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Bill Hargrove, 106; dubbed 'oldest league bowler ever'

Despite not being able to see the pins clearly, Bill Hargrove last bowled a week ago, just shy of his 107th birthday. Despite not being able to see the pins clearly, Bill Hargrove last bowled a week ago, just shy of his 107th birthday. (ap/file 2007)
Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Greg Bluestein
Associated Press / May 9, 2008

ATLANTA - By the time Bill Hargrove was recognized last year as the nation's oldest league bowler, his eyesight had deteriorated so much he could hardly see the pins.

But he kept at it, armed with a mental image of them. He was still bowling last week, just before he was hospitalized and died Monday of congestive heart failure - four days shy of turning 107.

Mr. Hargrove died at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville, a spokeswoman said yesterday. He lived nearby in Clermont.

He earned national attention in May 2007, after turning 106, when the United States Bowling Congress dubbed him "the oldest league bowler ever."

Mr. Hargrove began bowling in 1924. For decades, he played a version known as duckpin bowling. As duckpins faded, Mr. Hargrove took up the more popular form of bowling, played with a larger ball. He said it helped him cope with the 1973 death of his wife, Johnnie Ruth Carter Hargrove.

"I love it," Mr. Hargrove said when the league honored his longevity. "It puts you on trial as far as your ability. And your ability comes and goes. I'm fighting it all the time."

"Bowling kept him fit, and I'm sure having something like that, something that you really love, keeps you going," said Sandra Hargrove Carnet, 59, Mr. Hargrove's only child. "But he never became retired from the world. He stayed out there, interacted with people and the world."

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