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Mark Allen Bolte
Monument

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Mark Allen Bolte

Birth
Bentonville, Benton County, Arkansas, USA
Death
19 Apr 1995 (aged 28)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, USA
Monument
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
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Cenotaph
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Victim of the Oklahoma City bombing. Mark loved hockey and the Razorbacks. He traveled to Dallas early last month to meet old friends and go to a Dallas Stars hockey game. That night, the group watched the Arkansas Razorbacks play in a Final Four college basketball tournament game. Less than three weeks later, Bolte, 28, would perish in the federal building blast. "We had common backgrounds," said Joe Heflin. Like Heflin, Bolte received a bachelor's degree in civil engineering from the University of Arkansas and went to Austin to finish training as a highway engineer for the Federal Highway Administration. Bolte wanted to focus on environmental work, said Frank Meyer, highway administration division administrator in Austin. So when Bolte was promoted in late 1994 to area engineer and heard of an opening for an environmental specialist in Oklahoma, "he saw a career opportunity," Meyer said. "He was kind of excited he was getting the position he wanted," Heflin recalled. The new position Bolte took in January also put him closer to his hometown, Bentonville, where his parents, Don and Joyce, live. Bolte also had a younger brother, Matt. Bolte, who played lots of golf, had just bought a new green Chevrolet Blazer and recently had resumed a relationship with a hometown girlfriend, Heflin said.
Victim of the Oklahoma City bombing. Mark loved hockey and the Razorbacks. He traveled to Dallas early last month to meet old friends and go to a Dallas Stars hockey game. That night, the group watched the Arkansas Razorbacks play in a Final Four college basketball tournament game. Less than three weeks later, Bolte, 28, would perish in the federal building blast. "We had common backgrounds," said Joe Heflin. Like Heflin, Bolte received a bachelor's degree in civil engineering from the University of Arkansas and went to Austin to finish training as a highway engineer for the Federal Highway Administration. Bolte wanted to focus on environmental work, said Frank Meyer, highway administration division administrator in Austin. So when Bolte was promoted in late 1994 to area engineer and heard of an opening for an environmental specialist in Oklahoma, "he saw a career opportunity," Meyer said. "He was kind of excited he was getting the position he wanted," Heflin recalled. The new position Bolte took in January also put him closer to his hometown, Bentonville, where his parents, Don and Joyce, live. Bolte also had a younger brother, Matt. Bolte, who played lots of golf, had just bought a new green Chevrolet Blazer and recently had resumed a relationship with a hometown girlfriend, Heflin said.

Gravesite Details

Killed in the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, OK



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