Lloyd Young's Life
Sketch
written by
Norma Le Evans, his daughter
It's a privilege to be able to give this life sketch
for my Father, but I want you to know it is not an easy
thing to concise 85 years into 15 minutes.
In going back over Father's life, my Father was always
a very active individual. He never very often let very
much grass grow under His feet and He accomplished many
things in His life.
He was born on the 24th of February 1908 in a very
small house in Goshen, Idaho, and He was born to Elizabeth
Louisa Wilcock and John Royal Young. He was the 5th
of 8 living children in their family. They had 5 boys
and 3 girls. They had lost some children at childbirth
but they had 8 living children.
Sometime in His childhood, and I'm not exactly sure
when it was, but the family built a large two story
frame home on the farm ground in Shelley and this was
where Dad grew up within this large frame house, and
I can remember very well grandma and grandpa's large
frame home and I loved to go there to visit and be able
to go upstairs in one of grandma's sweet smelling bedrooms
and take a nap and that big house has always been real
special to me.
When He was a young man His father spent a lot of His
summers out in the hills herding sheep so a good share
of the work on the farm and the work with the cattle
was left up to the older boys and this is where Dad
not only learned where to work very hard, but he also
gained a love for cattle that stayed with Him all His
life. As He was growing up He had rabbits that He took
care of that He loved. He always had a dog and all my
Father's life He always had a dog, or 2 dogs, but He
loved dogs, and I don't believe I ever saw my Dad cry
any harder than He did when we had one of our old mother
dogs pass away in the process of having puppies and
we were not home at the time and she had problems and
died while we were gone and she had been with our family
for many years and my Father really cried when He came
home and found her dead.
He also loved to ride horses and all His growing up
years He had a special pony, and the faster that pony
could run the better He liked it because one of Dad's
great joys in life was to be able to have horse races
down the main street of shelley with anybody that would
race Him, and if He could win that race He was in seventh
heaven, and so He always loved His horses.
By the time He was 15 years old His Father had sold
the sheep herd and came home to stay and had pretty
well taken over the farm, but He got to where He had
to have an operation and after the surgery there was
quite a long time before He fully recovered as He was
supposed to do, and since He was quite ill and unable
to do the farm work, and the older boy Cliff was married
and on a place of His own, and Dee, the next boy in
line was in college, so, at 15 my Dad quit school. He
was in the 10th grade, and He came home and He run the
farm.
Dad did very well in school. He loved to sing, He was
in their chorises. He enjoyed math and He did very good
and he got good grades. He enjoyed playing in sports,
but the thing that made Him the proudest, and the thing
we never ever heard the end of, was that He was the
marble champion in the 10th grade, and anytime He saw
His children or His grandchildren playing marbles He
had to recite to them that He was the marble champion
in the 10th grade.
Dad was extremely proud of the way the crops turned
out that summer, He worked very hard to make a good
crop and He was very anxious to prove to His Father
and His family that He could do a good job and He could
raise a good crop, then just before the crops were to
be harvested Dee came home from college and as often
happens, when the older brother
comes home the little brother is shoved back into His
own spot, so things went from bad to worse that summer,
and one day Dad and Dee had a confrontation out in the
field, and when it was over Dad picked himself up out
of the dirt, He walked over and got on His pony and
rode off the farm. He rode down and went across the
Snake river on His pony and went over to a neighbors
place where He had worked off and on before, and He
asked this neighbor if He could work for Him. He told
the neighbor what had happened and told Him He'd like
to work for Him for His board and keep, and so He went
to work for this neighbor. At one time His Father called
the neighbor and asked him to please send His son home
and the man said I'll send Him home if He wants to go,
but if He doesn't want to go He is welcome here, and
Dad spent the rest of that summer working for that man.
After the crops were harvested He got a call from His
Mother. She told Him His Sister Maude, who lived in
Montana, had been home visiting with them and she was
leaving that night to return to Montana and they wondered
if Dad would be interested in going to Montana with
them that night and working for them as they needed
a helping hand on their ranch. So He swam His little
pony back across the Snake River and tied it up at home,
and He spent the next 2 years in Montana. He told a
lot of stories about the milk river country in Montana.
We knew how cold it was, we knew about the time He tied
a skonk to the Church door so the people couldn't get
out of the church while He sat on His pony and laughed
as they yelled at Him to come and get the skonk. We
heard about all the things that took place during His
stay in Montana.
One day He got another call from His Mother. His Father
was once again too sick to work, and they had no one
to run the farm so asked Him if He would come home and
take care of the farm again for them. So He left a young
lady there that He was engaged to and caught the train
and finally returned home. He took over the farm and
that summer He run the farm for His Father.
One night shortly after He got home he went to Idaho
Falls to a dance, and He was dancing with a young lady
that He had known in school and asked Her to go home
with Him. She told Him that she had a friend with her
and if He took Her the friend would Have to go also
because they were going to stay together that night,
which Dad agreed to do. The three of them were sitting
in Dad's Car at the girls house when a black cat ran
in front of the car. The friend said "No black
cat is going to run in front of me," and she piled
out of the car and took out after it. Dad piled out
of the other side of the car and took out after her
and they took off across Idaho Falls chasing this black
cat. Somewhere down the road a ways the cat went under
somebodys porch so the two of them slowly retraced their
steps back to the car. By the time they got back to
the car the other girl had given up and gone into the
house, so Dad just put the friend back into the car
and took her to her place. That girl was Verna Cook,
and that night after she got home she wrote in her diary,
and we still have that to this day," I met the
man tonight that I am going to marry," even though
at that time she was engaged to a man in Salt Lake and
He was still engaged to the girl in Montana.
On November 9, 1927 they were married in the Logan
Temple. When they came home they made their home for
a little while in Idaho Falls and then moved onto a
little farm in Basalt working for another man and eventually
He rented some ground there. They lived in the Basalt,
shelley area for about 8 years and at the end of that
time they moved onto what was called the Sugar Beet
Project in Osgood, west of Idaho Falls, and by then
they had 3 children. Shirley Marie was born a year after
they were married on September 12, 1928. I, NormaLe,
was born 2 years after that on April 19, 1930, and Florence
Beth was born 4 years after that on February 21, 1934,
so when they moved into the home in Osgood they had
3 little girls they took with them.
When I was born Dad wanted a boy, I was a second child
and it was His turn now to get a boy. Well He didn't
get a boy, but all my life I worked along side of my
Father and I was more or less His outside right hand
man all the time I was growing up, and I loved it. I
could leave the dishes and the housework, and all the
stuff in the house, and I could go out with my Dad,
and we fed sheep, and we bedded down new little lambs,
and we put straw in the corrals, and we milked the cows,
and I helped Him irrigate, and I helped Him harrow,
and I helped Him in the Hay, and I helped Him every
place, and Dad and I had many beautiful talks together,
and this is where I think I basically put together my
standards and my feelings about life. I got them from
my Father during those long evenings and those long
days working with Him. The thing that was interesting,
and I never realized it until I got older, was that
I don't think He was as anxious for the help as He was
for the company. My Dad was not a person who liked to
be alone very much and He really enjoyed the company.
When we moved to Osgood He finally got His Sons. Kenneth
Lloyd was born on May 16, 1936 and Richard Jay was born
on November 11, 1938. At this time they had their 5
children. They lived in Osgood until 1940, and I have
many special memories of Dad taking us to school on
His horse on really bad winter days when they couldn't
get buses through, and buses at that time were covered
wagons on sleighs with a big pot bellied stove in the
corner, and when that couldn't even get through the
bad drifts and snow my Dad would put us on the back
of His horse and He would trundle us up to school on
the back of that horse. We lived about a mile from the
school and so we had a good time in Osgood. My folks
did a lot of singing together there, and my Dad started
His work in the Scout programs there, and my mother
was in dramas, and we had a lot of good times there,
and I can remember one thing that would shock the Mormons
today and that was that we all used to get together
after Church and have ball games all Sunday afternoons,
and I have quite often thought about that and the Church
has come a long ways since the whole ward used to go
back to the Church after dinner on Sundays and have
ball games all Sunday afternoons. They were fun and
the whole family would go and they would end their games
in time for the men to go home and do their chores and
come back to 7:30 Sacrament Meeting. Our Church has
moved along quite a ways since that time.
In 1940 Dad bought a home down in the bottom part of
Thomas. The thing I remember about this move was that
Dad told us we would have a chance to see some Indians,
and sure enough we did, we saw lots of Indians, but
this proved to be our growing up home and Dad and Mother
lived in this home for 24 years. It was a wonderful
place. There were long shaded pastures where we could
take long walks and be alone whenever we wanted to.
There was a big canal that divided into 3 large ditches
that went down through that place and us and all the
neighbor kids swam all summer long in those ditches.
Dad bought 120 acres on that place and a few years later
he added another 120 acres to it and He more or less
made that farm blossom as a rose. He worked very hard,
my mother worked very hard, we all worked very hard.
We hoed beets, we pulled weeds out of potatoes, we shocked
grain, we picked potatoes, we did everything farm kids
did at that time and we grew and I'll tell you when
we had a minute to relax we didn't have to worry about
what we could do. We were never bored. We loved to read,
we loved to swim and by then there were 6 of us kids,
they had one more little girl born August 23, 1946 by
the name of Geraldine. We were always busy and there
was always things to do.
They remodeled the house there on the place after they
had been there few years. I remember when they got their
first refrigerator. I remember them getting the telephone
in and all of these things helped us to have a very
happy childhood on that ranch, and as we grew up Dad
sent both of His sons on Missions. It had always been
Dad's desire to go on a mission and when he came home
from Montana He asked His Father if He would support
Him on a mission, and His Father said, No, that He could
not spare Him on the farm, or something like that, so
at that time He never had a chance to fill a mission.
After He and Mother had moved into town and His responsibilities
were less He was once again asked by the Bishop if He
and Mother would be able to go on a mission, but at
that time my Mother was quite ill having just recently
suffered a heart attack so once again He was not able
to go, so it was a thrill to Him when He was able to
send His two boys on missions and to help them fill
a lifelong dream that He had for himself.
Dad was always active in the Church. He filled a lot
of positions. He was High Priests leader, He taught
in the Sunday School and was always active. All my life
I never remember my Father not being active in the Church
and He always went with us, but the thing that Father
was remembered the most for is His work in the Boy Scout
Programs. He worked in the Scouts for 21 years and He
took many young men on scouting trips, including my
husband, and later on in His life He was awarded the
Silver Beaver which was always a great honor to Him
and He was always thrilled to have it.
Dad and Mother did a lot of singing together. She would
play the guitar and He would stand behind her and sing
and I can remember them doing this many times and the
song that Florence and Richard sang at the beginning
of the funeral, That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine, was
always one of their favorite songs that they sang together.
We all worked hard as we grew to adulthood and each
of us married and had our own families the farm place
became too large for them and finally Dad decided it
was time for Him to retire from the farm and He finally
sold the farm and He and Mother bought a little home
in town on Monroe street and Dad worked for the Parks
department and He worked there for several years. During
this time Mother had Her heart attack and she got over
that, but she was never completely well after that.
Dad finally retired from the city and bought this little
piece of land in Riverton and He bought an older home
and put on it and remodeled the home and after He retired
He and Mother moved down to Riverton into this little
house, and they were so happy with this little home,
then one night Dad came home from a Sunday School meeting
and Mother was lying on the floor. She had suffered
a massive heart attack and died on the 24 of January
1974. After Mother passed away Dad lost His will to
do anything and He would just sit in the middle of His
house and let the mail pile up, the papers pile up,
He didn't care about anything, life had lost its savor
for my Father.
We were really happy one mothers day when Dad came
over to dinner and told us that He had a date with a
lady that He and Mother both had known real well when
they lived in Blackfoot. He kinda drug His feet about
going to pick her up and I said "Dad you're just
getting cold feet, now you've got to get out of the
house, you've got to go and pick her up." Dad had
been prompted several times to call Lucile and He had
tried a couple of times and she had been gone to Montana
to visit her family, so finally one morning when He
knew she would be home He called Her. She had just gotten
home late the night before and He called Her at 6 A.M.
in the morning (that would have turned me off) but He
called Her and She said "No, Her husband had been
dead about 4 or 5 years but she really wasn't interested
in going out. He said He couldn't understand why He
had been so prompted to call Her if She wasn't going
to go with Him, but she was the President of the Special
Interest Group and She would go with Him if He would
go to their fireside with Her, so He agreed to do this.
This afternoon at our House He said He just didn't
think He was ready to start going out yet, He just don't
know why He called her. I said,"well Dad, look
at it this way, you just need to go over, take her to
the fireside, and take Her home, it will only take 2
hours of your time, I'll call you at nine oclock, by
then you should by home." He said "OK that's
fine." so He left. I called Him at 9 O'clock, no
answer, I called Him at 10 O'clock, no answer, I called
Him at 11 0"Clock, no answer, I called Him at 12
O'clock, by then I was panicking. If He had gone off
the bridge into the river there was not much I could
do in the dark, so I went to bed. First thing in the
morning I got up and called Him. When He answered I
said "Dad, where in the world were you last night?"
He said "Oh, we had the lovliest time, I took Lucile
out to the house and I showed her around the place and
we just had the most wonderful talk together. That is
the most wonderful lady." From then on they continued
to date and they were married on the 28 of June, 1974.
From then on my Father was a different man and He loved
living.
Lucile kept a beautiful home, she was a good cook and
she was a very dear sweet Companion. Coming into this
marriage with her was 5 children who at that time was
grown and married and had their own families, but Father
became the Father of all of Lucile's family, but Lucile
was the one that showed Him the way. Lucile was the
one that always included our family in all they did,
she was the one that brought us together when one of
our family came to town and came to visit with them
she would always fix a big dinner and invite us all
to their house so we would have a chance to visit and
eat and have a good time together.
If I ever am a step-mother she would be the most wonderful
example that I could have ever had. She was always dear
to us and she always treated us with concern, with kindness,
she always sent birthday cards, she always made sure
that Dad would come and get me on my birthday and take
me out to supper and she always made sure that Dad and
I took time to go to the Cemetary on Memorial Day, she
bought the flowers and made sure that Dad did the things
that a Father should do. We loved Her dearly. She has
been married to my Father for nearly 20 years and in
those years my Father has had many wonderful experiences.
Lucile had some brothers and sisters and Dad learned
to love them as much as He loved anyone in this world.
In fact Jim and Venice and all her brothers and sisters
were very dear to Him. Jim had a big motor home and
Dad just thoroughly enjoyed the big trips that they
used to take in their motor home. On year they went
clear to Florida and Dad saw a lot of the United States
because of the fact that they were able to go with Jim
and Venice in that motor home.
One of the problems Dad had after Mother had her heart
attack was that Mother could not do a lot of things
so they had just settled in and they became very quiet
and just simply were there at home most of the time
and didn't do much and so after He married Lucile she
revived Dad, She helped Him get new clothes, She spruced
Him up a lot and they had an awful good time. About
13 years ago they headed for the Temple in St George
for the first time and this was also the result of Lucile's
brothers. They were living in the temple cottages doing
temple work and Lucile and Dad decided to go up for
a winter and stay in the cottages and do temple work.
They went every year from there on. Every spring when
Dad went through the packing to come home He declared
that they were not going again, but when fall came He'd
say, "well lets call the temple apartments and
see if we can get in there, and lets go back."
They didn't burn any bridges when they left so there
was always an apartment available and ready for them.
The fall of 1991 Dad and Lucile went back to St. George
as they had done before, but that year at Christmas
time Dad went into the hospital with pneumonia and He
was very sick and before Christmas was over He went
in twice with pneumonia and by the time He came out
of the Hospital He was very weak and it took Him all
the rest of that winter to get His strength back, and
that following summer after they came home He didn't
do very much. He mostly just sat and didn't do very
much. He was having a hard time walking, His hips was
giving Him trouble, and He had just not got back on
His feet from His illness, but that fall all against
all of our wishes He still wanted to go back to St.
George. We thought it would be warm there so they did
go back to St. George, but this time they went into
a nice little apartment that Donald had been able to
find for them and that is where they settled down, but
Dad was not able to do temple work so Lucile was only
able to go when she could find someone to stay with
Dad for a few hours then she would go through the temple.
Dad held His own for a little while but He couldn't
get out very much. He was walking with the walker but
it was hard for Him to get around and from this time
on He had bouts in and out of the hospital with high
blood sugar and sugar diabetes and several things. When
Spring came and it was time to come home He decided
He would rather stay there because of the health facilities
that was there and the people that was already helping
to take care of Him, so they sold the ranch in Riverton
but as time went on Dad's health continued to get worse.
He finally went through Gall Bladder surgery which we
hoped would bring Him out of some of the pain He was
experiencing and for 3 or 4 days after the surgery He
did very well. He was able to walk around with His walker
a little and did real good, but shortly after that He
suffered a severe stroke and it paralyzed both His right
leg and right arm so they took Him into the care center
in St. George and started giving Him therapy which eventually
became very painful for Him and so little by little
they cut down on the therapy until He was mostly just
resting and being quiet. Then 2 weeks ago He suffered
another severe stroke which made it hard for Him to
swallow and to talk and shortly after that He passed
away on November 24, 1994.
During the time they were going to the Temple, Dad
and Lucile did 5000 Endowments together. They had many
very spiritual experiences there in the Temple, and
Dad loved going to the temple. His great desire was
to be able to get well enough to go back and continue
to do temple work, but He was never able to do that.
When He passed away He was called Father by 11 children,
52 grandchildren, and 30 great grandchildren. Most of
these little great grandchildren had never known any
other grandmother but Lucile, or grandpa but my Father,
and He loved these little children, He loved them all,
He loved Lucile's little children as much as He loved
our little children. He has left a great legacy in the
posterity that He has left behind and I'm sure that
in the eternities these little children will still be
His little grandchildren, even though they are not tied
to Him by a sealing power they will still run up to
Him and call Him Grandpa, and our children will do this
with Lucile. Their family will always be a part of our
family through the eternities. I want to pay a moment
of tribute to Lucile at this time. No one anywhere in
this world could take any better care of a man than
she took of our Father and we love Her very much for
this.