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Gerald Leland “Jerry” Ericksen

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Gerald Leland “Jerry” Ericksen

Birth
Mount Pleasant, Sanpete County, Utah, USA
Death
9 Jan 2011 (aged 96)
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Burial
Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.6973837, Longitude: -111.840143
Plot
Olympus Park 346-2-E
Memorial ID
View Source
Gerald Leland Ericksen, our loving and ever-cheerful father, grandfather, and great-grandfather, died peacefully at the VA Nursing Home on January 9, 2011 at ninety-six years of age.

He was born March 17, 1914 in Mount Pleasant, Utah to Erick Henry and Annie Christina Monsen Ericksen, the youngest of nine children.

His father died when Jerry was fourteen years old, just before the Great Depression hit. He and his widowed mother struggled through the depression together. Jerry never made excuses or felt his life was hard, but faced each day with optimism and smiled as he moved forward.

Jerry never met a stranger and was a born leader, serving as the president of his high school, Snow College, and in many leadership positions throughout his long and productive life. He graduated from BYU and then started graduate work at the Yale Divinity School in the fall of 1941.

His education was interrupted by the outbreak of World War II and he served as an Army Chaplain in the Pacific theater, including extensive service on the island of Saipan. He was awarded the Bronze Star for meritorious service.

After the war, he was recruited into the life insurance business by Sterling W. Sill. He was the General Manager of the Utah Office of the New York Life Insurance Company for twenty years.

Jerry married the love of his life, Erna Mary Sconberg, on July 8, 1942 in San Francisco, California while he was in training on an army base. They had met two years earlier at the Grand Canyon, where he was a bell hop and played trombone in the band, and she was a waitress. Their marriage was solemnized the following year in the Salt Lake Temple.

Jerry's professional work took them to New York, California, and then back to Utah. They had been married for sixty-six years when Erna died March 13, 2009. He always treated her like a queen, and called her his "livin' doll." Their love and consideration for each other was an inspiration to their family, and to all who knew them.

Jerry loved the Savior and served in many capacities in the LDS Church, including as a missionary in the Southern States Mission from 1935 to 1937, and as president of the Salt Lake Emigration Stake.

Upon his retirement from New York Life, he and Erna presided over the Connecticut Hartford Mission from 1979 to 1982. They loved New England and their missionaries, and treasured those relationships the rest of their lives.

At age eighty-three, Jerry was called into a bishopric for the first time in his life, and served for six years. In all of his assignments his smile, sense of humor, organized approach, and love for people made him effective in his work, and loved by those who knew him.

Jerry was preceded in death by his parents and siblings, his wife, daughter Mimi Ericksen, and son Robert Ericksen, who died three days before Jerry's passing. He is survived by three of his children: Karen (David) Fuhriman, David (Irene) Ericksen, and Eric (Kathy) Ericksen, as well as fourteen grandchildren and seventeen great-grandchildren.

A Funeral Service will be held on Saturday, January 15, 2011, at 1:30 p.m. in the Federal Heights Ward Chapel, 1300 East Fairfax Road. Friends may call on Friday, January 14, 2011 from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at Larkin Mortuary at 260 East South Temple Street, as well as at the Church prior to the services from 12:30 to 1:15 p.m.
Interment will be in the Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, 3401 South Highland Drive (1495 East).
Published in the Deseret News from January 13 to January 14, 2011.
Gerald Leland Ericksen, our loving and ever-cheerful father, grandfather, and great-grandfather, died peacefully at the VA Nursing Home on January 9, 2011 at ninety-six years of age.

He was born March 17, 1914 in Mount Pleasant, Utah to Erick Henry and Annie Christina Monsen Ericksen, the youngest of nine children.

His father died when Jerry was fourteen years old, just before the Great Depression hit. He and his widowed mother struggled through the depression together. Jerry never made excuses or felt his life was hard, but faced each day with optimism and smiled as he moved forward.

Jerry never met a stranger and was a born leader, serving as the president of his high school, Snow College, and in many leadership positions throughout his long and productive life. He graduated from BYU and then started graduate work at the Yale Divinity School in the fall of 1941.

His education was interrupted by the outbreak of World War II and he served as an Army Chaplain in the Pacific theater, including extensive service on the island of Saipan. He was awarded the Bronze Star for meritorious service.

After the war, he was recruited into the life insurance business by Sterling W. Sill. He was the General Manager of the Utah Office of the New York Life Insurance Company for twenty years.

Jerry married the love of his life, Erna Mary Sconberg, on July 8, 1942 in San Francisco, California while he was in training on an army base. They had met two years earlier at the Grand Canyon, where he was a bell hop and played trombone in the band, and she was a waitress. Their marriage was solemnized the following year in the Salt Lake Temple.

Jerry's professional work took them to New York, California, and then back to Utah. They had been married for sixty-six years when Erna died March 13, 2009. He always treated her like a queen, and called her his "livin' doll." Their love and consideration for each other was an inspiration to their family, and to all who knew them.

Jerry loved the Savior and served in many capacities in the LDS Church, including as a missionary in the Southern States Mission from 1935 to 1937, and as president of the Salt Lake Emigration Stake.

Upon his retirement from New York Life, he and Erna presided over the Connecticut Hartford Mission from 1979 to 1982. They loved New England and their missionaries, and treasured those relationships the rest of their lives.

At age eighty-three, Jerry was called into a bishopric for the first time in his life, and served for six years. In all of his assignments his smile, sense of humor, organized approach, and love for people made him effective in his work, and loved by those who knew him.

Jerry was preceded in death by his parents and siblings, his wife, daughter Mimi Ericksen, and son Robert Ericksen, who died three days before Jerry's passing. He is survived by three of his children: Karen (David) Fuhriman, David (Irene) Ericksen, and Eric (Kathy) Ericksen, as well as fourteen grandchildren and seventeen great-grandchildren.

A Funeral Service will be held on Saturday, January 15, 2011, at 1:30 p.m. in the Federal Heights Ward Chapel, 1300 East Fairfax Road. Friends may call on Friday, January 14, 2011 from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at Larkin Mortuary at 260 East South Temple Street, as well as at the Church prior to the services from 12:30 to 1:15 p.m.
Interment will be in the Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, 3401 South Highland Drive (1495 East).
Published in the Deseret News from January 13 to January 14, 2011.


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