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Stanley DeMar Dunn

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Stanley DeMar Dunn

Birth
Bear Lake County, Idaho, USA
Death
29 Jul 2004 (aged 91)
Bear Lake County, Idaho, USA
Burial
Montpelier, Bear Lake County, Idaho, USA GPS-Latitude: 42.3359311, Longitude: -111.2875082
Memorial ID
View Source
Idaho State Journal, 07/31/04
MONTPELIER - Stanley DeMar Dunn, 91, passed away Thursday, July 29, 2004, in the Bear Lake Manor Living Center in Montpelier, Idaho. He was born Sept. 4, 1912, in Bennington, Idaho, to Crandall and Ida Jane Wright Dunn, the seventh of nine children. Schooling was received throughout Bear Lake County, with high school graduation being from Georgetown High.

He married Rose Rebecca Painter on July 5, 1939, in the Logan, Utah LDS Temple.

Stan worked at the Anaconda Copper-Phosphate mine Conda during World War II, moving to Georgetown in 1947, where he operated a dairy-hay farm and worked at the Central Farmers Fertilizer Company Plant. He was actively involved with the Georgetown Irrigation District through the development and installation of the gravity flow delivery system. Carpentry was a talent, with farm buildings and rail fences he built on his farm retaining straight and true.

Stan is survived by his wife, Rose, of 65 years, of Montpelier; two sons, Richard (Susan), of Fruitland, Idaho, and Vance (Betty), of Mineral, Virginia; eight grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren; and one brother, Stuart (Alice) Dunn of Provo, Utah. He was preceded in death by his parents, five sisters and three brothers
Idaho State Journal, 07/31/04
MONTPELIER - Stanley DeMar Dunn, 91, passed away Thursday, July 29, 2004, in the Bear Lake Manor Living Center in Montpelier, Idaho. He was born Sept. 4, 1912, in Bennington, Idaho, to Crandall and Ida Jane Wright Dunn, the seventh of nine children. Schooling was received throughout Bear Lake County, with high school graduation being from Georgetown High.

He married Rose Rebecca Painter on July 5, 1939, in the Logan, Utah LDS Temple.

Stan worked at the Anaconda Copper-Phosphate mine Conda during World War II, moving to Georgetown in 1947, where he operated a dairy-hay farm and worked at the Central Farmers Fertilizer Company Plant. He was actively involved with the Georgetown Irrigation District through the development and installation of the gravity flow delivery system. Carpentry was a talent, with farm buildings and rail fences he built on his farm retaining straight and true.

Stan is survived by his wife, Rose, of 65 years, of Montpelier; two sons, Richard (Susan), of Fruitland, Idaho, and Vance (Betty), of Mineral, Virginia; eight grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren; and one brother, Stuart (Alice) Dunn of Provo, Utah. He was preceded in death by his parents, five sisters and three brothers


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