Born April 12, 1924 to Ernest Eugene and Neva Beata Ralphs Jensen in Castle Dale, Utah, Helen filled her early years with work and play, learning and devotion, drawing inspiration from the courageous lives surrounding her in that stark and singular landscape.
Pioneer traditions and practices still held sway, and she came to embody the virtues of hard work and thrift, tolerance and community, family, service and faith, and love, an abundance of love drawn from that almost frontier environment.
From Castle Dale, she gladly was sent to the Southern States Mission to preach and serve the people of the Southeastern United States. What she learned there served to build her commitment to her God and her willingness to serve, qualities that endured throughout her life to the last day. She subseqently served in virtually all organizations in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, with particular affinity for the young people of the church.
Following her mission, she was married and sealed to her lifelong companion, C. Herschel Peacock on March 24, 1950 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple.
Helen and Herschel's life together revolved around family, faith, tradition and fun. They served for 10 years as stake missionaries to the Laotian and Cambodian refugee community and in a reactivation mission, both in Denver, Colorado.
Helen was a devoted member and leader in the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers. She loved to collect vintage clothing and costumes from bygone eras. Barbershop music was a lifelong passion, both as a follower and as a participant. Helen was social almost to a fault, befriending all and sundry and quick to organize dances, dinners and parties. From her years in a hardscrabble environment during depression years and beyond, she learned thrift and practiced frugality with all things in her life, even in times of relative prosperity. She was utterly and unstintingly devoted to her husband, children and grandchildren.
Funeral Services held Monday, December 20, 2010 at Springville LDS 9th Ward Chapel (55 N. Main St.).
Born April 12, 1924 to Ernest Eugene and Neva Beata Ralphs Jensen in Castle Dale, Utah, Helen filled her early years with work and play, learning and devotion, drawing inspiration from the courageous lives surrounding her in that stark and singular landscape.
Pioneer traditions and practices still held sway, and she came to embody the virtues of hard work and thrift, tolerance and community, family, service and faith, and love, an abundance of love drawn from that almost frontier environment.
From Castle Dale, she gladly was sent to the Southern States Mission to preach and serve the people of the Southeastern United States. What she learned there served to build her commitment to her God and her willingness to serve, qualities that endured throughout her life to the last day. She subseqently served in virtually all organizations in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, with particular affinity for the young people of the church.
Following her mission, she was married and sealed to her lifelong companion, C. Herschel Peacock on March 24, 1950 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple.
Helen and Herschel's life together revolved around family, faith, tradition and fun. They served for 10 years as stake missionaries to the Laotian and Cambodian refugee community and in a reactivation mission, both in Denver, Colorado.
Helen was a devoted member and leader in the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers. She loved to collect vintage clothing and costumes from bygone eras. Barbershop music was a lifelong passion, both as a follower and as a participant. Helen was social almost to a fault, befriending all and sundry and quick to organize dances, dinners and parties. From her years in a hardscrabble environment during depression years and beyond, she learned thrift and practiced frugality with all things in her life, even in times of relative prosperity. She was utterly and unstintingly devoted to her husband, children and grandchildren.
Funeral Services held Monday, December 20, 2010 at Springville LDS 9th Ward Chapel (55 N. Main St.).
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