The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Senior Outlook

February 3, 2010

Senior Center volunteer: Darold Cannon

Joplin resident Darold Cannon is a familiar face at the Joplin Senior Center.

In fact, he’s been a familiar face at the facility for thirty years. Everyone who frequents the center knows who he is and what a huge contribution he makes on a daily basis. But Darold’s modesty and quiet nature make it hard to understand what drives him to give so much of his time to the people of the Senior Center ... but he does. 

Darold began serving on the Joplin Senior Center Advisory Council in 1978 when his late wife, Ella Mae, started attending the senior center. Two years later, they both found themselves volunteering, delivering homebound meals together four to five days per week. The two of them delivered homebound meals for nearly 22 years, until her death in 2002.

Darold also started driving the van transporting seniors to and from the center in 1992 and continued that for four or five years while assisting with the homebound meal delivery at the same time. He and his wife not only volunteered at the senior center, but they also donated their time to Freeman Hospital beginning in the early 1980s, working at the front desk once a week, a position that Darold still holds to this day.

One day per week, Darold still delivers homebound meals in addition to his work at Freeman Hospital. He also still serves on the Advisory Council as the vice president, a position he has held for over 10 years. Darold helps serve drinks at the senior center the other days of the week. During his down time, he loves to play dominoes and pool.

“It’s something to kill time,” said Darold. “It (the Senior Center) has become my second home.”

Delivering meals is especially rewarding for Darold because, he says, the homebound seniors not only look forward to the arrival of the meal truck each day, but feel like family to him.

“They appreciate the help so much,” Darold says. “You become involved in their lives.”

Melvin Zumwalt, Joplin, is a good friend of Darold’s and began volunteering with him when they met at the center in 1980. They still hang out together on a daily basis, playing dominoes and visiting with their friends.

“Darold and I always had a pact that if he died first, I would carry him and if I died first, he would carry me,” Melvin says with a laugh. “Now neither of us can carry the other.”

Text Only
Senior Outlook
Facebook
Poll

Joplin City Manager Mark Rohr wants the city to distribute weather radios to all Joplin homes that don’t have one. That’s 11,000 radios. Do you think that’s a good use of $300,440?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
Facebook
Poll

Joplin City Manager Mark Rohr wants the city to distribute weather radios to all Joplin homes that don’t have one. That’s 11,000 radios. Do you think that’s a good use of $300,440?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
NDN Video
Obama Scraps Birth Control Mandate US Airmen's Killer Sentenced to Life in Germany Navy Names Ship for Gabrielle Giffords Raw Video: Deadly Blasts in Syria Romney Slams President Obama at CPAC Gingrich: Pres. Obama 'waging War on Religion' 5 Killed in Wrong-way Crash on I-10 in La. Uzbek Man Pleads Guilty in Plot to Kill Obama Denver's Largest-Ever Drug Bust Nets Dozens Marines: No Punishment for Nazi-like Flag Vets Look to Translate Military Skills Into Jobs Raw Video: School Bus Burst Into Flames LA School Reopens Amid Sex Abuse Scandal $25B Settlement Reached Over Foreclosure Abuses Pentagon: Allow Women Closer to Front Lines LA School in Sex Abuse Scandal Reopens Raw Video: Italy's Mount Etna Bursts Into Life Greeks March; Angry Despite Debt Deal Air Force Airlines: Leaders Get Polished Service Ga Girl Fights Off Kidnapper at Walmart
House Ads