Ervin Bob
Marjorie
Barton David
Charles Dennis
Ervin Lynn was born in Hatch, Utah on March 11, 1900 to Ira Wilder Lynn and Polly Amanda Allred. His grandfather was Rosmus Hansen Lynn, the first Bishop of Hatch, Utah. The family immigrated from Hatch, Utah to the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming in 1905 with many of their Lynn and Allred relatives. The trip was made by train and by wagon.
From 1923 through 1925 he served diligently as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints under John M. Knight in the Western States Mission. He started the first Sunday School in Albuquerque. While in New Mexico, he met the girl who would be his future bride, Clea Harriet Davis. They were married on August 20, 1926 in the Salt Lake Temple.
He retired from the Great Western Sugar Factory in 1966. Grandpa Lynn was the Bishop of the Lovell West Ward of the LDS Church for eight and a half years and a High Councilman to the Burlington, Cowley, and Lovell LDS wards. He has served faithfully in whatever Church assignments were given. He had been a member of the Lovell City Council.
Grandpa enjoyed his Sunday Church meetings, fishing with friends, tending a garden which he anxiously shared with friends and neighbors, visiting the afflicted, gospel study and discussion, humming Church hymns, and reminiscing with his eternal sweetheart and family. Ervin Lynn's good nature and friendly attitude endeared him to all who know him.
Lovell pioneer, Ervin Lynn, died suddenly early Wednesday morning, June 30, 1993 at the New Horizons Care Center in Lovell, Wyoming. He was convalescing from surgery for cancer.
He is survived by his wife, Clea; sons, Bob Lynn of Denver, and Barton Lynn and Dennis Lynn of Orem; and daughter, Marjorie Glenn of Provo. His posterity includes sixteen grandchildren and eighteen great-grandchildren.
Funeral Services were held Saturday, July 3, 1993 at 2:00 p.m. in the Lovell LDS Stake Center with Bishop Joel Smith of the Lovell Second Ward officiating. Burial was in the Lovell Cemetery. Haskell Funeral Home of Lovell was in charge of arrangements.
Ervin Bob
Marjorie
Barton David
Charles Dennis
Ervin Lynn was born in Hatch, Utah on March 11, 1900 to Ira Wilder Lynn and Polly Amanda Allred. His grandfather was Rosmus Hansen Lynn, the first Bishop of Hatch, Utah. The family immigrated from Hatch, Utah to the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming in 1905 with many of their Lynn and Allred relatives. The trip was made by train and by wagon.
From 1923 through 1925 he served diligently as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints under John M. Knight in the Western States Mission. He started the first Sunday School in Albuquerque. While in New Mexico, he met the girl who would be his future bride, Clea Harriet Davis. They were married on August 20, 1926 in the Salt Lake Temple.
He retired from the Great Western Sugar Factory in 1966. Grandpa Lynn was the Bishop of the Lovell West Ward of the LDS Church for eight and a half years and a High Councilman to the Burlington, Cowley, and Lovell LDS wards. He has served faithfully in whatever Church assignments were given. He had been a member of the Lovell City Council.
Grandpa enjoyed his Sunday Church meetings, fishing with friends, tending a garden which he anxiously shared with friends and neighbors, visiting the afflicted, gospel study and discussion, humming Church hymns, and reminiscing with his eternal sweetheart and family. Ervin Lynn's good nature and friendly attitude endeared him to all who know him.
Lovell pioneer, Ervin Lynn, died suddenly early Wednesday morning, June 30, 1993 at the New Horizons Care Center in Lovell, Wyoming. He was convalescing from surgery for cancer.
He is survived by his wife, Clea; sons, Bob Lynn of Denver, and Barton Lynn and Dennis Lynn of Orem; and daughter, Marjorie Glenn of Provo. His posterity includes sixteen grandchildren and eighteen great-grandchildren.
Funeral Services were held Saturday, July 3, 1993 at 2:00 p.m. in the Lovell LDS Stake Center with Bishop Joel Smith of the Lovell Second Ward officiating. Burial was in the Lovell Cemetery. Haskell Funeral Home of Lovell was in charge of arrangements.
Family Members
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Records on Ancestry
Advertisement