Search

Obituaries

of Dexter, Michigan, age 78, passed away Monday, March 31, 2025, at his home in Dexter. Rick was born January 10, 1947, in Texarkana, Texas, the son of Ferris and Anna (Johnson) Bousley.

Rick’s father was a member of the US Air Force and the family moved to Ann Arbor when his father retired. Rick graduated from Ann Arbor High School in 1965. He attended Eastern Michigan University and worked weekends at Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research in Ann Arbor. Rick served in the Army and was stationed in Heidelberg, Germany during the Vietnam War. After serving his country, he married Christel Schatz and moved to Berlin to attend The Academy of Fine Arts where he earned a Masters of Fine Arts (MFA) degree and developed a lifelong love affair with the arts, primarily painting, drawing and sculpting.

Rick and Christel had two daughters Denise and Cindy, both born in Germany. In 1977 the family moved back to the United States and Rick returned to Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis/Pfizer working there until the facility was closed. He joined Lycera Pharmaceutical in 2011and retired in 2019.

Rick was fully engaged in life throughout. He was a lifelong learner, an avid reader, and a lover of art and history. He was also physically active. He was a weightlifter with an extensive home gym, a Certified Personal trainer, and an accomplished table tennis player with a home table and robot. He was a member of the 2001 Senior Olympics Table Tennis Team that won a bronze medal in doubles in Baton Rouge, LA. He was on the Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis softball and bowling teams and was a talented enough bowler to have a 300 game to his credit. Rick also enjoyed fishing. He found relaxation and engagement there as he did with many other things.

Rick’s personality matched his passion for life. He was intelligent, thoughtful, patient, loving and kind. The things that Rick chose to do, he did well and he did them with humility, believing that a person’s deeds spoke for themselves. Considering the breadth and depth of Rick’s talent and education he could legitimately be called a Renaissance Man.

Rick married Cynthia "Cindi" Coxford on November 9, 1985, in Ann Arbor. It was the beginning of a very special and loving partnership that lasted throughout the rest of his life. He was a solid family man, supporting and loving his family in all ways. He furthered the education of his children, was an Assistant Men's Tennis Coach for his son’s Dexter High School tennis team, made it a priority to attend all his children’s sporting events and helped them work through life’s journey. He was a person who put others before himself.

He is survived by his loving wife, Cindi; daughters, Denise (Michael) Parker of Galloway, Ohio, and Cindy Bousley of Westland; son, Chad (Helen Jiang) Bousley of Royal Oak; brother, Douglas (Paula) Bousley of Ida; brother-in-law, Chuck (Marsha) Ash; sister-in-law, Betty (David) Mayer of Anchorage, AK, sister-in-law, Masae Ash of Billings, MT; grandchildren, Garrett Bousley-Crane, Ezra Bousley-Crane, and Kennedy Parker; nieces, Tracey Zatyracz, Nicola Ash and Erica Ash; nephew, Andrew Ash; lifelong best friend, Dave Brethauer; and his beloved dog, Prudence. He was preceded in death by his parents; stepmother, Ruth Bousley; brother, Donald Bousley; brother-in-law, Steven Ash; and first wife, Christel Schatz.

A celebration of life will be held Friday, April 25, 2025, 2:00 pm, at the First United Methodist Church in Chelsea, with Rev. Joy Barrett officiating. The family will receive friends before the service from 1:00 - 2:00 pm. Memorial contributions may be made to the Chelsea First United Methodist Church, or the Parkinson's Foundation


You can use the form below to share a memory or leave a public message for Rick's family. Please allow 24 hours for us to review and post your comment. 

Comments  

#3 Theresa Cody 2025-04-16 13:38
I met Dick in the late 80’s at Warner Lambert. Softball, volleyball, sports battle, track and field, bowling, fishing, weight lifting, Arnold Classic, parties and many trips. Our friendship was held to the soul! Dick was a person you could tell everything and anything to and his laugh was infectious. I’ve deeply missed our one on one Friendship. Dick will be greatly missed by all who knew him. What a true blessing from God! Dick, you are missed everyday…
Quote
#2 Juli Jauch 2025-04-09 01:52
I was lucky enough to meet Rick when I was an exchange student in Dexter. Over the following 16 years Rick,Cindi and Chad made me feel like a part of their family and I started to call them lovingly my American family. What a kind man Rick is (I can’t bring myself to use the word was yet). He is gentle, quiet with a lot of depth, humble, never complained even though it was hard for him not to be able to do the things he was able to do before, he helped everyone however he could and he was so loving. It warmed my heart to see Cindi and him still kiss and tease each other after so many years :)
We would talk German together and shared our passion for hot sauces and he had the best hot sauce collection of anyone I have ever met.His creamy beef he made in the mornings was one of his signature dishes and no matter the weather he would stand outside to do our steaks on the BBQ. I can’t write this without tears in my eyes eyes because he touched my heart and will be missed deeply
Quote
#1 Lisa Lindemann 2025-04-08 21:31
Rick had two step sisters; I am the younger of the two. My mother married his father. When I was a young girl, Rick would invite over his friends and they would play table tennis for hours! No one could beat him; it was like watching a master at his craft. Athletically inclined, Rick also lifted weights; but nobody really did that back then & so he was way ahead of his time. When Rick left the family home as a young man to live and travel abroad with the military; I decided to bring the childhood sporting equipment he left behind, back to life. I shot hoops with his basketball. I shot pucks around in the garage with his hockey stick & I used his old baseball mitt to play catch. Doing so made me feel like he never left home. When Rick moved back to the US from Berlin; his beautiful art work filled our home. When Rick became a father, his love of sports and the arts naturally flowed on into the lives of his children. Today…his flame still burns brightly as his legacy, lives on.
Quote

Add comment

Security code
Refresh