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Bonnie Jean Snow

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Bonnie Jean Snow

Birth
Provo, Utah County, Utah, USA
Death
25 Dec 2023 (aged 82)
Payson, Utah County, Utah, USA
Burial
Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.6993389, Longitude: -111.8420167
Plot
Northmont 322 3 W
Memorial ID
View Source
Today we celebrate the life of our beautiful mother, grandmother, great grandmother, sister, and friend, Bonnie Jean Snow, who passed away peacefully on December 25th, 2023.

Bonnie was born on September 17, 1941, to Norma Johnson Snow and James Earl Snow in Provo, Utah, where she attended elementary school. At the age of nine, she moved with her family to Salt Lake City, where she continued her education, graduating from Highland High School in 1959. That same year, she married Verl Moyar. Their union produced three children, David, Suzanne and Melissa. A subsequent marriage led the family to relocate to Sioux Falls, South Dakota, in 1974. She returned home to Utah in 2021.

While raising us, Mom worked part time as a switchboard operator for the Salt Lake City Police Department and, later, Keith O'Brien department store. A few years after moving to Sioux Falls, this experience helped her to secure a position at the Royal C. Johnson Veterans' Memorial Hospital. She served there for nearly 30 years, advancing from the switchboard to various administrative positions. She truly enjoyed working with the veterans and found meaning in her service to them.

Genealogy was a longtime passion for Mom. After retiring from the VA, she took that interest much further, spending countless hours on Ancestry.com, working to find every possible ancestor. She also helped others build and maintain their family archives as a frequent contributor to the Find a Grave online database.

Mom loved living in South Dakota, but she made sure to visit her family in Utah at least once every year, sometimes more, often driving all 950-some miles herself. If there was a wedding, blessing, or baptism, you would likely find her there.

A lifelong member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Mom served in many callings in the wards she attended in Salt Lake and Sioux Falls. She was the president of both the Primary and Relief Society, taught both adult Sunday School and Primary, was a Family History Consultant, and most recently served as a Primary Activity Leader. She loved working with the kids.

Throughout her life, Mom enjoyed traveling, movies, cats, reading, collecting china, selling and buying Avon, playing cards, telling stories, and just having a good talk and a laugh. We will forever miss her sense of humor and ability to relate, support, and empathize.

It is of great comfort to remember how fiercely Mom loved her family. She adored being a grandmother and made sure her grandkids, both near and far, received gifts and treats for just about any occasion, and she never missed a birthday.

Mom's love was especially apparent at Christmastime. Year after year, she purchased, wrapped, packaged, and shipped gifts to virtually every family member, all the way down to great-nieces and great-nephews. She often referred to it as her Christmas frenzy, and it was nothing short of epic! It is not lost on us that she has left us at this time of year that was so meaningful to her. Our sorrow is greater for it, but we are so thankful that her suffering is over.
Today we celebrate the life of our beautiful mother, grandmother, great grandmother, sister, and friend, Bonnie Jean Snow, who passed away peacefully on December 25th, 2023.

Bonnie was born on September 17, 1941, to Norma Johnson Snow and James Earl Snow in Provo, Utah, where she attended elementary school. At the age of nine, she moved with her family to Salt Lake City, where she continued her education, graduating from Highland High School in 1959. That same year, she married Verl Moyar. Their union produced three children, David, Suzanne and Melissa. A subsequent marriage led the family to relocate to Sioux Falls, South Dakota, in 1974. She returned home to Utah in 2021.

While raising us, Mom worked part time as a switchboard operator for the Salt Lake City Police Department and, later, Keith O'Brien department store. A few years after moving to Sioux Falls, this experience helped her to secure a position at the Royal C. Johnson Veterans' Memorial Hospital. She served there for nearly 30 years, advancing from the switchboard to various administrative positions. She truly enjoyed working with the veterans and found meaning in her service to them.

Genealogy was a longtime passion for Mom. After retiring from the VA, she took that interest much further, spending countless hours on Ancestry.com, working to find every possible ancestor. She also helped others build and maintain their family archives as a frequent contributor to the Find a Grave online database.

Mom loved living in South Dakota, but she made sure to visit her family in Utah at least once every year, sometimes more, often driving all 950-some miles herself. If there was a wedding, blessing, or baptism, you would likely find her there.

A lifelong member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Mom served in many callings in the wards she attended in Salt Lake and Sioux Falls. She was the president of both the Primary and Relief Society, taught both adult Sunday School and Primary, was a Family History Consultant, and most recently served as a Primary Activity Leader. She loved working with the kids.

Throughout her life, Mom enjoyed traveling, movies, cats, reading, collecting china, selling and buying Avon, playing cards, telling stories, and just having a good talk and a laugh. We will forever miss her sense of humor and ability to relate, support, and empathize.

It is of great comfort to remember how fiercely Mom loved her family. She adored being a grandmother and made sure her grandkids, both near and far, received gifts and treats for just about any occasion, and she never missed a birthday.

Mom's love was especially apparent at Christmastime. Year after year, she purchased, wrapped, packaged, and shipped gifts to virtually every family member, all the way down to great-nieces and great-nephews. She often referred to it as her Christmas frenzy, and it was nothing short of epic! It is not lost on us that she has left us at this time of year that was so meaningful to her. Our sorrow is greater for it, but we are so thankful that her suffering is over.


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  • Created by: wxm Relative Child
  • Added: Jan 14, 2024
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/263072369/bonnie_jean-snow: accessed ), memorial page for Bonnie Jean Snow (17 Sep 1941–25 Dec 2023), Find a Grave Memorial ID 263072369, citing Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA; Maintained by wxm (contributor 47569676).