Cover photo for Ronald Edward Hicks's Obituary
Ronald Edward Hicks Profile Photo
1940 Ronald Edward Hicks 2025

Ronald Edward Hicks

August 26, 1940 — June 19, 2025

Muncie

Emblem

Prof. Ronald Edward Hicks died 19 June 2025 at the age of 84. He was born 26 August 1940, the son of Winfield S. and E. Genevia Clements Hicks in Chicago, Illinois, but always considered Kingman, Indiana, where he grew up on his maternal grandparents' farm, to be his hometown. He graduated from Kingman High School and Purdue University, where he majored in international relations with a math minor. Receiving a commission as an officer in the U. S. Navy upon graduation from Purdue, he served on active duty in the Pacific aboard the USS Seminole and in Naval Reserve units in New York and Philadelphia, reaching the rank of lieutenant commander before transferring to the standby reserve. He also worked as an editor in New York and Philadelphia, including three years as managing editor of the American Anthropologist, before receiving a Fulbright-Hayes Fellowship for dissertation research in Ireland and completing his PhD in anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania. He was both proud of and surprised by the fact that a boy from a small farm in western Indiana could receive a doctorate from an Ivy League university. He joined the faculty at Ball State University in 1976, where he remained for forty years, during which he founded what is now the Applied Anthropology Laboratory, served as first director of the Center for International Programs, and served for eight years as the chair of the Department of Anthropology. In addition to numerous publications on Irish prehistory and mythology, Indiana prehistory, and archaeoastronomy, he served for a number of years on the editorial boards for Archaeology Magazine and Archaeoastronomy. Between 1971 and 2017 he spent about ten percent of his time doing fieldwork in Ireland, where his research focused on evidence for the pre-Christian religion and its relationship to the agricultural calendar and the landscape. He considered his most important work to be his study of the sídhe, the "hollow hills" thought to be the homes of the ancient Irish gods. He felt as at home in Ireland as in Indiana and was at his happiest when wandering Irish fields in search of remains of pre-Christian sacred sites or sharing time with his children (preferably both). He also directed two seasons of excavation at Mounds State Park in Indiana. He was always interested in another adventure, whether strolling the streets of Kamakura in Japan, taking a three-day boat trip through the Three Gorges of the Yangtze in China, wandering the outback of Australia's Cape York peninsula in search of aboriginal rock art, visiting the sites of fossil human discoveries in South Africa, or many others.

Dr. Hicks is survived by his wife, Robin, son Geoffrey of Bloomington, daughter Gwendolyn (Katie Neighbours) of Indianapolis, and daughter Morgan (Jackson Crantford) of Bloomington, plus one grandson, Henry, of Muncie. He was preceded in death by his parents, his beloved son Cameron, his sister Carolyn, and his step-sister Joyce Gibson Maxey. He was a devoted and caring father-generous to a fault, with a laugh so contagious it lit up every room. All who knew and loved him will miss him dearly.

There will be a Gathering of Family and Friends at Sanders Funeral Care, 203 S 1st Street in Kingman, on Monday, June 23, 2025, from 1:30 pm till 3:30 pm. Burial will follow at Kingman Fraternal Cemetery. Share memories and condolences online at www.SandersFuneralCare.com.



To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Ronald Edward Hicks, please visit our flower store.

Service Schedule

Upcoming Services

Visitation

Monday, June 23, 2025

1:30 - 3:30 pm (Eastern time)

Sanders Funeral Care Kingman

203 S 1st St, Kingman, IN 47952

Enter your phone number above to have directions sent via text. Standard text messaging rates apply.

Guestbook

Visits: 198

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the
Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Service map data © OpenStreetMap contributors

Send Flowers

Send Flowers

Plant A Tree

Plant A Tree