlie. She is a little "Rusty", especially her red hair color - must be like your grandmothers hair when she was young. She even has a little of that sense of humor I loved about you.
I wish you were here to see your daughter and granddaughter grow up, and to see the rest of our wonderful extended family and friends. But since that can't happen, just know that all who knew you miss you greatly. Your kindness, strength, perseverance, sense of humor and intelligence made you a one of a kind husband, father, brother, son, uncle and friend. I am forever honored to have been your wife and love.
P.S. I hope Mom isn't driving you and Bill crazy on the golf course up there in Heaven! I wonder if nudging the ball in with your foot is allowed!?
I think of you almost everyday, as we always see always see at least one crow on our walk. I know Lynn, Katy and Charlie miss you terribly but know that they are doing well. You would have loved Katy's wedding, which went off without a hitch and right before the Coronavirus made the country close down. Lucky! Hope you and Mike and Bill are singing, playing golf, birding or whatever makes you all happy. Love you, Laurie
Just when I think I've gotten to a point where my sadness over losing you might be leveling out, something comes up and throws my life into turmoil and tears. A wonderful occasion - the marriage of our daughter Katy to her fiancee Lynel is happening in February 2020. While I am so happy about this, I am overwhelmed with sadness that you will not be here to walk our daughter down the aisle. It just doesn't seem right and it's difficult to cope with this pain. I know it was so hard for you to make it until Katy's 21st birthday, but you did it! I just wish you were going to be here to help me celebrate our daughter's wedding. I know this pain will pass and the event will be a joyous occasion, and you will be somewhere looking on. But I wish you were going to be here with us...
I look back at the tributes left on this site for you over the years and am again so grateful: for the time I got to spend with you; for our wonderful daughter; that you got to meet your granddaughter Charlie even if briefly; and for all the great memories. It seems to me that you had a profound effect on so many lives; I know that I am a better person because of you. Even now, so many years later, you are greatly missed and forever admired.
Love you dear Russ!
Here in 2018 from Colorado I wish to thank you Russ for all the time we spent together on the job— funny, full of life and remembered fondly by every person he met. He made a difference in how I approached people and changed my life.
God Bless Russ.
I feel your Spirit. You live because you loved and are loved --even to this very moment. How can we not love such a beautiful soul such as yours. You are a light--keep burning bright. It helps us all as we journey to join you again in peace.
We miss you so much and wish you were still here. Love, Laurie
Your missed on this mortal plane my friend, but never far from our hearts...many wonderful memories...
The day has come and gone to honor your life and our loss of you - four years ago yesterday. I hope you know that we honor your life every day, not just on the day of your passing. I spent yesterday in a hospital, helping Mom but thinking of you. I learned so much from you - somehow it made being in the hospital almost bearable. We spent way too much time in hospitals, didn't we? Yet, all the times there and in between were amazingly special and I hold all of our memories so close to my heart. I miss you tremendously. I wish I could just hear your voice again or see your smile. Even though it has been four long years, I keep thinking you'll walk around the corner and back into our lives. You meant so much to me and to so many people. I love you very, very much.
P.S. I'm sure you're up in heaven playing with Carol Starbuck's boxer, Frasier. You always had a special bond with humans *and* animals! :)
You have been gone from us for three years now. We miss you very much. And you have missed so much. Our lovely, kind daughter Katy just turned 24 on April 9th. And our granddaughter Charlie will be 4 on May 6th. I'm so glad you got to meet her. She told me yesterday that you are her favorite Pop-Pop and you are in the sky watching over us. :)
We struggle on without you. I cherish all of the wonderful memories I have with you and although my heart is broken, I smile when I think of you. You could always make me laugh.
Love you and miss you so much,
Lynn
John and Gail
You would be so proud of them, with raising Charlie, you live within that little one...xo, with love your friend, and stylist. :)
Leave a Tribute
As I look back over the last ten years, I know that you would be so proud of Katy. I see you in her and it makes life a little easier. She is kind and smart, & even a little nerdy like you. She digs into something until she figures it out, whether it's a data analysis problem, a new project she has to manage or figuring out how to grow a garden. And she doesn't give up or give in easily.
The one thing I am truly grateful for is that you got to meet Charlie. She is a little "Rusty", especially her red hair color - must be like your grandmothers hair when she was young. She even has a little of that sense of humor I loved about you.
I wish you were here to see your daughter and granddaughter grow up, and to see the rest of our wonderful extended family and friends. But since that can't happen, just know that all who knew you miss you greatly. Your kindness, strength, perseverance, sense of humor and intelligence made you a one of a kind husband, father, brother, son, uncle and friend. I am forever honored to have been your wife and love.
P.S. I hope Mom isn't driving you and Bill crazy on the golf course up there in Heaven! I wonder if nudging the ball in with your foot is allowed!?









One Year of Missing Russ
A year ago today... seems so long and yet so recent.
Everyday we find ourselves wishing he was here to tell us one of his silly jokes; explain about something no one else seems to know except him; to ask for technical assistance on our darn computers or the password to something; to see his wonderful smile or raised eyebrow; to hear him play guitar with Katy and sing us a song; to watch him wiz through crossword puzzles; to watch Regis and Kelly in the morning over a lovely cup of coffee; to work on projects around the house or in our garden; to watch him be silly with his granddaughters; or to just sit quietly and enjoy his calm, loving presence. We have these and so many other memories to give us strength in the days, months, and years to come. We see his touch in everything and his smile all day long. And really, there is a certain crow that seems to show up at the most unusual moments….
An old friend. . .
I just learned about Russ’ passing on FaceBook. We had become “friends” again in recent years. I have known Russ—or rather Rusty, as he was called back then – since the 4th grade when he moved to Camp Hill. I remember him and his family from both school and the country club, which our families both frequented.
Rusty was always very different from most of the other boys – he was much more mature and got over the “girls as cooties” thing much earlier. He actually was one of the first boys to have a girlfriend—a very pretty girl named Vicki Ryder. I think that may have been short-lived. But he was always popular and sought after by girls for his good looks and charm—even then. For some reason, I valued his friendship and never saw him as “boyfriend” material. He was just fun to be around and great to talk to about anything.
I particularly remember 6th grade— in Mr. Berner’s class. It was the year after John Kennedy was shot. The space thing was big. There was a group of boys who built “rocket ships” which they raced around the town of Camp Hill on Saturdays. Each week was a different launch – and always, only boys were allowed to be the “pilots”. They really didn’t want girls involved, but Rusty was always pretty cool and kind to the excluded girls – at least he was to me and made me feel somehow better. I remember hanging out at each others houses and talking about the world – as much as 12 year olds could.
We knew each other through junior/senior high school (in Camp Hill, the school was 7th to 12th grade) and we hung out with many of the same kids. As we got older, we became the hippie group, the ones that protested Viet Nam and had sit-ins to allow us to wear pants (for girls) and then to wear blue jeans. But I remember Rusty went away to a private school. I remember missing him being at school. I think I saw him again when we were seniors when I was making plans with some of those “rocket ship boys” to get a VW bus and travel around the US after graduation and out to California. I think Rusty may have even been a part of that plan. That never happened. We all went off to college.
We lost touch. I often wondered what happened to him over the years. I had looked for him on occasion, wanting to just say hello to an old friend again.
It is interesting that our lives must have paralleled on occasion. After graduating from Penn State, I went on to San Francisco where I met my husband in 1977—around the time Russ met Lynn, it seems. We married in San Francisco in 1979 and lived there for most of 22 years, then moved on to Carmel for seven years, and then Fresno. We both have one daughter, ours was born a few year’s earlier, in 1984 (no grandchildren as yet). I wish our paths had crossed again. It would have been fun to meet up and get to know each other’s spouses and children.
A few years ago, I found Rusty on FaceBook and discovered that he was also a Californian. We had a brief “conversation”. I had no idea he was ill. He was very brave. I wish his family nothing but the best—I know how lucky they are to have had such a fabulous spirit in their lives. Even though we hadn't seen each other in nearly 40 years, I will miss him too. He was a special part of my growing-up-years.
Celebration of Russ's Life - Tribute at Solana Beach Church May 14, 2011
Russ and I first met in 1977 at Thunderbird - over 32 years ago. Lynn and Russ were an “item” even then. We were like the 3 musketeers back then on campus and later living together in Mexico together. I had the honor to be best man for Russ & Lynn's wedding. Even then, when you think of soul mates or those folks fated to be together- I always thought of Russ and Lynn. And I know Russ thought how lucky he has been to have Lynn as his wife, partner and best friend. He always thought he got the better part of that deal.
We remained friends after graduation, with Russ in Rochester and later in their first CA apartment in Menlo Park and later in Cupertino and San Diego. There are casual friends and there are deep, abiding friendships that mean everything in one's life. Russ was one of the latter - the kind that make all the difference in the world. Russ got me my first tech job by going to his boss and vouching for me. That simple act of faith from Russ led to my career in technology and to my relocation to California. I owe much of my success to Russ as a friend and mentor because Russ was always there to help someone else out. And that was just Russ, he always made the other person feel more special than himself. Which just made Russ himself more special.
Russ was a tremendous teacher on the value of being a good human being - it was a rare moment when Russ said a negative thing. For him the glass was always full. Even in fighting his disease, Russ always spoke of it as an inconvenience or something that had to be overcome. And for Russ, it was also about love his family, for the apple of his eye, Katie, and then for Charlie that gave him the will to push back on his disease. Few men have to overcome and fight so much to be with his loved ones – Russ did that for 15 years,since he was diagnosed in 1996. Russ set goals to be there for Katy and later on for Charlie – all out of love. Just remember Russ's Mohawk haircut, that he did with and for Katy – to get a sense of both his ability to laugh at himself and his love for Katy.
I'll always remember Russ for his sense of adventure, abiding curiosity, quirky sense of humor and ability to be passionate about so many things. He loved the unique nature of life - his collection of Mexican dog statues, cool old movies like “The Good the Bad and the Ugly” and interesting music like George Thorogood "Bad to the Bone”,Tom Waits and his favorite “More than a Feeling” by Boston, technology like his red Audi Quattro and the endless electronic gadgets --- Russ always made it interesting. One thing for sure, you would never be bored around Russ.
In the end, I'll remember him for his perseverance. Most of us get upset because we lose our keys or our cell phones. Russ stayed positive while they were taking parts of his body and living in pain. Russ was strong and wise like a 100 year old oak tree that has survived many storms. Russ never mentioned how bad things were for him - I only got the inkling of it from Lynn and from the times we tried to get together where he just could not.
Let me share one last memory of Russ. I was coming to visit him in mid April when Lynn called me in Mexico City to tell me that Russ was near the end of his time with us. I spoke to Russ via phone from Mexico - russ could speak in a whisper I told him of memories like driving with him in intense Mexico City traffic in the 70’s, his passion for Latin America, of life with him while sharing a house in Guadalajara together, and driving back to Thunderbird from Mexico with Russ when we lost our map in the middle of the countryside. I told him that his friendship has been and always will be special to me as it is for us who gathered here today to celebrate his life.
Russ will live on in our hearts and never be forgotten. Russ is out there now smiling down on us with his russ smile and making others feel special through his memory.