I ? if Rey is the children's mother.
Comments: Utah County, Utah Cemetery Index
Name: Gladys E. Taylor Limb
Birth Date: 9 Apr 1925
Death Date: 30 Aug 1977
Cemetery: Timpanogos
OBIT: The Daily Herald (Provo, UT), Wednesday, 31 AUG 1977, pg: 3Gladys Elaine Taylor Limb
AMERICAN FORD, UT., - Gladys Elaine Taylor Limb, 52, of 525 N. 300 E., American Fork, died Tuesday, August 30, 1977 in the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City.
Born April 9, 1925 in Manti, Utah, she was reared by foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orson E. Taylor. She married Daniel Wayne Limb on November 8, 1941 in Provo. The marriage was later solemnized in the Manti LDS Temple.
Mrs. Limb was active in the LDS Church, serving as a Primery and Sunday School teacher. She was also active in Relief Society. She was a captain in DUP and had served on the American Fork Old Folks Committee for 20 years.
Survivors include her husband; two daughters and one son, Mrs. LaVoy (Caroline) Erickson, Deseret, Millard County, Utah; Mrs. Abe (Wanda) Dalley, American Fork; Daniel C. Limb, serving an LDS mission in Colchester, England; 13 grandchildren; mother, Mary B. Etherington of Santaquin; two brothers and two sisters, Jack Etherington, Payson; Ernest LeRoy Taylor, Spanish Fork; Mrs. Larry (Fay) Steele, Orem, and Mrs. Ervin (Helen) Dodds, Santaquin.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. in the American Fork Sixth Ward Chapel. Friends may call at Anderson and Sons Mortuary Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Burial will be in Timpanogos Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Orem, Utah.
Utah County, Utah Cemetery Index
Name: Robert Wayne Limb
Birth Date: 11 Oct 1959
Death Date: 19 Feb 1963
Cemetery: TimpOBIT: The Daily Herald (Provo, UT), Thursday, 21 FEB 1963, pg: 4
Robert Wayne Limb, 3
Heart Illness Claims Child
AMERICAN FORK, UT., - Robert Wayne Limb, three-year-old son of Daniel W. and Gladys Taylor Limb, 525 N. 300 E., died Tuesday in the American Fork Hospital of a heart ailment.
He was born October 11, 1959, in American Fork, Utah.
Surviving, besides his parents, are two sisters and a brother, Mrs. Carolyn Humes, Orem; Wanda Limb and Daniel C. Limb, both of American Fork; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Limb and Mrs. Mary Etherington, all of Santaquin.
Funeral services will be held Saturday noon in the American Fork Sixth-Eighth LDS Ward Chapel. Friends may call at the Anerson and Sons Mortuary Friday evening from 7 to 8 and Saturday until 11:30 a.m. Interment will be in the Timpanogos Memorial Park Cemetery.
Dr. Eugene Edward Campbell (Twin)
Comments: Dr. Eugene Edward Campbell married Beth Larsen dau/o Daniel Leo "Lee" Larsen & Mary L. Braithwaite
In Memoriam: Eugene E. Campbell, 1915-86
The PASSING OF EUGENE E. CAMPBELL on April 10, 1986, brought to
an end the career of one of Utah's most distinguished historians.
Along with his numerous contributions as teacher and author in
American Studies, he has long been recognized as one of the foremost
scholars of Utah history.Dr. Campbell received his bachelor's and master's degrees from
the University of Utah and obtained his doctorate from the University
of Southern California. He joined the history faculty of Brigham
Young University in 1956 and during the next twenty-four years was
a major influence in the growth and development of both the history
department and the university. His counsel and wisdom were
recognized and sought after both by his colleagues and by the
administration.His influence as a mentor was enormous. In addition to the
thousands of students he taught as undergraduates, over sixty
master's degrees and nearly two dozen doctorates were obtained
under his scholarly direction. Among the graduate students at
Brigham Young University he engendered feelings of deep respect
and gratitude for a professor who always had time to listen and who
sincerely cared about their interests and needs.He was born on April 26, 1915, in Tooele, Utah, to Edward and
Betsy Ann Bowen Campbell. Growing up in this small Mormon
farming community was always a source of pride to Dr. Campbell
because of the rich heritage it represented to him from ancestors who
had helped settle the area. With the completion of his studies at the
University of Utah and his marriage to Beth Larsen on August 11,
1939, his training and professional activities began to shape and
mold the academic skills of this unique teacher. His graduate work
was interrupted by World War II, in which he served as a chaplain in
Germany. This experience had a profound impact upon his own
philosophy of life. The five children that came into the Campbell
home became the center of their parents' lives. His concern and love
for his own carried over to the classroom and to the graduate
committees on which he served.Dr. Campbell's credentials as a scholar are equally impressive.
He authored and co-authored several books, including: The United
States: An Interpretive History, Fort Bridger: Island in the Wilderness,
Fort Supply: Brigham Young's Green River Experiment, and
The Life and Thought of Hugh B. Brown. He was one of the
associate editors for Utah's History and a consulting editor for Utah:
A Guide to the State. At the time of his death he was preparing a text
dealing with the 1846-69 period in Mormon history.In addition to his many books. Dr. Campbell also authored more
than a dozen articles published in a variety of journals. These articles
reflect a wide diversity of interest. Two won special recognition from
the scholarly community. His "Brigham Young's Outer Cordon: A
Reappraisal," published in the 1973 Utah Historical Quarterly, won
the Mormon History Association Best Article Award for that year as
well as the Utah State Historical Society's Dale L. Morgan Award for
the best scholarly article published in the Quarterly. In 1976, he
became the first to win the Dale L. Morgan Award twice, this time for
the article co-authored with his son, Bruce, "Divorce among
Mormon Polygamists: Extent and Explanations."As appropriate to a man of his stature, Dr. Campbell won many
other awards, honors, and recognitions. Though much too numerous
to detail, they include such prestigious achievements as cofounder
of the Mormon History Association, past president of the
Mormon History Association, consultant to the National Endowment
for the Humanities, and recipient of the Utah State Historical
Society's most distinguished award, that of Fellow.The state of Utah has lost one of its great scholars, and the
academic community will miss his genius. Yet, the great loss will be
to the students who will not have the privilege to be taught by this
kind and gentle man.FRED R. GOWANS
Brigham Young University
Born
Mrs Henry Maylett sunday june 30 118
a girl
Marriage Notes for Rueben Lillard Tucker and Lynne Maylett-5971
Comments: MARRIAGE: The Manti Messenger, 23 FEB 1951
Maylett - Tucker Wedding Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Maylett announce the marriage of their daughter, Lynn, to Mr. Reuben L. Tucker. The ceremony was performed by County Clerk Gilbert L. Fjeldsted at 5 p.m. on Friday, February 16, 1951.
A dinner honoring the newlyweds was served to 28 members of the immediate families on Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Girven C. Stott. The dinner table was centered with a traditional wedding cake, trimmed in roses and rosebuds topped with a miniature bride and groom.
Out-of-town guests for the wedding dinner were Mayor and Mrs. Calvert Larsen and daughter, Georgia, of Ephraim, Miss Leah Henrie of Canada and Mrs. Gerald Mickelsen of Salina.
Those assisting the host and hostess were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Maylett, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Chapman, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Maylett and Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Maylett.