Shortened life lived to the fullest
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Lolita Harper
Loyalty was a tenet of Douglas Alan Turner’s life. He stuck by his
friends, kept their secrets in confidence and treated them with
respect, his loved ones said.
“He was extremely loyal to his people and in turn, his people were
extremely loyal to him,” his wife Loretta Turner said.
His allegiance to his loved ones helped in his battle against
bladder cancer, as friends flooded the last days of his life with
love, care and support. On March 11, 2004, Douglas Turner lost that
fight and passed away.
Although his death was premature, Turner packed as much life as he
could in his 60 years, becoming an icon in the automobile racing
industry. Turner, who has pursued nearly every facet of racing from
soapbox to Formula One Championships, holds more records than Loretta
Turner could even count -- including the coveted cross county driving
record of 32 hours and seven minutes.
“I have boxes and boxes of trophies in the attic that I am going
to have to find something to do with,” Loretta Turner said.
The couple never had children, so unlike Douglas Turner, who
learned his love of automobiles from his father, there is no
offspring to pass the legacy on to.
And what a legacy it is. The 1995-96 edition of industry magazine
“The Vintage Voice,” wrote an extensive profile on Turner, who did
not only capture the racing industry with the horsepower but with
brainpower as the founder and owner of the leading aftermarket
manufacturing companies, GT Styling.
Just because there are no Turner children in the picture doesn’t
mean Douglas’s love for high performing automobiles was not shared.
Loretta Turner can be seen trackside in various pictures in the
couple’s Newport Beach home.
The couple married in 1978 and has spent the past 25 years
traveling, laughing, loving and sharing. On Wednesday, the Turners
took their final trip together as Loretta Turner took her beloved
husband on Wednesday to his final resting spot in Hawaii.
The Turners have been going to Kauai repeatedly since their
honeymoon and eventually bought a house there, Loretta Turner said.
Each time they would leave, her husband would whine like a
school-boy; teasingly saying, “Mommy, Mommy, do we have to go?”
“And this time, bless his heart, he gets to stay,” Loretta said.
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