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Marjorie Pay Hinckley, wife of President Gordon B.
Hinckley, passed away at home at 5:05 p.m.
on 6 April 2004. President
Hinckley and other family members were with her at the time. She died of causes incident to age.
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Identified by her husband as the lodestar of their family,
Marjorie Hinckley gently guided her children with faith, intelligence and humor. Her
happiest role in life was that of a supportive wife and mother.
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Born Marjorie Pay on 23 November 1911, in Nephi,
Utah, she was the first child of Phillip LeRoy and Georgetta Paxman Pay. She
had four sisters and two brothers, but one brother died in infancy. The family moved to Salt
Lake City in 1914 where Marjorie began her
education. She graduated from East
High School in 1929 and went to
work at the Owens Illinois Glass Company performing secretarial duties.
As a young girl she was taught by her mother that the best
husband for her would be one who loves the Lord. Marjorie met a young man with that
qualification living right across the street from her family home. She and Gordon B. Hinckley were married on 29 April 1937 in the Salt
Lake Temple
by Elder Stephen L. Richards, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. (President Hinckley was called to serve as
an Assistant to the Twelve Apostles in April 1958, to the Quorum of the
Twelve in September of 1961 and became the President of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints on 13 March 1995).
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Photos
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Funeral Arrangements for Marjorie Pay Hinckley
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Excerpt from President Hinckley's concluding remarks at
General Conference, 4 April 2004
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News coverage on the passing of Marjorie Pay Hinckley
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The young couple began their married life in Salt
Lake City in a small farmhouse in Millcreek.
President Hinckley was employed at Church headquarters in downtown Salt
Lake, and Marjorie continued her
employment at the glass company until the birth of their first child. As the family increased in size, the Hinckleys built a home on property down the lane from
their first house, still in the rural East Millcreek
area. By 1954 they were parents of
five children, Kathleen, Richard, Virginia,
Clark and Jane.
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Marjorie was an energetic mother and made good use of humor to settle many of life's difficulties. She was often heard to say, "The only
way to get through life is to laugh your way through it." Marjorie loved being a mother and delighted
in every moment with her children. She
especially enjoyed the sound of the screen door slamming as the children ran
in and out of the house. She was sad
every fall when the children went back to school because she missed them so
much during the day.
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An avid reader, Marjorie encouraged her children to gain
knowledge by studying and reading. As
the family traveled in the car on vacations, she
would read to them from the classics.
Although her formal education was interrupted by economic stress
during the depression, she encouraged her children to seek degrees in higher
education. She was a student of the
scriptures and often used the words of ancient and latter-day prophets to
teach and inspire others.
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Living in Utah
most of her life, except for a brief time in Denver
while her husband was working for the Denver
and Rio Grande Railroad, Marjorie had the opportunity to travel extensively
throughout the world. She developed a
special appreciation for the people in the Far East. Hong Kong became a favorite city, and she was delighted when her children
and their spouses were able to gather in Hong Kong
with her and President Hinckley to celebrate their fiftieth wedding
anniversary.
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A dedicated student of the lives of her ancestors,
Marjorie delighted in the opportunity to share stories of their faith and
devotion taken from her research and that of others. Searching for family names in genealogical
facilities was a major part of her life.
Pedigree charts, pictures and written histories were often visible in
her home, and she used this acquired knowledge to encourage others in
numerous public addresses.
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She developed a close relationship with her 25 grandchildren
and 41 great-grandchildren, who always knew she was just a telephone call
away. They willingly consulted with
her about the joys and challenges in their lives.
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Marjorie Hinckley was recognized numerous times, having
named for her the Marjorie Pay Hinckley Chair in Social Work and Social
Science from Brigham Young University in April of 2003, and receiving an
honorary doctorate of humane letters from Utah Valley State College in April
of 2001 and the heritage award during the centennial celebration of the
Daughters of Utah Pioneers that same year.
From BYU she received an honorary doctoral degree in Christian Service
in April of 2000. Other recognition
included the distinguished Service to Humanity Award in 1998, Freedom
Festival Award in 1997 and the Exemplary Womanhood Award in 1996.
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Marjorie Pay Hinckley lived almost all of her life in Salt
Lake City, but her influence has spread all around
the world. She visited nearly every
continent. She conversed comfortably
with such dignitaries as the queen of Thailand
and prime minister of Britain,
but felt equally at ease with ordinary people wherever she went.
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