November 27, 2005
page B8
Violet June Tripp Olson Pulsipher, 89, died November 24, 2005, in Murray, Utah, of natural causes. Violet was born June 26, 1916, to Melvin Reynolds Tripp and Stella Mae Anna West in Burley, Idaho. She married Floyd D. Olson on January 13, 1934, in Salt Lake City, and together they had 11 children. One son died in 1946 (sic). Floyd passed away in 1974.
Violet fulfilled a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to Baton Rouse, LA from 1977-1978. She married Clyde C. Pulsipher in 1982; and he passed away in 1986. During her lifetime, she magnified many church callings, culminating as a faithful ordinance worker in the Jordan River Temple.
Violet is survived by her children, Shirley (David) Chase, Mantua; Nadine (Kent) Richardson, Riverton; Carrol (Raymond) Hudson, Pocatello, Idaho; Mary (Zane) Curtis, Taylorsville; Geri Bartholomew, West Jordan; Dorothy (Roger) Jensen, West Jordan; Barbara (Curtis) Arrington, Payson; Carl, California; Kathi (David) Fulk, Milwaukie, Oregon; Ken (Emily), Spotsylvania, Virginia. She is also survived by 52 grandchildren; 136 great-grandchildren; and 26 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Monday, November 28, 2005, at 12 noon at the Murraydale Ward, 6300 South 300 East, Murray, Utah. Viewings will be Sunday 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Jenkins-Soffe Mortuary, 4760 So. State, Murray, Utah, and at the church 10:30-11:30 a.m. prior to services. Burial in the Midvale City Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, Violet requested donations to the Primary Children's Hospital in SLC.
******************
I was born 26 June
1916 in Burley, Idaho. My father is
Melvin Reynolds Tripp
and my mother is Stella
May Anna West.
I started school at
the age of five years in
the Stars Ferry School.
The first and part of the
second grade I went to
school in Glensferry,
Idaho. The remainder
of my school days were
spent in Burley, Idaho.
I and my brothers
and sisters used to go
swimming in the Snake
River when we lived
in Glensferry. When
I was about three or
four I used to have to
carry water a quarter
of a mile. At night my
father would go down to the canal with a barrel
to get water for washing the dishes and clothes.
Virginia, my sister, used to eat grasshoppers. They
were so terribly thick in 1923 that they would just
line the streams on the sweet clover. Everyone she
could find that was dead and crisp, she would eat.
She would eat the live ones when she could catch
them. I can remember
playing house with
my best friend, Lillian
Harwood, with the
first big dolls we ever
had. They had cloth
bodies and eyes that
would go to sleep. My
mother had a big doll
about three feet high
that had joints in its
fingers, wrists, arms,
ankles, knees, waist,
etc. -- everywhere
humans do; but she
wouldn’t let us play
with it. She would get
it down and let us see
it every so often, but
that was all. My sister,
Grace, used to carry
me home from school
on her back because I
would get so tired. We
had one and three-fourths miles to walk. It would
be dark when we left for school and dark when we
returned home.
On 13 Jan. 1934 I married Floyd Donald Olson; and the last part of May of that same year I
graduated from high school.
Contributor: Ben Theobald (48692641)
November 27, 2005
page B8
Violet June Tripp Olson Pulsipher, 89, died November 24, 2005, in Murray, Utah, of natural causes. Violet was born June 26, 1916, to Melvin Reynolds Tripp and Stella Mae Anna West in Burley, Idaho. She married Floyd D. Olson on January 13, 1934, in Salt Lake City, and together they had 11 children. One son died in 1946 (sic). Floyd passed away in 1974.
Violet fulfilled a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to Baton Rouse, LA from 1977-1978. She married Clyde C. Pulsipher in 1982; and he passed away in 1986. During her lifetime, she magnified many church callings, culminating as a faithful ordinance worker in the Jordan River Temple.
Violet is survived by her children, Shirley (David) Chase, Mantua; Nadine (Kent) Richardson, Riverton; Carrol (Raymond) Hudson, Pocatello, Idaho; Mary (Zane) Curtis, Taylorsville; Geri Bartholomew, West Jordan; Dorothy (Roger) Jensen, West Jordan; Barbara (Curtis) Arrington, Payson; Carl, California; Kathi (David) Fulk, Milwaukie, Oregon; Ken (Emily), Spotsylvania, Virginia. She is also survived by 52 grandchildren; 136 great-grandchildren; and 26 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Monday, November 28, 2005, at 12 noon at the Murraydale Ward, 6300 South 300 East, Murray, Utah. Viewings will be Sunday 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Jenkins-Soffe Mortuary, 4760 So. State, Murray, Utah, and at the church 10:30-11:30 a.m. prior to services. Burial in the Midvale City Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, Violet requested donations to the Primary Children's Hospital in SLC.
******************
I was born 26 June
1916 in Burley, Idaho. My father is
Melvin Reynolds Tripp
and my mother is Stella
May Anna West.
I started school at
the age of five years in
the Stars Ferry School.
The first and part of the
second grade I went to
school in Glensferry,
Idaho. The remainder
of my school days were
spent in Burley, Idaho.
I and my brothers
and sisters used to go
swimming in the Snake
River when we lived
in Glensferry. When
I was about three or
four I used to have to
carry water a quarter
of a mile. At night my
father would go down to the canal with a barrel
to get water for washing the dishes and clothes.
Virginia, my sister, used to eat grasshoppers. They
were so terribly thick in 1923 that they would just
line the streams on the sweet clover. Everyone she
could find that was dead and crisp, she would eat.
She would eat the live ones when she could catch
them. I can remember
playing house with
my best friend, Lillian
Harwood, with the
first big dolls we ever
had. They had cloth
bodies and eyes that
would go to sleep. My
mother had a big doll
about three feet high
that had joints in its
fingers, wrists, arms,
ankles, knees, waist,
etc. -- everywhere
humans do; but she
wouldn’t let us play
with it. She would get
it down and let us see
it every so often, but
that was all. My sister,
Grace, used to carry
me home from school
on her back because I
would get so tired. We
had one and three-fourths miles to walk. It would
be dark when we left for school and dark when we
returned home.
On 13 Jan. 1934 I married Floyd Donald Olson; and the last part of May of that same year I
graduated from high school.
Contributor: Ben Theobald (48692641)
Inscription
Mother
Family Members
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Advertisement