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Gloria Pat <I>Harper</I> Snyder

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Gloria Pat Harper Snyder

Birth
Woodward, Woodward County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
23 Mar 2022 (aged 91)
Yukon, Canadian County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Yukon, Canadian County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Plot
A 47 - 10
Memorial ID
View Source
Pat Snyder was born on July 15th, 1930, in Woodward, Oklahoma. At the tender age of three weeks old in a Ford Model T her parents, Millard and Grace Harper, and her older sister, Beverly, set out on their adventure to Oklahoma City. Even though Pat had one sister and no brothers, she was her father's "boy." If our beloved Pat had been a boy, his name would have been Patrick. Her nickname became Patsy.
Pat attended Classen High School and in 1948 went on to OU as a business major getting a degree in Secretarial Science. Her dad provided her with one year of college tuition. She then went on with a scholarship and worked 40 hours a week in the dorm to complete her degree.
In 1952, Pat was reunited with Jim Snyder a former High School classmate. One weekend when Jim was on leave a friend arranged a blind date. She and Jim married eight months later. They had four children, sixteen grandchildren, and 28 great-grandchildren. Their quiver was full. "Psalm 127:4-5" Pat and Jim's family was their most prized possession. They moved to Yukon in 1961, establishing Yukon's first supermarket, becoming a chain of six stores known as Snyder's Foods.
Pat was born with a passion for all things art. As a young child, she found joy in sketching and creating art. She professionally started showing her work at various art shows and galleries. In 1975 she showed at Norman Wilks Gallery and did so for the next 35 years. Her works were hung in galleries in Santa Fe and Taos. She showed her work in Howell Gallery for ten years until her retirement. Her home was always filled with children, food, and art. She painted everything, but she especially loved figurative paintings. She loved sketching and painting her children and grandchildren. Her special joy was the thirty-year tradition of her Christmas painting that became her coveted Christmas card.
Pat's heart was always for her community. She was quick with a word of encouragement and a table full of food. She loved people and was loved dearly. She said, "I love Yukon. I wouldn't leave it for anything. It's my home, my comfort, and my joy. I love everything about it." Her faith permeated her very soul, and she led her family as a Godly matriarch. She was a light for her community and a beacon for the love of God. The Bible verse that best reflected Pat is, "Her children arise and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her: "Many women do noble things, but you surpass them all." Proverbs 31:28-29.
Pat Snyder was born on July 15th, 1930, in Woodward, Oklahoma. At the tender age of three weeks old in a Ford Model T her parents, Millard and Grace Harper, and her older sister, Beverly, set out on their adventure to Oklahoma City. Even though Pat had one sister and no brothers, she was her father's "boy." If our beloved Pat had been a boy, his name would have been Patrick. Her nickname became Patsy.
Pat attended Classen High School and in 1948 went on to OU as a business major getting a degree in Secretarial Science. Her dad provided her with one year of college tuition. She then went on with a scholarship and worked 40 hours a week in the dorm to complete her degree.
In 1952, Pat was reunited with Jim Snyder a former High School classmate. One weekend when Jim was on leave a friend arranged a blind date. She and Jim married eight months later. They had four children, sixteen grandchildren, and 28 great-grandchildren. Their quiver was full. "Psalm 127:4-5" Pat and Jim's family was their most prized possession. They moved to Yukon in 1961, establishing Yukon's first supermarket, becoming a chain of six stores known as Snyder's Foods.
Pat was born with a passion for all things art. As a young child, she found joy in sketching and creating art. She professionally started showing her work at various art shows and galleries. In 1975 she showed at Norman Wilks Gallery and did so for the next 35 years. Her works were hung in galleries in Santa Fe and Taos. She showed her work in Howell Gallery for ten years until her retirement. Her home was always filled with children, food, and art. She painted everything, but she especially loved figurative paintings. She loved sketching and painting her children and grandchildren. Her special joy was the thirty-year tradition of her Christmas painting that became her coveted Christmas card.
Pat's heart was always for her community. She was quick with a word of encouragement and a table full of food. She loved people and was loved dearly. She said, "I love Yukon. I wouldn't leave it for anything. It's my home, my comfort, and my joy. I love everything about it." Her faith permeated her very soul, and she led her family as a Godly matriarch. She was a light for her community and a beacon for the love of God. The Bible verse that best reflected Pat is, "Her children arise and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her: "Many women do noble things, but you surpass them all." Proverbs 31:28-29.


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