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Larrie Knudsen: May 13, 1943-Jan. 13, 2026

In his early forties, Larrie met Pat, and together they formed a partnership grounded in curiosity, courage, and shared purpose. They traveled the world – Australia, New Zealand, Asia, Europe – not as tourists, but as seekers of experience, culture, and truth.

Larrie Franklin Knudsen was born on May 13, 1943, in Tennessee. At four years of age, he was adopted by Jack Hewitt Knudsen and Stella May Powell, a military couple whose values of discipline, service, and resilience would quietly shape the man Larrie became. Growing up, he attended nearly a dozen schools – a life of constant transition that taught him adaptability, independence, and the ability to stand steady in unfamiliar places.

From the beginning, Larrie was an adventurer.

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He served seven years in the military, not for recognition, but because service was part of his character. After his military years, Larrie continued caring for others as a nurse, working in prison systems and serving Native American communities – often where compassion was most needed and least expected. He showed up for people without judgment or conditions.

In his early forties, Larrie met Pat, and together they formed a partnership grounded in curiosity, courage, and shared purpose. They traveled the world – Australia, New Zealand, Asia, Europe – not as tourists, but as seekers of experience, culture, and truth. Their journeys were not about distance traveled, but about depth lived.

Alaska became one of the clearest expressions of Larrie’s spirit. There, he and Pat built a cabin in the bush and lived off the land for five years. It was a life chosen deliberately – one of self-reliance, respect for nature, and quiet fulfillment. Larrie didn’t chase comfort; he chased authenticity.

For more than fifty years, Larrie was a treasure hunter. Yet his understanding of treasure went far beyond what could be unearthed. Treasure was history preserved, lessons learned, freedom earned, and stories worth passing on. The hunt itself mattered as much as the find.

One of Larrie’s deepest wishes was to be a father. Though life took him down many winding paths, that dream never left his heart. Before his passing, that wish was fulfilled when he adopted Andrew Taylor, choosing family not by circumstance, but by intention. In doing so, Larrie completed a circle – having been adopted himself, he became a father by choice, legacy by design.

As he looked toward the future he would leave behind, Larrie was clear about what mattered most. He wanted his legacy to help animals, entrepreneurs willing to build something meaningful, and veterans who had served and sacrificed – causes rooted in loyalty, courage, and stewardship.

Larrie Franklin Knudsen lived wide, lived true, and lived free.
He leaves behind more than memories – he leaves a standard.

Serve well.
Travel far.
Live simply.
Choose family.
Leave something better behind.

His life was the treasure.

Author

Growing up in Southern California, Louis Amestoy remained connected to Texas as the birthplace of his father and grandfather. Texas was always a presence in the family’s life. Amestoy’s great-grandparents settled in San Antonio, Texas, drawn by the city’s connections to Mexico and the region’s German communities. In 2019, Louis Amestoy saw an opportunity to make a home in Texas. After 30 years of working for corporate media chains, Louis Amestoy saw a chance to establish an independent voice in the Texas Hill Country. He launched The Lead to be that vehicle. With investment from Meta, Amestoy began independently publishing on Aug. 9, 2021. The Amestoys have called Kerrville home since 2019.

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