Collection for person entities.
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Molly Lucy (Dean) Stucker
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She was born to Preston H. Dean and Mildred M. (Monheim) Dean in Grand Junction, Colorado. Her father was a prominent photographer in town. Her mother was a homemaker. She attended local schools and graduated from Grand Junction High School, where she was a member of the Girls' Club, band, Ski Club, Tri-S, and a Girl Reserves officer. She married Paul E. Stucker, a chemist who worked for mining companies, on October 28, 1945. They lived in Grand Junction, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Southwest Africa. In Namibia, he managed the largest uranium mine in the world. They had three children.
*Photograph from the 1943 Grand Junction High School yearbook.
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Molly Murfee
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Contributor to "2020: The Hammer and The Dance: A Gunnison Valley Journal," (source:2020: The Hammer and The Dance : A Gunnison Valley Journal). Local writer, teacher, and seer.
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Mona Jenkinson Frost
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Mona Jenkinson Frost is well remembered in the community for her strong commitment to furthering culture during the Quiet Years in Aspen. As a long serving teacher, church member, Pitkin County Library board member, Historic Preservation Committee board member, senior citizen advocate and beloved music teacher, Mona did all she could to promote education and culture in Aspen.
Mona was born in Aspen on Christmas Day 1905 to Frank and Eva (Shiman) Jenkinson who were originally from the Isle of Mann. Frank came to Aspen with his brother during the mining era, returned to Isle of Mann to marry and then came back to Aspen. Mona’s mother was an organ and piano player and her father had a fine tenor voice. They filled the home with music and Mona learned from a young age to play both the organ and the piano. There were three other children in the family, Mona’s older sister Pauline, and the younger twins, Earl and Lucille.
Mona was a serious student who worked hard to earn good grades. After graduating from Aspen High School in 1923, she attended Western State College in Gunnison, CO and earned her teaching degree. She returned to Aspen to teach for one year before move to the eastern plains near Sterling to take a teaching position. Mona had met Paul Frost, an Aspenite who worked for the State Highway Dept., while at home. After some time of visiting while Mona was near Sterling, the couple married in 1935.
They had one child, Pauline, and Mona spent years at home to raise her. The desire to teach brought her back to the class room and Mona taught for many more years. Her students remember her as loving and demanding at the same time. Mona taught 4th and 6th grades as well as serving as the music teacher for the school. She also helped the school publish a humorous newspaper. Mona passed away on March 5, 2002 at the age of 96.--Aspen Hall of Fame website
Photo: Aspen Historical Society
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Monard H. "Unc" Lawrence
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He was the owner of the Glade Park Store in the early Twentieth century and said by oral history interviewee Glenn McFall to be a benefactor to the land around Glade Park, helping to “carry some men through the Depression.” He married Loda Thirsk, who helped him run the store.
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