DAVID RANDALL KENT JR.

FORT WORTH - David Randall Kent, Jr., 88, a lover of poetry and music, a World War II veteran and a pioneer in the fields of hypersonic and supersonic flight, passed away peacefully on Wednesday, July 30, surrounded by his family.
Funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 2, at All Saints’ Episcopal Church, 5001 Crestline Rd., Fort Worth, with a reception following in the Parish Hall.
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the All Saints’ Episcopal Church Rector’s Discretionary Fund, or to a charity of your choice.
David Randall Kent, Jr., son of David Randall Kent, Sr., and Bessie Anita McDuffie, was born Jan. 25, 1926 in Shreveport, Louisiana. He graduated from Byrd High School in Shreveport, attended Texas A&M University, graduated from Louisiana State University with BS in Mechanical Engineering in 1947, and received an MS in Mechanical Engineering from Cornell University in 1949. He also attended Tulane University and completed all residency work toward a Ph.D. in classical philosophy.
While serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, he was wounded in combat near Lammersdorf, Germany, as his unit advanced on an enemy gun emplacement. He was awarded the Purple Heart.
In 1947, he married the love of his life, Ann Bazet, of Houma, Louisiana, with whom he spent 66 very happy years. They are the parents of three children, six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren, with whom he treasured spending his time.
He was unfailingly cheerful, kind-hearted and generous. A voracious reader with a phenomenal memory, he could recite poetry, verbatim, to fit any occasion. He loved classical music, and was especially fond of Rachmaninoff and Mozart. After church services on Sundays, he was known to play orchestral music very loudly on a stereo system he built himself, causing his rock-and-roll-obsessed kids to roll their eyes and plug their ears. Occasionally, he would sneak in a favorite big-band tune, and he later confessed to liking the Beatles.
He enjoyed the happy fellowship of motor-boating and sailing with friends. Despite living his entire adult life with a prosthetic left leg that resulted from his war injury, he took up snow skiing at the age of 47 and kept on bombing the mountain until he was 80. He traveled the world extensively, both for business and for pleasure, and he covered nearly every continent with his wife, Ann. His meticulous planning skills translated into epic family road trips to national parks, world’s fairs and historic attractions. Frequent backseat altercations among his three boys were brought to a screeching halt by his stern admonition to “pipe down!”
In their retirement years, they spent many joyful hours at their historic Franklin plantation home, Bocage.
At the Fort Worth Division of Convair in the 1950s and ‘60s, he served as the propulsion lead in several early, highly classified hypersonic aircraft design studies that pushed aerodynamic performance to new levels. In the 1960s and ‘70s at General Dynamics Fort Worth Aircraft Division (later Lockheed Martin Aeronautics), he was a key member of the core design team that produced the F-16 Fighting Falcon, a revolutionary, lightweight supersonic jet that became the principal frontline fighter of the U.S. Air Force. He served as Vice President of F-16 Engineering and Director of Flight Test, and was Vice President and Program Director of the F-16XL project. As Division Vice President and Program Director, he led the General Dynamics team in the Advanced Tactical Fighter program that ultimately produced the F-22 Raptor, the world’s most advanced fighter aircraft. He had engineering roles on the B-36 Peacemaker, the B-58 Hustler and the F-111 Aardvark. As a member of the YF-16 design team, he shared the Collier Trophy Award for Achievement in Aircraft Design. He is a member of the Lockheed Martin Hall of Fame.
The family would like to thank his many loving and devoted friends through the years, whom he cherished. Special thanks, also, to those who helped manage his health challenges during the final years, especially the staffs at Baylor All Saints’ Hospital, VITAS Hospice and U.S. Renal Care.
Survivors include his loving wife, Ann Bazet Kent; three children, David and his wife, Jonell; Allen and his wife, Suzanne; and John and his wife, Dorothy. Six grandchildren, David “Chip” and his wife Brooke; Ricky and his wife, Sara; Chris and his wife, Vaishali; Michael and his wife, Kate; and Hollis and Gracie. Seven great-grandchildren, Jade, David “Bear,” Amber, Sanders, Charlotte, Brady and August.

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