Details

Collection: FND001 - SHSND Foundation - North Dakota Heritage Family Memorial Program
Series: Tribute
Folder: DIG
Item: 271854
Title: Harry J. Pearce
Date: 8/20/1942-10/14/2025
Creator:
Inscription/Marks: 8/20/1942
Summary: Harry Jonathan Pearce, age 83, passed away peacefully at his home in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan on October 14, 2025. Harry was born on August 20, 1942, in Bismarck, ND, to William Ridgely and Jean Murray Pearce. He grew up close to his two older brothers, Murray and Bill. His early interest in rocketry led him from Valedictorian of Bismarck High School to the U.S. Air Force Academy where he earned a BS in engineering in 1964. When color blindness kept him from becoming a fighter pilot, he earned his JD from Northwestern and joined the USAF Judge Advocate General Corps. He met the love of his life, Kathy Bruk, an elementary school teacher, in Chicago, marrying her after a brief courtship. After military stations in Illinois, England, and Holland, he and Kathy moved back to Bismarck to raise their three children, Shannon, Susan, and Harry Mark. Following brief stints as a municipal judge, police commissioner, and federal magistrate, he joined his father's law firm that would become Pearce and Durick. For 15 years he tried and won product liability lawsuits throughout the country, culminating with a monumental victory for General Motors in the X-Car lawsuit. He then moved his family to metro Detroit to become Associate General Counsel at GM in 1985 and was appointed to Vice President and General Counsel in 1987. As General Counsel, Harry orchestrated a masterful and inspirational televised takedown of NBC Dateline's rigged testing of GM's C/K pickups in 1993, which helped catapult him to become Vice-Chairman of GM in 1996. A grim leukemia diagnosis in 1998 changed the path of his life. His brother Bill's perfect match stem cell transplant saved his life against all odds. Harry retired from GM in 2001, regained his health and later was named Chairman of Hughes Electronics, Chairman of Nortel Networks, and Chairman of Montana Dakota Utilities, headquartered in his favorite city of Bismarck. Throughout this time, he served as a long-time board member of Marriott. Harry turned his personal battle with leukemia into a public mission, serving on the boards of the Bone Marrow Foundation, the National Bone Marrow Transplant Link, the Stewart Francke Leukemia Foundation, Sabriya's Castle of Fun Foundation, Wayne State University's School of Medicine, as Chairman of the GM Cancer Research Foundation, Chairman of the Marrow Foundation, and as President of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Research Foundation. He created LifeMatch Bone Marrow drives at GM to expand the donor registry, donated to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center that had saved his life, and helped countless people through life-threatening medical diagnoses, including the creation of an Emmy award-winning film. Of the multiple accolades he earned, Harry was most proud of those that reflected the values and ethics engrained in him during his upbringing in North Dakota and studies at the Air Force Academy. He was awarded the U.S. Air Force Academy's first-ever Distinguished Graduate award in 2001 and the Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Award, North Dakota's highest honor, conferred in 2004. Harry was committed to serving his nation, chairing the Presidential Roundtable on Cancer, the Presidential Commission on the U.S. Postal Service, Yale University's Chairmen's Forum on corporate governance, the U.S. Air Force Academy Sabre Society and Board of Visitors, and the U.S. Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation. He served on the Board of Trustees for Northwestern University, Howard University, United States Counsel for International Business, and New Detroit Inc. Harry believed in giving back, with generous donations to the U.S. Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation, U.S. Air Force Academy, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Kathy Bruk Pearce Fund for Breast Cancer Research at the University of Michigan, Beaumont Hospital, Northwestern University, and the Detroit Achievement Academy, among other charities. At General Motors, Harry is credited for vehicle safety innovations that spread throughout the automotive industry, including vehicle telematics with the life-saving OnStar Automatic Crash Response system, event data recorders that capture details of a car crash and help improve safety, and glow-in-the-dark trunk releases to prevent the entrapment of children. He was instrumental in the advancement of GM's alternative powertrain technology, from the industry's first modern electric vehicle, the EV1, to the 108 mpg hydrogen fuel cell Precept with 130 innovations. Using his influence at GM, he increased the diversity of the country's law firms by formally encouraging them to hire more qualified women and minorities. He led GM's decision to purchase the Renaissance Center, sparking the revitalization of downtown Detroit's riverfront. In 1993, he developed a visionary and groundbreaking set of ethical corporate governance guidelines for GM, over 10 years before they would be required by the SEC for all publicly traded companies. At home, Harry's knack for handyman repairs was legendary. He enjoyed some unique hobbies, creating an incredible Lionel railroad layout, hand-crafting beautiful wooden furniture, toys and Pinewood Derby cars for the whole family in his full woodworker's shop, and looking to the stars in his observatories. Above all, Harry knew family was the most important part of his life. After the passing of his wife Kathy in 2006, he enjoyed his later years with longtime companion Susan Kilbride. Left to cherish his memory and continue his legacy are Susan Kilbride and family, daughters Shannon Baker (George) and Susan Pikal (Rob), son Harry Mark Pearce (Katie), grandchildren Hal, Pearce, Jack, Kayla, Claire, Keaton, Harry William, Colton, and great granddaughter Josie.
Red ID: FND_I_79349 Image ID: 538372 Image Notes: FND001 271854

Collection: FND001 Digitized Images from Collection
Title: SHSND Foundation - North Dakota Heritage Family Memorial Program
Date: -

Summary: The North Dakota Heritage Family Memorial Program is sponsored by the North Dakota Funeral Directors Association. The life stories of deceased North Dakotans are featured in an archvied collection. Current partners in the project are Eastgate Funeral & Cremation Services, Bismarck Evans Funeral Homes, Carrington and New Rockford Everson-Coughlin Funeral Home, Williston Fulkerson Funeral Home, Tioga Fulkerson Funeral Home, Watford City Fulkerson Stevenson Funeral Home, Williston Nero Funeral Home, Bottineau Parkway Funeral Service, Bismarck Springan Stevenson Funeral Home, Stanley Stevenson Funeral Home, Dickinson These funeral homes provide recent obituaries to the Foundation, where staff and volunteers format, edit and archive each memorial. The memorials are posted, and copies are sent to the family for their input and approval. The listing currently features more than 13,000 memorials, and is constantly updated as new memorials and histories are received.

Enter a subject or term in one or both of the “Search” boxes.

  • “Item Detail” searches the Title, Creator and Summary fields of all item-level records.
  • “Collection Number” searches the Collection Number field only and requires an exact match.

The “DETAILS” button provides additional information about an item, as well as the following options:

  • “Collection Summary” details the contents of the entire collection in which the selected item is located.
  • You can print the image and its corresponding details by selecting “Print".
  • “Digitized Images from the Collection” returns a list of all digitized items within that collection (available from the “Collection Summary” screen).

Click on image to expand/zoom the image view.

“Photobook home” takes you back to the main Photobook page where you can start a new search.

“Featured Collections” showcases new and/or popular collections and the digitized images within those collections.


Information on how to order copies is located here.

The collections preserved in the North Dakota State Archives include over a million images. Only a small percentage of these images have been digitized. This photo gallery provides a preview of the images that have been digitized.

For more information on the non-digitized images, please refer to the finding aids found on our website at history.nd.gov, or ask a member of our reference staff for assistance.