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PLAC London,Chelsea,Middlesex,England
Grandpa Faulkner was born in London, England in the same week as his father's death. His father, an army pensioner, died of complications from malaria. His father had contracted malaria while serving in the British Army during Indian Mutiny, India and the Boer War in South Africa.
Grandpa and his mother joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Grandpa subsequently emigrated to the United States. He was on the last passenger ship to make the journey at the onset of WWI. He was only 13 years old at the time, and was travelling alone. The ship travelled blacked out at night because of the threat of German U-boat attacks.
When he finally made it to Utah, he went to work for the family of one of the Mormon missionaries that had brought the L.D.S. religion to him. The family had a large ranch and farm in northern Utah, near Tremonton. There, the English lad became a cowboy in the wild west and learned to love the land and began his education in farming and animal husbandry.
When Grandpa was 18, he joined the United States Marine Corps. He travelled through the pacific on sea duty, one of the ports of call being Hawaii.
After his honorable discharge from the Marine Corps., he rented a room at the home of Arthur Larsen in the Avenues section of Salt Lake City, where he met Bernece Larsen, Arthur's daughter. They fell in love and where married, starting a long and wonderful life together.
After a number of jobs, including truck driving, Grandpa went to work at Geneva Steel in Provo, Utah. He bought a home and wonderful farm in the Prove River bottoms. Some of my fondest memories of him include riding on the big, red Farm-All tractor, feeding the pigs, milking the cow and picking, then eating apples, cherries and pears in the orchard.
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At the same time, Dr. James Furman Berry, a physician, another son of William Berry, established a plantation along the Tallahatchie River in Pontotoc County, near the present county seat of New Albany in what is now Union County. He was the physician for the early settlers in this area and used the income from his large practice to expand his land holdings, his slave holdings, and his farming operations; and therefore, by the time of the Civil War, he owned and operated a large plantation in addition to practicing medicine.
Eva Hardy Buck Radmall
The Daily Herald on Wednesday, March 28Our beloved mother, grandmother, sister, and friend passed away Monday, March 26, 2001 of natural causes. Eva was born November 21, 1912 to Lewis Myron Hardy and Ella Maude Child. She was the fourth of thirteen children.She married Lewis Melvin Buck February 21, 1936 in the Salt Lake Temple, they had five children and were later divorced. She married Zera Radmall.
She was very generous with her time and money and believed in working hard.
She raised five children by herself and went without many things for them.
She worked at the Utah State Training School for 26 years and was named employee of the year twice. She loved the intellectually handicapped people that she took care of.
Survivors include her children: Ella Peterson, Pleasant Grove; Robert (Julie) Buck, Downey, ID; LouAnn (Jerry) Provost, Benjamin; Margene Tadd, Heber; Michael Buck, San Francisco, CA; 21 grandchildren and 32 great-grandchildren.
She is also survived by her sisters: Mary Hislop, Myrle Young, and Jenice Harris. She was preceded in death by her brothers and a sister: Lewis Hardy, Margaret Stoker, John Hardy, Paul Hardy, Ellsworth Hardy, Roy Hardy, Ray Hardy, Joseph & Hyrum Hardy, and Donald Hardy.
We would like to thank the many devoted employees at Orem Nursing & Rehab Care Center who took care of mother.
Funeral services will be Friday, March 30, 2001 at 11 a.m. at Walker Mortuary, 187 South Main, Spanish Fork. Friends may call at the mortuary on Thursday evening from 6-8 p.m. and on Friday from 9:45-10:45 a.m. prior to the services. Burial will be in the Spanish Fork City Cemetery.
This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page A6.