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Grant Callan Perkins

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Grant Callan Perkins

Birth
Downey, Bannock County, Idaho, USA
Death
Jan 2017 (aged 100)
Sandy, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Burial
Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.6978417, Longitude: -111.8481167
Plot
Everlasting 25-C
Memorial ID
View Source
Grant Callan Perkins was born September 9, 1916 in Dayton, Idaho. He was the youngest of nine children born to David Alma Perkins and Mary Elizabeth Callan Perkins. He enjoyed a festive celebration of his 100th birthday with all of his family and friends on September 9, 2016.

He grew up in Dayton and went to school nearby in Preston, Idaho, where he was a member of the Preston football team. The family homestead where he was born was donated to the town of Dayton and is now called Perkins Park, a gathering place for town residents.

Grant met his wife, Mary Gayou, in Tucson, Arizona and they were married on November 1, 1936. They were married for seventy-two years and Mary preceded him in death in 2008.

Grant spent his entire career working for Union Pacific Railroad, first as a fireman and later as an engineer. He retired from the railroad in 1980. Grant was a founding member of Willow Creek Country Club in the mid-1950's. That is when he first took up golf. He became an avid fan, was a member at Willow Creek for most of the rest of his life, and shot a hole-in-one on six occasions on that course.

Grant lived in his own home until the last four months of his life, still gardening, climbing up and down stairs, enjoying a panoramic view of Salt Lake City, and shoveling snow whenever he could sneak away from the watchful eye of family and neighbor, Kathy Wu.

Grant is survived by his two daughters, Nadyne Meier and Joanne (Mike) Ernstsen; four grandchildren, Scott Painter (Andrew Pitts), Ronni Meyer, Michael Ernstsen (Christy), and Rob Ernstsen; six great-grandchildren, Joshua Meyer, Justin (Amber) Meyer, Nicole (Nick) Higgs, Ryen Ernstsen, Adam Kacerovskis, and John Ernstsen; and seven great-great-grandchildren.

Private family services will be held to honor our time with him and share wonderful memories, with interment at Wasatch Lawn Mausoleum alongside his wife, Mary.

The family wishes to express their sincere gratitude to Beehive Senior Care, Brighton Hospice, and Sunrise Sandy for the care and love provided to Grant and his family during the last years of his life. We also want to thank granddaughter Ronni and great-granddaughter Nicole for the love and constant care provided to both Grant and his wife, Mary, during the final years of each of their lives.
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune on January 22, 2017.
Grant Callan Perkins was born September 9, 1916 in Dayton, Idaho. He was the youngest of nine children born to David Alma Perkins and Mary Elizabeth Callan Perkins. He enjoyed a festive celebration of his 100th birthday with all of his family and friends on September 9, 2016.

He grew up in Dayton and went to school nearby in Preston, Idaho, where he was a member of the Preston football team. The family homestead where he was born was donated to the town of Dayton and is now called Perkins Park, a gathering place for town residents.

Grant met his wife, Mary Gayou, in Tucson, Arizona and they were married on November 1, 1936. They were married for seventy-two years and Mary preceded him in death in 2008.

Grant spent his entire career working for Union Pacific Railroad, first as a fireman and later as an engineer. He retired from the railroad in 1980. Grant was a founding member of Willow Creek Country Club in the mid-1950's. That is when he first took up golf. He became an avid fan, was a member at Willow Creek for most of the rest of his life, and shot a hole-in-one on six occasions on that course.

Grant lived in his own home until the last four months of his life, still gardening, climbing up and down stairs, enjoying a panoramic view of Salt Lake City, and shoveling snow whenever he could sneak away from the watchful eye of family and neighbor, Kathy Wu.

Grant is survived by his two daughters, Nadyne Meier and Joanne (Mike) Ernstsen; four grandchildren, Scott Painter (Andrew Pitts), Ronni Meyer, Michael Ernstsen (Christy), and Rob Ernstsen; six great-grandchildren, Joshua Meyer, Justin (Amber) Meyer, Nicole (Nick) Higgs, Ryen Ernstsen, Adam Kacerovskis, and John Ernstsen; and seven great-great-grandchildren.

Private family services will be held to honor our time with him and share wonderful memories, with interment at Wasatch Lawn Mausoleum alongside his wife, Mary.

The family wishes to express their sincere gratitude to Beehive Senior Care, Brighton Hospice, and Sunrise Sandy for the care and love provided to Grant and his family during the last years of his life. We also want to thank granddaughter Ronni and great-granddaughter Nicole for the love and constant care provided to both Grant and his wife, Mary, during the final years of each of their lives.
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune on January 22, 2017.


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