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Merrill Vallant “Buzz” Lee

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Merrill Vallant “Buzz” Lee Veteran

Birth
Cudahy, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Death
14 Jan 2020 (aged 96)
Orem, Utah County, Utah, USA
Burial
Provo, Utah County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.2989222, Longitude: -111.6471778
Plot
Garden of Peace 316 A-1
Memorial ID
View Source
Merrill Vallant "Buzz" Lee
1923 - 2020
VETERAN

Early Life: Merrill "Buzz" was born February 13, 1923, in Cudahy, California, son of Delbert Leroy and Georgia Lessie Brinkley Lee. Of course, to all who knew him (starting with his mother over an alleged bee incident at a very early age) he was "Buzz." His childhood and teenage years would unfold in a story rivaled only by the adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. As his family moved wherever work could be found between California, Arizona and New Mexico, Buzz was involved in adventure after adventure, generating stories that would be retold countless times over decades. Many stories came from his years as a child in "Cactus Flat" or the area around present-day Lebanon, Arizona.
❦ As a boy, not yet eight-years-old, he was up before dawn, milking cows, turning the water, tending animals, and keeping his shoeless feet warm in fresh cow pies. As the oldest boy and second oldest of the children, he watched over his younger siblings, rode a horse he affectionately referred to as "that little mare" and found friendship with his dog, Cub. He was fascinated by the beautiful, dark sky filled with stars and loved the smell of the mesquite trees on warm summer nights. He would tearfully recount the dark Cactus night when Buzz was eight, his dad sent him in their old Model A Ford to fetch a doctor for his two-year-old sister; she would succumb that night to typhoid fever. As a high schooler at South Gate High in South Gate, California, his focus admittedly was football. He would forever love the game. He was nothing if not scrappy. Due to an off-field altercation where he broke his nose, he was the only player on his team with a face mask. At 135 pounds, he started at guard on the offensive line and would cut down defenders twice his size in a heavy run offense. Throughout his life, he loved the game and became the ultimate armchair quarterback, sure that he could out-coach anyone. As a gymnast, he was captain of his high school team.
Life's Work | Service | Interests: With the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Buzz, like, many of the Greatest Generation, enlisted in military service. He joined the Coast Guard, with promises from the recruiter of sailing the world on fancy "yachts" and enjoying beautiful beaches. Buzz loved the beach. He ended his tour at a long-range navigation station on an atoll ("the rock"), just a mile off the coast of Iwo Jima. There, he witnessed the flyover of the Enola Gay on that fateful mission to Japan that he tearfully would declare "did not need to happen." During his military service, he made the most important and impactful decision of his life when he married his sweetheart, Palma Rae Bahl, with whom he would spend the next 75½ years. With her quiet and confident demeanor and fiscal frugality, she became the real rock that would anchor his life and keep him headed in the right direction. They eventually settled in Downey, California, and raised three children.
❦ As a youth, Buzz had learned to "set" or install ceramic tile. Upon his military discharge, he perfected his trade and became a master craftsman. With tenaciousness, fearlessness, perseverance and hard work, and in the face of many obstacles, including a fire that completely destroyed his tile factory, as well as conflicts with a hostile union, he built and rebuilt his business into a successful enterprise that would provide very well for his family through his working years and throughout the rest of his life. He developed a reputation for quality, generosity and honesty. Buzz loved to engage with his customers and with people in general. He worked hard every day, except Wednesday, which was his golf day. Ah yes, Buzz became enamored with golf, way before golf was fashionable. There was surely no other activity that he enjoyed more. Clubs, balls, hats, sweaters—his cars, his garage and his office were filled with them. He worked obsessively on the game, always tweaking and perfecting.
❦ As a faithful member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Buzz was the first to affirm his belief and the first to humbly acknowledge his own shortcomings. His generosity and tremendous empathy for those who were less fortunate was always present. He was ever mindful that he came from nothing economically and never hesitated to help those who were "down on their luck." Cayenne pepper, apple cider vinegar, prune juice, Shaklee vitamins, not worrying or taking life too seriously, a sarcastic sense of humor, the stalwart support from his loving and very patient wife, the 5:00 a.m. workout sessions at the gym well into his 70s, an outspoken passion for conservative politics and the tremendous joy he felt for his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, fueled his longevity. Merrill Vallant "Buzz" Lee passed away January 14, 2020, at home in Orem, Utah, after a long and good life. He was 96.
Preceded In Death By: His parents and nearly everyone that was his peer, also by his grandson, Conner. He looked forward to seeing them.
Interment: East Lawn Memorial Hills Cemetery
Arrangements & Obituary: © 2020 | Nelson Family Mortuary

Bio compiled by: Annie Duckett Hundley
Merrill Vallant "Buzz" Lee
1923 - 2020
VETERAN

Early Life: Merrill "Buzz" was born February 13, 1923, in Cudahy, California, son of Delbert Leroy and Georgia Lessie Brinkley Lee. Of course, to all who knew him (starting with his mother over an alleged bee incident at a very early age) he was "Buzz." His childhood and teenage years would unfold in a story rivaled only by the adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. As his family moved wherever work could be found between California, Arizona and New Mexico, Buzz was involved in adventure after adventure, generating stories that would be retold countless times over decades. Many stories came from his years as a child in "Cactus Flat" or the area around present-day Lebanon, Arizona.
❦ As a boy, not yet eight-years-old, he was up before dawn, milking cows, turning the water, tending animals, and keeping his shoeless feet warm in fresh cow pies. As the oldest boy and second oldest of the children, he watched over his younger siblings, rode a horse he affectionately referred to as "that little mare" and found friendship with his dog, Cub. He was fascinated by the beautiful, dark sky filled with stars and loved the smell of the mesquite trees on warm summer nights. He would tearfully recount the dark Cactus night when Buzz was eight, his dad sent him in their old Model A Ford to fetch a doctor for his two-year-old sister; she would succumb that night to typhoid fever. As a high schooler at South Gate High in South Gate, California, his focus admittedly was football. He would forever love the game. He was nothing if not scrappy. Due to an off-field altercation where he broke his nose, he was the only player on his team with a face mask. At 135 pounds, he started at guard on the offensive line and would cut down defenders twice his size in a heavy run offense. Throughout his life, he loved the game and became the ultimate armchair quarterback, sure that he could out-coach anyone. As a gymnast, he was captain of his high school team.
Life's Work | Service | Interests: With the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Buzz, like, many of the Greatest Generation, enlisted in military service. He joined the Coast Guard, with promises from the recruiter of sailing the world on fancy "yachts" and enjoying beautiful beaches. Buzz loved the beach. He ended his tour at a long-range navigation station on an atoll ("the rock"), just a mile off the coast of Iwo Jima. There, he witnessed the flyover of the Enola Gay on that fateful mission to Japan that he tearfully would declare "did not need to happen." During his military service, he made the most important and impactful decision of his life when he married his sweetheart, Palma Rae Bahl, with whom he would spend the next 75½ years. With her quiet and confident demeanor and fiscal frugality, she became the real rock that would anchor his life and keep him headed in the right direction. They eventually settled in Downey, California, and raised three children.
❦ As a youth, Buzz had learned to "set" or install ceramic tile. Upon his military discharge, he perfected his trade and became a master craftsman. With tenaciousness, fearlessness, perseverance and hard work, and in the face of many obstacles, including a fire that completely destroyed his tile factory, as well as conflicts with a hostile union, he built and rebuilt his business into a successful enterprise that would provide very well for his family through his working years and throughout the rest of his life. He developed a reputation for quality, generosity and honesty. Buzz loved to engage with his customers and with people in general. He worked hard every day, except Wednesday, which was his golf day. Ah yes, Buzz became enamored with golf, way before golf was fashionable. There was surely no other activity that he enjoyed more. Clubs, balls, hats, sweaters—his cars, his garage and his office were filled with them. He worked obsessively on the game, always tweaking and perfecting.
❦ As a faithful member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Buzz was the first to affirm his belief and the first to humbly acknowledge his own shortcomings. His generosity and tremendous empathy for those who were less fortunate was always present. He was ever mindful that he came from nothing economically and never hesitated to help those who were "down on their luck." Cayenne pepper, apple cider vinegar, prune juice, Shaklee vitamins, not worrying or taking life too seriously, a sarcastic sense of humor, the stalwart support from his loving and very patient wife, the 5:00 a.m. workout sessions at the gym well into his 70s, an outspoken passion for conservative politics and the tremendous joy he felt for his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, fueled his longevity. Merrill Vallant "Buzz" Lee passed away January 14, 2020, at home in Orem, Utah, after a long and good life. He was 96.
Preceded In Death By: His parents and nearly everyone that was his peer, also by his grandson, Conner. He looked forward to seeing them.
Interment: East Lawn Memorial Hills Cemetery
Arrangements & Obituary: © 2020 | Nelson Family Mortuary

Bio compiled by: Annie Duckett Hundley

Inscription

Married JULY 3, 1944
They Were
"The Greatest Generation"

Gravesite Details

Interment 25 Jan 2020



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