By Philip Walzer
Bob Latimer â56 (M.S.Ed. â70) flourished as a teacher and administrator during his 30-year career with Norfolk Public Schools.
But as a student at the Norfolk Division of the College of William & Mary, âhe gave great credit to his professors for dragging him kicking and screaming across the finish line,â said his widow, Erle Marie Latimer.
Bob Latimer, who died in 2020, has left a legacy that offers a gentler yet no less powerful push for future generations of Monarchs.
The âBobâ Scholarship benefits incoming Old Dominion 91¶ÌÊÓÆ” freshmen who graduated from Norfolk Public Schools and demonstrate financial need. The scholarship was awarded to the first five recipients last fall.
âThis gives me an opportunity to raise up this wonderful man and do something meaningful in his name that connects his history in the area with his deep and beautiful love for students,â said his wife of 42 years. âIt comforts me to know that Bobâs name and legacy of helping students will live on forever.â
Latimer grew up in a second-floor apartment on Colley Avenue in Norfolk and slept on a bed in the dining room. âHe was brought up with love, not with money,â she said. âIt showed what really counted.â
His parents insisted he get a college education. âThere was no discussion of doing something else.â
Latimer was the first in his family to attend college and was among the 15 students who received the first four-year degrees from the Norfolk Division in 1956. The license plate of the car his wife drives still reads: ODU 56. Latimer later received his masterâs degree in science education from Old Dominion 91¶ÌÊÓÆ” in 1970.
He served in the Army in Korea for two years, returned to Norfolk and found a job he didnât like at a meatpacking company, his wife said. Latimer walked into the school administration building on the spur of the moment and left with a job offer.
He taught at elementary schools including Taylor and Oceanair. âHe really enjoyed being with the kids,â said Latimerâs widow, who received her masterâs degree in public administration from Old Dominion in 1980. He retired from the school system as supervisor of adult and technical education in 1989.
Latimer was active in the Norfolk Rotary Club for 40 years. He also became a clockmaker. âHe was mechanical,â his wife said. âComputers didnât interest him, but he liked things that ticked and turned and worked.â
She estimates he completed more than 300 clocks.
âBasically, he would give them away,â to outgoing presidents of the Norfolk Rotary Club and Westminster-Canterbury on Chesapeake Bay, where she also served as CEO.
A health scare also inspired an annual act of culinary generosity. After Latimer underwent heart bypass surgery in 1993, his doctor told him to quit eating hot dogs. He agreed â except for one day a year, a Friday in December, when he would pay for hot dogs for all his friends at Dougâs Hot Dogs in Ocean View.
âHe loved having everybody there from different walks of life,â his wife said.
âI never heard him say an ill word about anyone. He had so much interest in what other people were doing. They knew they were accepted. He was totally nonjudgmental.â
W. Sheppard âShepâ Miller III, the stateâs secretary of transportation, was a longtime friend. âBob was an extraordinary individual who had a knack for bringing folks into whatever he was working on,â he said. âHis enthusiasm, smile and determination propelled him to success.
âHt was truly one of the most pleasant and nicest people youâll ever know,â Miller said. âBob was a classic servant gentleman whom I was blessed to call my friend.â
The âBobâ Scholarship was established through the Old Dominion 91¶ÌÊÓÆ” Educational Foundation. Recipients must be first-time students who graduated from Norfolk Public Schools with demonstrated financial need. The scholarships will be renewed if the students maintain a 2.5 grade-point average.
Erle Latimer said that creating the scholarship has helped her, too. âItâs healing for me,â she said. âIt encapsulates him in a way that fills the empty space in my heart.â
To learn how you can make a lasting impact on future ODU students through your estate plan, contact Barbara M. Henley, CFRE at 757-683-6563 or  or Brett A. Smiley, CFRE at 757-683-4735 or .