Roger Bleile
~ Elite 1000 Member ~
It is with sadness that inform my engraving colleagues of the passing of John R. Rohner of Boulder, Colorado at the age of 97.
John was a FEGA Charter Member who developed an interest in gun engraving in the 1940s after his service with the USMC where he earned two Purple Heart medals during the battle of Saipan.
John was one of the earliest to write articles about engraving for gun magazines during the 1950s and 1960s. This included two of the guns he engraved featured on the cover of the June 1955 edition of American Rifleman.
John is also remembered as the R in GRS Tools. Along with his brother-in-law, Don Glaser, he was instrumental in the development, promotion, and sales of the original GraverMeister pneumatic assisted engraving system.
John held degrees in both natural history and museum techniques which led to his primary occupation as a professor of museum technology.
John led an adventurous life with too many activities to recount here. He was personal friends with many outdoor writers and artists who have predeceased him. Above all John's heart was devoted to engraving and his fellow engravers. As a result, he amassed an extraordinary collection of engraved chasing hammer heads crafted for him by the foremost names in our field.
You can read more about John and see images of his work in The Art of Engraving by John's friend James B. Meek as well as American Engravers (1980), and American Engravers-The 21st Century (2010), as well as a recent article in The Engraver magazine.
On a personal level, I will greatly miss John and the many stories he passed on about the people and events of his life.
Rest in honored peace my friend.
John was a FEGA Charter Member who developed an interest in gun engraving in the 1940s after his service with the USMC where he earned two Purple Heart medals during the battle of Saipan.
John was one of the earliest to write articles about engraving for gun magazines during the 1950s and 1960s. This included two of the guns he engraved featured on the cover of the June 1955 edition of American Rifleman.
John is also remembered as the R in GRS Tools. Along with his brother-in-law, Don Glaser, he was instrumental in the development, promotion, and sales of the original GraverMeister pneumatic assisted engraving system.
John held degrees in both natural history and museum techniques which led to his primary occupation as a professor of museum technology.
John led an adventurous life with too many activities to recount here. He was personal friends with many outdoor writers and artists who have predeceased him. Above all John's heart was devoted to engraving and his fellow engravers. As a result, he amassed an extraordinary collection of engraved chasing hammer heads crafted for him by the foremost names in our field.
You can read more about John and see images of his work in The Art of Engraving by John's friend James B. Meek as well as American Engravers (1980), and American Engravers-The 21st Century (2010), as well as a recent article in The Engraver magazine.
On a personal level, I will greatly miss John and the many stories he passed on about the people and events of his life.
Rest in honored peace my friend.