Raised in Tribute:
$33082.00Mark L. Hart Jr. died peacefully early on Christmas Eve morning, Dec. 24, 2015. He was surrounded by his family. He remained completely selfless and never complained throughout his 16-year ordeal with Parkinson's disease. He never lost his wonderful sense of humor and he taught those close to him what it means to be brave and dignified.
Mr. Hart was born on April 21, 1943, to Frances Shear Hart of Waco and Mark Lafayette Hart of Fort Worth. He graduated from Paschal High School in 1961, The University of Texas at Austin in 1965 and the University of Texas School of Law in 1968. While an undergraduate, he was a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity and the Texas Cowboys. In law school, he was associate editor of the Texas Law Review and graduated with honors. He was a great athlete. In high school, at a time when Paschal was regularly a contender for state titles in baseball and basketball, he was a three-year starting pitcher and a two-year starting forward. After pitching for the Longhorns during his freshman year, intramural sports became his primary athletic outlet. He was named all-University 11 times in four different sports. He held a record for longest softball throw at UT. During law school he led the "Legal Eagles" to two university titles as the team's quarterback. Mr. Hart has been honored by his alma mater and his peers by the creation of the Mark L. Hart Jr. Endowed Chair in Corporate and Securities Law at the UT School of Law and the Mark L. Hart Jr. Endowed Scholarship, which is awarded annually to two UT students involved with the school's intramural sports program.
He began his law career at the Vinson Elkins law firm in Houston in 1968. In 1969 he married the love of his life, Adele Perry. In 1972 he moved his family back home to Fort Worth to open a VE office, which he ran until 1979. In 1979 he founded the law firm of Kelly, Hart and Hallman, along with Dee Kelly, Bill Hallman and several others. He was the managing partner of KHH from its inception until his retirement, although he remained of counsel until his death. During his tenure at KHH the firm came to be one of the largest and most respected firms in the state.
Mr. Hart was an active supporter of civic life. He served on many charitable boards, including as president of the Board of Trustees of Fort Worth Country Day School, president of the Board of Trustees of the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, president of the local branch of the American Cancer Society and as a special advisor to the board of the Kimbell Art Museum. Despite his many commitments, Mr. Hart found plenty of time to be a family man. He regularly coached his children's sports teams and enthusiastically supported their aspirations. He was careful not to impose his own ideas of how they should live their lives. He took immense pleasure in doting on his wife. Mark Hart never judged people by how they looked, who they loved or by their last name. To him, quality of character was paramount. Countless people considered him a mentor, and his wise counsel was regularly sought by many of the most successful people in Fort Worth and beyond. He died with no regrets.
He is survived by his wife, Adele Hart; his son, Mark Hart III and his wife, Shannon, and their children, Mark, James and Mary Shannon; his daughter, Mary Lipscomb and her husband, Blake, and their sons, Jody and Miles; his daughter, Elizabeth Hart; and his sister, Harriet Hart and her husband, Sonny Wallace.
The family would like to thank the following people who loved him and cared for him during his illness: Lorena and Armando Ramirez, Glenda Hanney, Leslie Gordon, Shakari Lee, Brad Scott, Vladimir Angert, Marcos Santos, Noah Prewett, Chrystal Prewett, Jackie Crossin and Allegra Hayim.
The Michael J. Fox Foundation is dedicated to finding a cure for Parkinson's disease and to ensuring the development of improved therapies for those living with Parkinson's today. The Foundation is the world's largest nonprofit funder of Parkinson's research, with more than $800 million in high-impact research funded to date.
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