WARREN
COLEBANK
    Warren Lester Colebank was the first of three children born to Lester and Linda Nasman
Colebank on December 30, 1921 in Madelia.  Lester was working the Cement and Tile factory
at the time.  In 1924 Warren's parents moved to a farm 7 miles from Mentor, Minnesota.  
They grew wheat, barley, oats, flax, fodder corn, alfalfa and wild hay.  They kept horses and
milk cows and raised chickens and hogs.  They sold cream, eggs and pork.  Warren attended
grammar school in district #156 in Woodside Township, Polk County and graduated from
Mentor High School.
    Warren joined the Civilian Conservation Corps at Deer River, Minnesota for two years
where he advanced to chief cook.  He enlisted in the U.S. Marines in March, 1942, and was a
staff sgt. in the South Pacific, mainly on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands.  At the request
of his cousin Norman, Joyce Furseth corresponded with Warren while he was in the Pacific.
Warren went to visit Joyce when he returned from the war and a romance ensued.
    Warren and Joyce were married November 25, 1944 in
East Grand Forks, Minnesota. Joyce is the adopted daughter
of Jotham and Myrtle Lee Furseth and grew up in Edmore,
North Dakota.  She was in nurse's training when the two
got married.  Warren attended electrical trade school at the
North Dakota School of Science in Wahpeton for two years,
then worked as an electrician 6 years in Madelia and 4 years
in Chandler, Minnesota.  
    After a year in Goodyear, Arizona, the family moved to Bremerton, Washington where
Warren advanced to power plant dispatcher.  He retired in 1975 at age 53 when he became
paraplegic caused by an AVM inside his spinal cord.
    Warren and Joyce had four children, James Warren (10/12/45), Bruce Lester (10/4/47),
Lynda Louise Colebank Corey (11/8/49) and Wendy Jane  (9/21/52).  
    Warren wrote several detailed genealogies, including 'From Whence Came the Colebanks,'
and 'The Nasman Cousins.' He taught violin and guitar and was an active member of the
Washington Old Time Fiddlers Association.  
    June Colebank Blanshan wrote about her brother: "I always looked up to my brother
Warren, not just because he was 6'3" tall, but because he was good looking, talented and a real
nice guy.
    Warren had the croup really bad one winter.  He may have had a touch of TB at the time
because a classmate of his died of TB that year (about 5th grade).  
    Warren was bright in school.  In high school he never took a book home to study except
once when he had to learn a poem, and yet he had a 4-year B average.  In country school he
even skipped a grade.
    Warren was interested in music from the time he was ten years old.  For his first
performance he sang and accompanied himself on the ukulele for PTA.  By the time he was 15
he was playing guitar.  I remember him sitting by the radio with his guitar, listening intently to
any guitar music and trying to copy it.  I think it was about this time he acquired an old violin
that had to be fixed up and then he taught himself to play.  It seemed like he could play any
stringed instrument he picked up.  While Warren was in the Marines he organized his own little
band, 'The Colebank, Johnson and Johnson Band.'
    Warren was a kind, gracious man who loved music and smiled a lot.  He died on October
21, 1995 at age 73.
CLICK ON THE PHOTO
BELOW TO ENTER WARREN
COLEBANK'S PHOTO ALBUM
*Some of the information for this article was taken from 'From Whence Came the Colebanks' by Warren
Colebank and from 'William Cunningham' by June Colebank Blanshan.