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Florence Melissa <I>Morgan</I> Wessel Pitman

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Florence Melissa Morgan Wessel Pitman

Birth
Poplar, Bonneville County, Idaho, USA
Death
8 Mar 1990 (aged 75)
Bountiful, Davis County, Utah, USA
Burial
Shoshone, Lincoln County, Idaho, USA Add to Map
Plot
15-51
Memorial ID
View Source
Florence Melissa Morgan is the sixth child born to Melissa Marian Bassett and Joseph Charles Morgan.

By the time the Morgan family had moved to Dietrich, Idaho, in 1931, Florence had completed school through the eighth grade. Due to her mother's poor health, she did not attend school in Dietrich. She remained at home, helping with kitchen duties and caring for the younger children.

In 1934 Florence married Leland Hollis Wessel. Later that year their daughter Alice was born. The earliest years of this marriage were spent in the Dietrich area with Lee working at farming and later with the Union Pacific Railroad. Florence had a reputation by this time of always taking care of someone. When mothers-to-be needed help, she would go to their homes and stay until the new mothers were able to resume the normal duties of the home.

During World War II many defense plants began operating in the Ogden and Salt Lake City, Utah, area. Florence and family moved to Utah in 1943. She worked for a short time at the Union Pacific Railroad laundry, then was hired at the Ogden Arsenal. Here she disassembled, repaired, and reassembled firearms. She was very proud of her "war effort" contribution.

But the marriage of Florence and Leland was a troubled one, ending in divorce.

Another big change came about in Florence's life after her sister Emily Pitman passed away in 1945. She and daughter Alice made a move back to Dietrich, Idaho, to live with the George Howard Pitman family, as his wife Emily's death left a family of five children without a mother. Florence assumed the responsibility of helping to care for her sister's five children. Florence married second her sister's widower, George Howard Pitman (aka Howard), 4 April 1946 in Salt Lake City, Utah. The melding of two families is not usually easy and this one was no exception. But Florence and Howard were married in 1946, making this arrangement permanent. She worked diligently in gardening, canning, cooking, and cleaning. There was always plenty of everything to be done.

In 1950 Howard and Florence sold their first farm in Dietrich and bought about 600 acres of unimproved range land, also in Dietrich, where he built a new house and farm buildings. With the help of his boys and a nephew (George Ward), he put about 100 acres of that land under irrigation which he used to grow mainly hay and grain for his livestock.

In 1960, after her daughter Alice and all her Pitman stepchildren were married or gone, she and Howard sold the family home and farm and moved to Shoshone, Lincoln, Idaho, where he continued to build houses and work as a contractor on other building projects

From 1970 to 1974 they lived in Puyallup, Washington, working on a church building project. Howard would help build and Florence would stain and varnish the woodwork. When they moved back to Idaho in about 1974, the town of Jerome became their next home.

As the years passed Florence was a helpmate and devoted companion to her husband Howard. Florence enjoyed mostly good health until serious intestinal surgery in 1972. She recovered but did have stomach problems periodically after that time. It was also observed that her once sharp memory was slipping. After Howard's death in 1985, her condition deteriorated rapidly. Florence moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado, in 1986 and lived with her daughter and son-in-law, Alice and Chester Hunt. As her health worsened her necessary needs required constant nursing care. She was moved to an Alzheimer's care center in Bountiful, Utah, in July of 1989. While there she contracted pneumonia and passed away on 8 March 1990. She is buried next to her husband and sister in the Shoshone, Idaho, Cemetery. She is remembered as an avid flower gardener with a special love for geraniums.

-Life sketch of Florence Melissa Morgan by daughter Alice Hunt, 1999.


Florence Melissa Morgan is the sixth child born to Melissa Marian Bassett and Joseph Charles Morgan.

By the time the Morgan family had moved to Dietrich, Idaho, in 1931, Florence had completed school through the eighth grade. Due to her mother's poor health, she did not attend school in Dietrich. She remained at home, helping with kitchen duties and caring for the younger children.

In 1934 Florence married Leland Hollis Wessel. Later that year their daughter Alice was born. The earliest years of this marriage were spent in the Dietrich area with Lee working at farming and later with the Union Pacific Railroad. Florence had a reputation by this time of always taking care of someone. When mothers-to-be needed help, she would go to their homes and stay until the new mothers were able to resume the normal duties of the home.

During World War II many defense plants began operating in the Ogden and Salt Lake City, Utah, area. Florence and family moved to Utah in 1943. She worked for a short time at the Union Pacific Railroad laundry, then was hired at the Ogden Arsenal. Here she disassembled, repaired, and reassembled firearms. She was very proud of her "war effort" contribution.

But the marriage of Florence and Leland was a troubled one, ending in divorce.

Another big change came about in Florence's life after her sister Emily Pitman passed away in 1945. She and daughter Alice made a move back to Dietrich, Idaho, to live with the George Howard Pitman family, as his wife Emily's death left a family of five children without a mother. Florence assumed the responsibility of helping to care for her sister's five children. Florence married second her sister's widower, George Howard Pitman (aka Howard), 4 April 1946 in Salt Lake City, Utah. The melding of two families is not usually easy and this one was no exception. But Florence and Howard were married in 1946, making this arrangement permanent. She worked diligently in gardening, canning, cooking, and cleaning. There was always plenty of everything to be done.

In 1950 Howard and Florence sold their first farm in Dietrich and bought about 600 acres of unimproved range land, also in Dietrich, where he built a new house and farm buildings. With the help of his boys and a nephew (George Ward), he put about 100 acres of that land under irrigation which he used to grow mainly hay and grain for his livestock.

In 1960, after her daughter Alice and all her Pitman stepchildren were married or gone, she and Howard sold the family home and farm and moved to Shoshone, Lincoln, Idaho, where he continued to build houses and work as a contractor on other building projects

From 1970 to 1974 they lived in Puyallup, Washington, working on a church building project. Howard would help build and Florence would stain and varnish the woodwork. When they moved back to Idaho in about 1974, the town of Jerome became their next home.

As the years passed Florence was a helpmate and devoted companion to her husband Howard. Florence enjoyed mostly good health until serious intestinal surgery in 1972. She recovered but did have stomach problems periodically after that time. It was also observed that her once sharp memory was slipping. After Howard's death in 1985, her condition deteriorated rapidly. Florence moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado, in 1986 and lived with her daughter and son-in-law, Alice and Chester Hunt. As her health worsened her necessary needs required constant nursing care. She was moved to an Alzheimer's care center in Bountiful, Utah, in July of 1989. While there she contracted pneumonia and passed away on 8 March 1990. She is buried next to her husband and sister in the Shoshone, Idaho, Cemetery. She is remembered as an avid flower gardener with a special love for geraniums.

-Life sketch of Florence Melissa Morgan by daughter Alice Hunt, 1999.




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