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Dr Laurence Douglas “Doug” Israelsen

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Dr Laurence Douglas “Doug” Israelsen

Birth
Death
25 Apr 2020 (aged 74)
Burial
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA Add to Map
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Dr. Laurence Douglas “Doug” Israelsen
1945 - 2020

Early Life: On August 6, 1945, a bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. That same day, Lyle Israelsen, having obtained leave from the United States Navy to join his wife, Nancy, for the birth of their first son, proudly welcomed little boy, Dwight, into the world. A few moments later, another bomb was dropped. To everyone’s great astonishment and joy, the doctor exclaimed, “There’s another one coming!” Doug made his extraordinary grand entrance. Throughout his life, he continued to surprise and delight with his boundless capacity to live life to the fullest.
Doug flourished alongside his twin on their idyllic small farm in North Logan. It was every little boy’s dream with wide open fields, mountains and streams to explore with his ever-growing number of siblings and neighbor kids. Here, Doug learned the value of hard work and play from his dad as he worked alongside him in the hay fields, planted and harvested, milked cows, hunted, rode horses, camped and devised hilarious pranks. With his dad as Scoutmaster, Doug earned his Eagle Scout award and cherished the times they spent together. He learned from both parents to pause and take time to appreciate and give thanks for the beauty of nature and animals. His innate artistic talents and love of learning were encouraged by his mother, who supplied him and his 11 siblings with every imaginable book and type of art medium. Creativity flowed effortlessly from Doug as he created woodcuts, paintings, mosaics, hunting bows and sculptures. He was also a gifted athlete, participating in many sports including basketball and football at South Cache High School. He spent his teen summers working construction, and along with Dwight, assisted in building I-80 through southwest Wyoming. His natural charisma, good looks, and penchant for creating excitement, garnered him a wide range of friends.
Life’s Work | Service | Interests: Following a year at Utah State University, and then his Brazilian South mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Doug married Karen Colette Nixon and they were blessed with six beloved daughters.
He finished his degree at Brigham Young University and was accepted at the University of Nebraska-College of Dentistry. After graduating Magna Cum Laude with his DDS degree, Dr. Israelsen completed a residency in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the esteemed Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and later set up practice in Salt Lake City, Utah. His unquenchable passion for learning and sharing led him to continue his cutting edge studies well beyond his terminal degrees, always staying abreast of the latest techniques. His distinguished career brought many positions of leadership, including: president of American Craniofacial Associates and president of Utah Society of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. He was in demand as a lecturer in renowned schools including Harvard Medical School, Beijing Medical School, Medical College of Virginia, and is known throughout the world for his pioneering and research in the field of auricular craniofacial implants. He was the first surgeon west of the Mississippi to receive authorization to use the procedure for missing ears, noses and cheeks. Doug loved his work and was widely recognized by peers and patients for his skill, caring and expertise.
Doug was married to Cathie Ann Roberts from 1988 until her death in 2002, and to Sharon Dorociak from 2005-2008.
His artistic talents flourished throughout his adulthood and included woodworking, exquisite original piano compositions, and most notably, life-sized bronze sculptures. He prided himself on his World Champion Quarter Horse, Okie, the model for his sculpture “Great Western Tradition,“ which stands at the American Quarter Horse Museum in Amarillo, Texas. Doug loved watching his daughters grow and cherished the time he was able to spend working with them in his office. He took great pride in their achievements and in the women, wives and mothers they have each become. In his later years, he found his soulmate, Karen Marie Kruger, and together, they enjoyed their shared passions of raising Andalusian horses, working on the ranch and traveling to their home in Florida.
Perhaps the most meaningful elements of Doug’s life can’t be found in diplomas, awards or titles, but in the generosity of his soul, his deep caring for people, and the quiet service he so freely gave. Most are unaware of the countless weeks he volunteered back in his beloved Brazil, in humanitarian medical service to the people he had come to love on his mission, or of the innumerable times he marked a surgery as “no charge” to help out a client in need. Doug was a genius at knowing exactly what a person needed most, and then he just gave it, no matter the personal cost or time involved. One little-known example is his taking a homeless man to lunch, and then meeting with him regularly, and over years, sponsoring him in a literacy program and housing to better his life. Or the time he took 200 homeless people to Chuck-o-Rama for Christmas dinner. He is legendary for his quiet giving within his family and known as The Candy Man and Awesome to all nieces and nephews. His far-reaching influence for good has touched countless lives and his beautiful and compassionate heart lives on through his deeds and in the lives of his posterity. Doug’s life represents a stunning array of accomplishments, quiet service, and boundless curiosity. He was an elegant Renaissance man: composer, designer, compassionate friend, surgeon, nature and animal lover, and was relentless in his quest to learn, master and experience everything possible. Laurence Douglas "Doug" Israelsen passed gracefully to the next life on April 25, 2020, surrounded by his loving family, following a cerebral aneurysm and subsequent hemorrhages. He was 74.
Family Includes: His children: Amie Gerber (Bruno), Anne-Marie Halverson (Brad), Shelly Wilkinson (Patrick), Emily Volk (Sean), Jennifer Christian (Brett), Laura Kebker (Eric), Chase Williamson, Morgan Nassar (Raja), and Madison Smith (Dave); his siblings: Dwight (Jill), Jeanne Harrison (Keith), Laurie Ballam (Michael), Mark (Toi), Ned (Cynthia), John (Angie), Lila Geddes (Doyle), Eve Jones (Randy), Richard, Bonnie Erickson (Steven) and James (Melinda); as well as 29 grandchildren and one more on the way.
Service: 1428 S. 800 E. Mapleton, Utah
Arrangements: Premier Funeral Services
Interment: Mount Olivet Cemetery
Obituary: © 2020 | Premier Funeral Services
Bio compiled by: Annie Duckett Hundley
Dr. Laurence Douglas “Doug” Israelsen
1945 - 2020

Early Life: On August 6, 1945, a bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. That same day, Lyle Israelsen, having obtained leave from the United States Navy to join his wife, Nancy, for the birth of their first son, proudly welcomed little boy, Dwight, into the world. A few moments later, another bomb was dropped. To everyone’s great astonishment and joy, the doctor exclaimed, “There’s another one coming!” Doug made his extraordinary grand entrance. Throughout his life, he continued to surprise and delight with his boundless capacity to live life to the fullest.
Doug flourished alongside his twin on their idyllic small farm in North Logan. It was every little boy’s dream with wide open fields, mountains and streams to explore with his ever-growing number of siblings and neighbor kids. Here, Doug learned the value of hard work and play from his dad as he worked alongside him in the hay fields, planted and harvested, milked cows, hunted, rode horses, camped and devised hilarious pranks. With his dad as Scoutmaster, Doug earned his Eagle Scout award and cherished the times they spent together. He learned from both parents to pause and take time to appreciate and give thanks for the beauty of nature and animals. His innate artistic talents and love of learning were encouraged by his mother, who supplied him and his 11 siblings with every imaginable book and type of art medium. Creativity flowed effortlessly from Doug as he created woodcuts, paintings, mosaics, hunting bows and sculptures. He was also a gifted athlete, participating in many sports including basketball and football at South Cache High School. He spent his teen summers working construction, and along with Dwight, assisted in building I-80 through southwest Wyoming. His natural charisma, good looks, and penchant for creating excitement, garnered him a wide range of friends.
Life’s Work | Service | Interests: Following a year at Utah State University, and then his Brazilian South mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Doug married Karen Colette Nixon and they were blessed with six beloved daughters.
He finished his degree at Brigham Young University and was accepted at the University of Nebraska-College of Dentistry. After graduating Magna Cum Laude with his DDS degree, Dr. Israelsen completed a residency in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the esteemed Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and later set up practice in Salt Lake City, Utah. His unquenchable passion for learning and sharing led him to continue his cutting edge studies well beyond his terminal degrees, always staying abreast of the latest techniques. His distinguished career brought many positions of leadership, including: president of American Craniofacial Associates and president of Utah Society of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. He was in demand as a lecturer in renowned schools including Harvard Medical School, Beijing Medical School, Medical College of Virginia, and is known throughout the world for his pioneering and research in the field of auricular craniofacial implants. He was the first surgeon west of the Mississippi to receive authorization to use the procedure for missing ears, noses and cheeks. Doug loved his work and was widely recognized by peers and patients for his skill, caring and expertise.
Doug was married to Cathie Ann Roberts from 1988 until her death in 2002, and to Sharon Dorociak from 2005-2008.
His artistic talents flourished throughout his adulthood and included woodworking, exquisite original piano compositions, and most notably, life-sized bronze sculptures. He prided himself on his World Champion Quarter Horse, Okie, the model for his sculpture “Great Western Tradition,“ which stands at the American Quarter Horse Museum in Amarillo, Texas. Doug loved watching his daughters grow and cherished the time he was able to spend working with them in his office. He took great pride in their achievements and in the women, wives and mothers they have each become. In his later years, he found his soulmate, Karen Marie Kruger, and together, they enjoyed their shared passions of raising Andalusian horses, working on the ranch and traveling to their home in Florida.
Perhaps the most meaningful elements of Doug’s life can’t be found in diplomas, awards or titles, but in the generosity of his soul, his deep caring for people, and the quiet service he so freely gave. Most are unaware of the countless weeks he volunteered back in his beloved Brazil, in humanitarian medical service to the people he had come to love on his mission, or of the innumerable times he marked a surgery as “no charge” to help out a client in need. Doug was a genius at knowing exactly what a person needed most, and then he just gave it, no matter the personal cost or time involved. One little-known example is his taking a homeless man to lunch, and then meeting with him regularly, and over years, sponsoring him in a literacy program and housing to better his life. Or the time he took 200 homeless people to Chuck-o-Rama for Christmas dinner. He is legendary for his quiet giving within his family and known as The Candy Man and Awesome to all nieces and nephews. His far-reaching influence for good has touched countless lives and his beautiful and compassionate heart lives on through his deeds and in the lives of his posterity. Doug’s life represents a stunning array of accomplishments, quiet service, and boundless curiosity. He was an elegant Renaissance man: composer, designer, compassionate friend, surgeon, nature and animal lover, and was relentless in his quest to learn, master and experience everything possible. Laurence Douglas "Doug" Israelsen passed gracefully to the next life on April 25, 2020, surrounded by his loving family, following a cerebral aneurysm and subsequent hemorrhages. He was 74.
Family Includes: His children: Amie Gerber (Bruno), Anne-Marie Halverson (Brad), Shelly Wilkinson (Patrick), Emily Volk (Sean), Jennifer Christian (Brett), Laura Kebker (Eric), Chase Williamson, Morgan Nassar (Raja), and Madison Smith (Dave); his siblings: Dwight (Jill), Jeanne Harrison (Keith), Laurie Ballam (Michael), Mark (Toi), Ned (Cynthia), John (Angie), Lila Geddes (Doyle), Eve Jones (Randy), Richard, Bonnie Erickson (Steven) and James (Melinda); as well as 29 grandchildren and one more on the way.
Service: 1428 S. 800 E. Mapleton, Utah
Arrangements: Premier Funeral Services
Interment: Mount Olivet Cemetery
Obituary: © 2020 | Premier Funeral Services
Bio compiled by: Annie Duckett Hundley


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