Remembering
Marjorie Pay Hinckley, Part Two
A
Photograhic Essay
By
Maurine and Scot Proctor
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.
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Sister
Hinckley was nearly always by President Hinckley’s side
on his many trips throughout the world. Kirtland, Ohio.
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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, but it was at the bottom of the depression when salaries
were meager and jobs unsteady.
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Sister
Hinckley, always alert and attentive to the Saints she met.
Kirtland, Ohio.
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"In
those days," Marjorie explained later, "you didn't get
married unless you had a job and could provide. But there was
no question about whether or not we would get married.
It was just a matter of when."
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Sister Hinckley loved here grandchildren
(seen here with granddaughter Sarah). Kirtland, Ohio.
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According
to President Hinckley’s biography, Go Forward with Faith, “Gordon
and Marjorie were attracted to each other's sense of humor, love
for the gospel, innate optimism, and love of life.
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Sister
Hinckley poses with daughter Jane Hinckley Dudley and granddaughter
Sarah. Kirtland, Ohio.
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“Through
the years Marjorie would often say that the only way to get through
life was to laugh your way through it, and even as a young woman
she had a buoyant, cheerful disposition that was like an elixir
to Gordon. It resonated with his native tendency to see the positive
and to believe there was a solution to anything.
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Sister
Hinckley with President Hinckley in Kirtland, Ohio.
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She
had a light heart without being light-minded. In turn, Gordon's
dry wit delighted Marjorie, who loved the fact that although her
beau was practical, self-disciplined, and serious about the things
that mattered to him, he didn't take himself very seriously and
was often the first to poke fun at his own quirks. They enjoyed
bantering back and forth.”
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Sister
Hinckley, always young at heart. Kirtland, Ohio.
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Marjorie
published a book called Small and Simple Things this past
year which is a treasury of her wit and wisdom. Here she wrote,
“Elder Neal a. Maxwell once said, ‘We are here in mortality, and
the only way to go is through; there isn’t any around!’ I would
add, the only way to get through life to laugh your way through
it. You either have to laugh or cry. I prefer to laugh. Crying
gives me a headache.”
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Sister
Hinckley was always interested in everything around her.
Kirtland, Ohio.
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Click here to continue with Part
Three of “Remembering Marjorie Pay Hinckley”