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Alita Jane <I>Peterson Gano</I> Knuckles

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Alita Jane Peterson Gano Knuckles

Birth
Lockerby, San Juan County, Utah, USA
Death
26 Jan 2011 (aged 87)
Cortez, Montezuma County, Colorado, USA
Burial
Dove Creek, Dolores County, Colorado, USA GPS-Latitude: 37.7638893, Longitude: -108.9124527
Memorial ID
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Funeral services for Cortez resident Alita Jane Knuckles will be held Saturday, Feb. 5, at 10 a.m. at Ertel Memorial Chapel with interment to follow at Dove Creek Cemetery. Visitation has been scheduled for Friday evening from 4 to 6 p.m. at Ertel Chapel.

Born in Lockerby, Utah, to Harry Jay and Edith Jane Long Peterson, she was the first child of a family that would eventually grow to eight children. Dry farming was the family business, and business was tough. As was typical for that time period, both sets of her grandparents were within a two-mile walk of her. At the age of 3, Alita was stricken with polio. This debilitating condition stripped her of the ability to walk, so she was forced to be carried anywhere she went, and she had to learn how to walk all over again. The walks to visit grandparents were more than just a chance to visit, but were also therapy.

The polio also affected her ability to start school with the rest of the children that were her age, and she was forced to start two years behind the rest of her future classmates. Over the next two years Alita was able to complete four years of school, and was caught up with the kids that were her age. In 1941 she moved in with long-time family friends Clyde and Eloise Deremo in Dove Creek. She completed her senior year of high school and graduated with the DCHS class of 1942.

Following graduation she went to work at the REA co-op in Dove Creek, where she met a young farmer by the name of Vernon Gano. The two were married the following February, and they eventually settled on land three miles north of Dove Creek where she remained for the next 40 plus years.

For 22 years Alita's vocation was described as "farm wife." This title is used not for simplicity, but rather because there is not another word that encompasses everything this involves. It was also during this time that her own family would be formed, and her two daughters Betty and Norma entered the picture. In an attempt to better provide for his family, and to supplement his farm income, Vernon had gone to work in the local mines. On an August afternoon, just a few days after the birth of their first grandson, Roger, Vernon was tragically killed in what can only be described as a freak mining accident. The public support for Alita and her family was so overwhelming that the funeral was forced to be held in the gymnasium of the Dolores County High School.

A couple of years later, a chance conversation at the county assessor's office led to a new vocation. While in the office to go over her property taxes, she happened to mention that she was going to have to find a job. She left the office with a job she held for the next 24 years until her retirement. A new vocation was not the only thing new for Alita. A local widower, Jewel Knuckles caught her eye, and after courtship the two were married in 1966. Jewel had four children of his own, most of them grown, but the marriage also brought a new son, Dennis, into the house. Dennis was a freshman at Dolores County High School at the time, and was a classmate of Norma.

Jewel also introduced Alita to another area that proved to be very important to her over the years, a new church. They were charter members in the Baptist Chapel in Cortez. After meager beginnings, they were able to build a new church, and Alita was the first person baptized in the new building. The next 20 plus years saw Alita and Jewel making the trip to Cortez every Sunday and Wednesday for services. Alita remained a devoted member of her church for the remainder of her life. Alita and Jewel moved off of the family farm in 1988 to a home in Cortez.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Vernon Gano and Jewel Knuckles of Dove Creek; her sisters, Elsie and Mildred; and brothers, Boyd and Douglas.

She is survived by two sisters, Hazel Peterson and Iris (Peterson) Jackson; and one brother, Howard; her daughters, Betty and Norma; stepson, Dennis Knuckles; grandsons, Roger and Vernon Knuckles, Steve, Brian, and Chris Neely; step-granddaughters, Karla, Karen, Lisa and Rita; 10 additional step-grandchildren, 13 great-grandchildren, and three great-great-grandchildren, plus numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.

Services are under the direction of Ertel Funeral Home.
Funeral services for Cortez resident Alita Jane Knuckles will be held Saturday, Feb. 5, at 10 a.m. at Ertel Memorial Chapel with interment to follow at Dove Creek Cemetery. Visitation has been scheduled for Friday evening from 4 to 6 p.m. at Ertel Chapel.

Born in Lockerby, Utah, to Harry Jay and Edith Jane Long Peterson, she was the first child of a family that would eventually grow to eight children. Dry farming was the family business, and business was tough. As was typical for that time period, both sets of her grandparents were within a two-mile walk of her. At the age of 3, Alita was stricken with polio. This debilitating condition stripped her of the ability to walk, so she was forced to be carried anywhere she went, and she had to learn how to walk all over again. The walks to visit grandparents were more than just a chance to visit, but were also therapy.

The polio also affected her ability to start school with the rest of the children that were her age, and she was forced to start two years behind the rest of her future classmates. Over the next two years Alita was able to complete four years of school, and was caught up with the kids that were her age. In 1941 she moved in with long-time family friends Clyde and Eloise Deremo in Dove Creek. She completed her senior year of high school and graduated with the DCHS class of 1942.

Following graduation she went to work at the REA co-op in Dove Creek, where she met a young farmer by the name of Vernon Gano. The two were married the following February, and they eventually settled on land three miles north of Dove Creek where she remained for the next 40 plus years.

For 22 years Alita's vocation was described as "farm wife." This title is used not for simplicity, but rather because there is not another word that encompasses everything this involves. It was also during this time that her own family would be formed, and her two daughters Betty and Norma entered the picture. In an attempt to better provide for his family, and to supplement his farm income, Vernon had gone to work in the local mines. On an August afternoon, just a few days after the birth of their first grandson, Roger, Vernon was tragically killed in what can only be described as a freak mining accident. The public support for Alita and her family was so overwhelming that the funeral was forced to be held in the gymnasium of the Dolores County High School.

A couple of years later, a chance conversation at the county assessor's office led to a new vocation. While in the office to go over her property taxes, she happened to mention that she was going to have to find a job. She left the office with a job she held for the next 24 years until her retirement. A new vocation was not the only thing new for Alita. A local widower, Jewel Knuckles caught her eye, and after courtship the two were married in 1966. Jewel had four children of his own, most of them grown, but the marriage also brought a new son, Dennis, into the house. Dennis was a freshman at Dolores County High School at the time, and was a classmate of Norma.

Jewel also introduced Alita to another area that proved to be very important to her over the years, a new church. They were charter members in the Baptist Chapel in Cortez. After meager beginnings, they were able to build a new church, and Alita was the first person baptized in the new building. The next 20 plus years saw Alita and Jewel making the trip to Cortez every Sunday and Wednesday for services. Alita remained a devoted member of her church for the remainder of her life. Alita and Jewel moved off of the family farm in 1988 to a home in Cortez.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Vernon Gano and Jewel Knuckles of Dove Creek; her sisters, Elsie and Mildred; and brothers, Boyd and Douglas.

She is survived by two sisters, Hazel Peterson and Iris (Peterson) Jackson; and one brother, Howard; her daughters, Betty and Norma; stepson, Dennis Knuckles; grandsons, Roger and Vernon Knuckles, Steve, Brian, and Chris Neely; step-granddaughters, Karla, Karen, Lisa and Rita; 10 additional step-grandchildren, 13 great-grandchildren, and three great-great-grandchildren, plus numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.

Services are under the direction of Ertel Funeral Home.


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