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Eldrid Squire Bunting

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Eldrid Squire Bunting Veteran

Birth
Saint George, Washington County, Utah, USA
Death
24 May 2015 (aged 89)
South Jordan, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Burial
Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA Add to Map
Plot
Resthaven 160-3-E
Memorial ID
View Source
Never one to call attention to himself, our beloved father, step-father, and grandfather, Eldrid Squire Bunting, quietly passed away early Sunday morning, May 24, 2015. He was known as Ed or Grandpa Ed to all who knew him. For nearly ninety years that simple two-letter name complemented his personality and desire for the simple life.

Born to Harold Lovett Bunting and Clara Squire on September 6, 1925 in St. George, his boyhood was filled with cowboy-themed adventure and fun-loving trouble.

Often sleeping more nights under the stars of the Arizona Strip than in his own small home, he ranched with his mother, father, and brother, and learned principles of hard work and integrity that governed his long and successful life.

In 1943, he became an air traffic controller for the U.S. Air force and participated in multiple war engagements throughout the Pacific.

After the war, he began work as a sheet metal and HVAC contractor, eventually purchasing Schoppe Company and turning it into a successful multi-generational company.

His boyhood love of the outdoors and riding on the back of a good horse never left him. He spent countless days riding the Wasatch mountains with friends, family, and three generations of Boy Scouts.

He loved children and regaled them with stories of his childhood adventures during the Great Depression. He encouraged children to enjoy his garden and orchard, helping them find the perfect tomato and lifting them high to reach ripe plums and apples. He was notorious for his practical jokes and contagious sense of humor.

He served faithfully in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and enjoyed his time as a temple worker at the Jordan River Temple. He loved to serve others and would leave whatever he was doing to assist anyone in need.

His greatest wish was to have a large and happy family. He was preceded in death by his parents, his son, Steve Bunting; and the love of his life, Ann Elizabeth Cardall Bunting. He is survived by his brother, Shirl Bunting; nine of his ten children, and multiple grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

A viewing will be held on Monday, June 1st from 6:00-8:00 p.m. at Holladay-Cottonwood Mortuary, 4670 South Highland Drive, Millcreek Township. Funeral services will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Tuesday, June 2, 2015 in the Cottonwood Fourteenth Ward Chapel, 2080 East 5165 South, Holladay. A viewing will commence at 9:30 the same day.
Interment will follow at Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, 3401 South Highland Drive (1450 East), East Millcreek.
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune from May 29 to May 31, 2015.
Never one to call attention to himself, our beloved father, step-father, and grandfather, Eldrid Squire Bunting, quietly passed away early Sunday morning, May 24, 2015. He was known as Ed or Grandpa Ed to all who knew him. For nearly ninety years that simple two-letter name complemented his personality and desire for the simple life.

Born to Harold Lovett Bunting and Clara Squire on September 6, 1925 in St. George, his boyhood was filled with cowboy-themed adventure and fun-loving trouble.

Often sleeping more nights under the stars of the Arizona Strip than in his own small home, he ranched with his mother, father, and brother, and learned principles of hard work and integrity that governed his long and successful life.

In 1943, he became an air traffic controller for the U.S. Air force and participated in multiple war engagements throughout the Pacific.

After the war, he began work as a sheet metal and HVAC contractor, eventually purchasing Schoppe Company and turning it into a successful multi-generational company.

His boyhood love of the outdoors and riding on the back of a good horse never left him. He spent countless days riding the Wasatch mountains with friends, family, and three generations of Boy Scouts.

He loved children and regaled them with stories of his childhood adventures during the Great Depression. He encouraged children to enjoy his garden and orchard, helping them find the perfect tomato and lifting them high to reach ripe plums and apples. He was notorious for his practical jokes and contagious sense of humor.

He served faithfully in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and enjoyed his time as a temple worker at the Jordan River Temple. He loved to serve others and would leave whatever he was doing to assist anyone in need.

His greatest wish was to have a large and happy family. He was preceded in death by his parents, his son, Steve Bunting; and the love of his life, Ann Elizabeth Cardall Bunting. He is survived by his brother, Shirl Bunting; nine of his ten children, and multiple grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

A viewing will be held on Monday, June 1st from 6:00-8:00 p.m. at Holladay-Cottonwood Mortuary, 4670 South Highland Drive, Millcreek Township. Funeral services will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Tuesday, June 2, 2015 in the Cottonwood Fourteenth Ward Chapel, 2080 East 5165 South, Holladay. A viewing will commence at 9:30 the same day.
Interment will follow at Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, 3401 South Highland Drive (1450 East), East Millcreek.
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune from May 29 to May 31, 2015.


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