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Melvin Jay “Mel” Brown

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Melvin Jay “Mel” Brown

Birth
Roy, Weber County, Utah, USA
Death
11 Sep 2014 (aged 91)
East Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Burial
Cottonwood Heights, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.6114602, Longitude: -111.8040285
Memorial ID
View Source
Our beloved husband, father, and grandfather, Melvin Jay Brown, passed away peacefully at his home on September 11, 2014 while surrounded by his family.

Grandpa Mel was born January 24, 1923 to John Martin and Mary Jane Christensen Brown in Roy, Utah, where he grew up and attended high school.

He proudly served his country as a member of the United States Army Air Corp during World War II, spending much of the war stationed in the Aleutian Islands, where he maintained and loaded bombs onto B52 bombers.

Grandpa married his sweetheart, Dolores Hardman, on September 14, 1949. He built their family home in Salt Lake City, where they raised their family ----- the very home where he passed away late Thursday morning.

Mel had many passions in life. He loved motorcycles, grandma, airplanes, grandma, boating and camping with his family, music, his harmonica, a good joke, and grandma.

While he worked hard for over forty years as a barber and as a property manager for Zions Securities Corporation, he played just as hard. He loved to tinker in his shop on his motorcycles, boat, truck, and even his airplane. It wasn’t unusual for music to be coming from his shop in the garage, where dad could often be found whistling hymns while he tinkered. Did we mention that he loved grandma?

Of his many passions, Mel's greatest joy was his family. Besides grandma, he loved spending time with his three children and seven grandchildren. He used to joke that he had one daughter, one son, and one other child. We’re not sure which of his daughters was the “other child.”

He was always a prankster, but it’s difficult to imagine a more patient, loving, or wise man. Among the many lessons he taught his children was the value of service.

He was a lifelong and devout member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Over the decades, he held numerous callings and provided help and support to too many neighbors, friends, and family members to count.

It’s no exaggeration to suggest grandpa touched the lives of hundreds and changed us for the better. What an exemplary role-model. We will do more than remember him --- we will be forever changed because we knew him.

Mel is survived by Dolores, his sweetheart and wife of sixty-five years; his children, Sherrie Robertson, Dr. Linda Brown, MD (Dr. Ron Trudel, MD), and Jay (Wendy) Brown; his grandchildren, Jayme (Mark) Richardson, Bryan Robertson, Curtis Brown, Davis Rasmussen, Hayden Brown, Tanner Trudel, and Madison Trudel; and his sisters, Joyce Heinecke and Gladys Westenskow. He is preceded in death by his parents; brothers, Paul, Virgil, and Keith; sisters, Alba, Orpha, and Maxine; and grandson, Hunter Trudel.

A viewing will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at Holbrook Mortuary, 3251 South 2300 East, followed by a graveside service in the Mountain View Memorial Estates Cemetery, 3115 East Bengal Boulevard (7800 South).
Published by Holbrook Mortuary.

Melvin Jay Brown, 91, passed away peacefully on September 11, 2014 while surrounded by his family.

A viewing will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at Holbrook Mortuary, 3251 South 2300 East, followed by a graveside service at Mountain View Memorial Estates, 3115 East Bengal Boulevard (7800 South).
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune on September 14, 2014.
Our beloved husband, father, and grandfather, Melvin Jay Brown, passed away peacefully at his home on September 11, 2014 while surrounded by his family.

Grandpa Mel was born January 24, 1923 to John Martin and Mary Jane Christensen Brown in Roy, Utah, where he grew up and attended high school.

He proudly served his country as a member of the United States Army Air Corp during World War II, spending much of the war stationed in the Aleutian Islands, where he maintained and loaded bombs onto B52 bombers.

Grandpa married his sweetheart, Dolores Hardman, on September 14, 1949. He built their family home in Salt Lake City, where they raised their family ----- the very home where he passed away late Thursday morning.

Mel had many passions in life. He loved motorcycles, grandma, airplanes, grandma, boating and camping with his family, music, his harmonica, a good joke, and grandma.

While he worked hard for over forty years as a barber and as a property manager for Zions Securities Corporation, he played just as hard. He loved to tinker in his shop on his motorcycles, boat, truck, and even his airplane. It wasn’t unusual for music to be coming from his shop in the garage, where dad could often be found whistling hymns while he tinkered. Did we mention that he loved grandma?

Of his many passions, Mel's greatest joy was his family. Besides grandma, he loved spending time with his three children and seven grandchildren. He used to joke that he had one daughter, one son, and one other child. We’re not sure which of his daughters was the “other child.”

He was always a prankster, but it’s difficult to imagine a more patient, loving, or wise man. Among the many lessons he taught his children was the value of service.

He was a lifelong and devout member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Over the decades, he held numerous callings and provided help and support to too many neighbors, friends, and family members to count.

It’s no exaggeration to suggest grandpa touched the lives of hundreds and changed us for the better. What an exemplary role-model. We will do more than remember him --- we will be forever changed because we knew him.

Mel is survived by Dolores, his sweetheart and wife of sixty-five years; his children, Sherrie Robertson, Dr. Linda Brown, MD (Dr. Ron Trudel, MD), and Jay (Wendy) Brown; his grandchildren, Jayme (Mark) Richardson, Bryan Robertson, Curtis Brown, Davis Rasmussen, Hayden Brown, Tanner Trudel, and Madison Trudel; and his sisters, Joyce Heinecke and Gladys Westenskow. He is preceded in death by his parents; brothers, Paul, Virgil, and Keith; sisters, Alba, Orpha, and Maxine; and grandson, Hunter Trudel.

A viewing will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at Holbrook Mortuary, 3251 South 2300 East, followed by a graveside service in the Mountain View Memorial Estates Cemetery, 3115 East Bengal Boulevard (7800 South).
Published by Holbrook Mortuary.

Melvin Jay Brown, 91, passed away peacefully on September 11, 2014 while surrounded by his family.

A viewing will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at Holbrook Mortuary, 3251 South 2300 East, followed by a graveside service at Mountain View Memorial Estates, 3115 East Bengal Boulevard (7800 South).
Published in the Salt Lake Tribune on September 14, 2014.


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  • Created by: Ryan D. Curtis
  • Added: Sep 13, 2014
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/135849821/melvin_jay-brown: accessed ), memorial page for Melvin Jay “Mel” Brown (24 Jan 1923–11 Sep 2014), Find a Grave Memorial ID 135849821, citing Mountain View Memorial Estates Cemetery, Cottonwood Heights, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA; Maintained by Ryan D. Curtis (contributor 46858513).