Advertisement

Raul Joel “R.J.” Parrish

Advertisement

Raul Joel “R.J.” Parrish Veteran

Birth
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Death
20 Feb 2011 (aged 75)
Kaysville, Davis County, Utah, USA
Burial
Kaysville, Davis County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.0435742, Longitude: -111.9279809
Memorial ID
View Source
Raul Joel "R.J." Parrish passed away suddenly and unexpectedly on Sunday morning, February 20, 2011 at his home. He was seventy-five years old.

He was born January 14, 1936 in Salt Lake City to Samuel Joel Parrish and Janice Udy Parrish and lived his early life in Centerville, Utah. He was the oldest of three children.

He attended high school at Bountiful High, and later Davis High, after which he enlisted in the United States Navy. He was stationed at NAS Beeville, Texas, where he was assigned as a flight engineer to a bomber crew which was attached to the aircraft carrier USS Ranger. He had the distinction of being a member of the 1956 commissioning Ranger crew and in 1993 was invited to participate alongside his son Chris, a twenty-year naval veteran, in the Ranger's final cruise just prior to the ship's decommissioning.

He married Jeannine Pope of Bountiful, Utah in 1965, which later was solemnized in the Ogden LDS Temple. They were the parents of five sons. Joel and Jeannine lived their adult lives in Kaysville, Utah in the same house for over forty-five years.

His career in public service spanned more than thirty years, working for the Davis County School District as Supervisor of Electrical Maintenance Services and later as Chief of Davis Schools Security, where he instituted many programs to ensure the safety of students and faculty. He also innovated key energy management systems that continue to save the school district millions of dollars. He was deputized as a special deputy in the Davis County Sheriff's Department, later serving as Commander of the Davis County Sheriff's Reserve. He retired from public service in 1999.

In his later years, he occupied himself with a variety of hobbies and interests, including gardening, gunsmithing, travel, and his dogs. The entire neighborhood benefited from his green thumb and ability to grow exceptional tomatoes - which he freely gave away. "Help yourself, but don't bring a bucket" was the request on his simple sidewalk sign.

He is survived by his wife, Jeannine, their five sons; Douglas (Kayelene) of Alpine, Utah; Brian (Nancy) of Blackfoot, Idaho; Chris of Pleasant Grove, Utah; Tracy (Cindy) of Herriman, Utah; and Joel Jr. of Garden City, Utah; twenty-two grandchildren; ten great-grandchildren; his brother Richard (Dawn); and sister Jolaine Randall, both of Bountiful, Utah. Both of his parents preceded him in death.

Funeral Services will be held on Thursday, February 24, 2011 beginning at 11:00 a.m. in the Kaysville Twelfth Ward Chapel, 1039 East Crestwood Road, Kaysville, Utah. Friends wishing to pay respects may call on the family at Russon Brothers Farmington Mortuary, 1941 North Main Street, Farmington, Utah, on Wednesday evening from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., and at the chapel on Thursday morning from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. just prior to the services.
Interment will be in the Kaysville City Cemetery.
Published in the Deseret News on February 22, 2011.
Raul Joel "R.J." Parrish passed away suddenly and unexpectedly on Sunday morning, February 20, 2011 at his home. He was seventy-five years old.

He was born January 14, 1936 in Salt Lake City to Samuel Joel Parrish and Janice Udy Parrish and lived his early life in Centerville, Utah. He was the oldest of three children.

He attended high school at Bountiful High, and later Davis High, after which he enlisted in the United States Navy. He was stationed at NAS Beeville, Texas, where he was assigned as a flight engineer to a bomber crew which was attached to the aircraft carrier USS Ranger. He had the distinction of being a member of the 1956 commissioning Ranger crew and in 1993 was invited to participate alongside his son Chris, a twenty-year naval veteran, in the Ranger's final cruise just prior to the ship's decommissioning.

He married Jeannine Pope of Bountiful, Utah in 1965, which later was solemnized in the Ogden LDS Temple. They were the parents of five sons. Joel and Jeannine lived their adult lives in Kaysville, Utah in the same house for over forty-five years.

His career in public service spanned more than thirty years, working for the Davis County School District as Supervisor of Electrical Maintenance Services and later as Chief of Davis Schools Security, where he instituted many programs to ensure the safety of students and faculty. He also innovated key energy management systems that continue to save the school district millions of dollars. He was deputized as a special deputy in the Davis County Sheriff's Department, later serving as Commander of the Davis County Sheriff's Reserve. He retired from public service in 1999.

In his later years, he occupied himself with a variety of hobbies and interests, including gardening, gunsmithing, travel, and his dogs. The entire neighborhood benefited from his green thumb and ability to grow exceptional tomatoes - which he freely gave away. "Help yourself, but don't bring a bucket" was the request on his simple sidewalk sign.

He is survived by his wife, Jeannine, their five sons; Douglas (Kayelene) of Alpine, Utah; Brian (Nancy) of Blackfoot, Idaho; Chris of Pleasant Grove, Utah; Tracy (Cindy) of Herriman, Utah; and Joel Jr. of Garden City, Utah; twenty-two grandchildren; ten great-grandchildren; his brother Richard (Dawn); and sister Jolaine Randall, both of Bountiful, Utah. Both of his parents preceded him in death.

Funeral Services will be held on Thursday, February 24, 2011 beginning at 11:00 a.m. in the Kaysville Twelfth Ward Chapel, 1039 East Crestwood Road, Kaysville, Utah. Friends wishing to pay respects may call on the family at Russon Brothers Farmington Mortuary, 1941 North Main Street, Farmington, Utah, on Wednesday evening from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., and at the chapel on Thursday morning from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. just prior to the services.
Interment will be in the Kaysville City Cemetery.
Published in the Deseret News on February 22, 2011.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement