Christopher David Stewart was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan on 1 April (really!) 1957 to David Hugh and Diane Silva Stewart. Moving to Pocatello, Idaho in 1967 and to State College, Pennsylvania in 1971, Chris completed high school at State College High. Family
moved to Bryan, Texas in 1975, and Chris earned a baccalaureate degree in 1980 in Engineering having proudly served in the Texas A & M Corps of Cadets for five years. He married after graduation, worked in road construction management in Texas for two years,
and then moved to Casper, Wyoming in 1982 to take up work with a home construction business, Pulte Homes. Between then and late 1988 the seeds of his company, Climate Engineering Corporation, were sown. In December 1988, his daughter Cody Dyan was born, and
late the next year the family relocated to Thermopolis, Wyoming where he settled on the 127 acre parcel adjacent the Big Horn River where he built his home and lived the rest of his life.
Chris was a life-long outdoorsman who thoroughly enjoyed and excelled at hunting, fishing, shooting, and camping in Wyoming. He conveyed his passion for the outdoors to his daughter and encouraged her in school, music, and 4-H. Business and his love for the
outdoors took him to every corner of the state many times in the past 34 years. Chris became a highly respected and reputable radiant heating engineer who won contracts throughout Wyoming and southeastern Montana representing Roberts Gordon LLC in Buffalo,
New York. He enjoyed raising and training Labrador retrievers for field trials for some years and always enjoyed hunting birds and ducks over his dogs. He was quite proud of creating a substantial reservoir on his land that became home to myriad fish and waterfowl
with the help of Ducks Unlimited and the Wyoming Department of Fish and Wildlife. Chris was an avid participant with Ducks Unlimited for years & actively supported NRA & Pheasants Forever. Chris was dedicated to his daughter, his grandson Logan – who turns
five in May, his home, community, and the state of Wyoming. All knew him as a fiercely conservative individual with little patience for big government and business-stifling regulations. Chris cherished and honored individual freedom. Chris is survived by his
mother Diane, brother Marc, daughter Cody, and grandson Logan.
A memorial celebration of Chris’s life was held April 16, 2 PM at his home on Black Mountain Road.
In lieu of flowers or gifts, donations may be made to Hot Springs County 4-H Activities, 328 Arapahoe Street, Thermopolis, WY 82443.
Mortimore Funeral Home assisted the family.