Thursday, July 30, 1970
A Birthday FOUR Scotty
1967 - Annual Recap
1697 ...Major News Stories include Worlds First Heart Transplant, the first ATM, the first Super Bowl (Green Bay Packers and the Kansas City Chiefs). There were strikes by US teaching staff for pay increases. The Vietnam War continued, as did peace rallies and protesters against the war. Muhammad Ali was stripped of his boxing world championship for refusing to be inducted into the US Army. Twiggy became a fashion sensation and mini skirts continued to get shorter and the Beatles continued to reign supreme. The movie industry produced "The Graduate" "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Cool Hand Luke" . TV shows included "The Fugitive" and "The Monkees" and color television sets become popular as the price came down and more programs were made in color.
On the Westra homefront ... the young couple (Marge, turned 25 & Lamar who turned 30) said goodbye to their little home on Rainer Street where they had lived when both Scott and Chris were born. They moved to their new St. Street home, which was only a few blocks away and was even in the same ward.
Chris was a New Year's Baby, learned to crawl, walk, talk and he celebrated his first birthday. Little Scott started pre-school and turned four at the end of the year. In the "history" in Dropbox, it is noted that Grandma Lucille came up to visit in August, but it looks like there must have been a family trip to Utah earlier in the year as there is a picture with Margie's folks and grandparents (and Grandma Lucille) too.
Margie was pregnant with Wendy the last half of this year ... and back in Utah, a little boy named Rick Jensen was born. Those two wouldn't meet until years later, but it was 1967 where their story began.
You can also check out the extended Westra news in Grandma Lucille's Christmas Newsletter.
Thursday, July 16, 1970
When Scott Was Small ...
- Turned over alone at 23 days old
- Started smiling at 5-6 weeks
- Turned from back to stomach at 4 months
- Crawled at 5½ months
- First tooth at 6½ months (8 teeth by 13 months)
- Walked at 8 months
- First words (11+ months) mama, dada, ball, woof-woof, nose
- Taken off the bottle at 13 months
- Favorite toys were balls, pop-beads, chatter-phone, push-chime
- At 21 months, could count to ten (usually leaving out 1, 5 and 8)
- At about 1 year of age you became very interested in animals. You loved to see them and point them out in books. One of your first words was woof-woof. At 13 months you began to like stuffed animals; your teddy bear, monkey and clown. At 17 months you started taking your monkey to bed with you every night.
- When you were 16 months old, your mom and dad both got bicycles with a cute little seat on the back for you. You loved to go bike riding every day and would ask "Go bye-bye on bike?" Daddy would ride his bike to work and we would ride to meet him every day.
- You were an excellent talker, pronounced words well and had a large vocabulary. At 26 months you could recite the Pledge of Allegiance" all by yourself.
- By age 3, you knew many songs, nursery rhymes and finger plays. You started Junior Sunday School and enjoyed it very much. Mommy was your teacher.
- Shortly before you turned four, we moved into our new home on Saint Street. You started nursery school and had your first "friend" birthday party. 13 children came. You were four when you went to the dentist for the first time. You were very good at the checkup, but had two cavities. You were so good and tried so hard to be brave. But when we went back for the second one you bawled and wouldn't let the dentist do one thing!
- Your first plane ride was December 1968 when we flew to SLC for Uncle Merrill's wedding. You had your 5th birthday while we were there. You thought the plane ride was great. After boarding the plane, you asked "When are we going to Blast Off?" We went on five round trips by airplane during that next year, and lived in Los Angeles, California for two months. Started Kindergarten at Spalding Elementary. You rode the school bus, which stopped right next door.
- April 1970 (age 6) ... lost first two teeth. Bottom center (these are preserved in the baby book!) Started 1st grade at Sacajawea School, there was team teaching in 3-class clusters (there is a big newspaper feature about it). We bought a moving picture camera and our first pictures were taken at your 6th birthday party.
Tuesday, June 30, 1970
1966 Recap
A little later in the year, Rex and Zada made a trip to Washington to be there for the birth of Christopher ... that's when Dad/Lamar caught the big fish! It looks like the Westras must have made a trip back to Utah, or Aunt Diane made a trip up to Washington, as those two families are pictured together (cute little cousins Chris and baby Brad, and Scott and Mauri). Photos of little Scott enjoying the Thanksgiving turkey. Grandma Lucille had written a Christmas Letter in 1967 mentioning that Steve had gotten engaged Christmas of 1966, and left for service January 1967 (so that picture was probably taken one of those times).
1966 looked like a fairly full year!
Friday, June 5, 1970
Chris Came ...
Since Scott's labor was only maybe around 4 hours, I expected Chris to be even quicker. So we went to the hospital and I was dilated only to 3 and they sent me home. I was in labor all night with the pains 5 minutes apart and scared I would wait too long, but didn't want to be sent home again. When I was admitted, I remember being in the delivery room and the pain was so bad, they gave me gas and put me "under" for a bit. When I regained consciousness, I recall thinking "somebody is screaming," then realizing "Oh, it is me screaming...." Chris was born on a Monday and I never missed a week of church. September 5th was Labor Day in 1966. The Labor and Delivery dept. was very overcrowded that day and there was no room to put me in after he was born, so my bed was just out in the hallway. I was sitting up and a nurse came by and said, "You shouldn't be sitting up!" She thought I hadn't had the baby yet and was in labor. Chris's was my hardest and longest birth, which surprised me because he wasn't that big.
Some memories from the baby book ...
- Dr. Robert E Chase. Nurse Beulah Liechty.
- Kadlec Methodist Hospital/Richland, Washington. Room 419C. Receipt for payment $208.20, another for $2.00.
- Hair was dark brown at birth, lighter later on, very sparse on top, one inch in back.
- Blessed October 9, 1966 in Richland 1st ward. When Chris was held up after the blessing, he spit up at the congregation. Two other babies blessed that day.
- Very spitty baby (more than any of the other kids). Had to have a burp diaper on every chair around the house to grab quick when needed.
- Red birthmark on the forehead.
- Sleeping through the night at three months. Started sucking thumb, would not take pacifier.
- Swaying and dancing to music at 15 months.
- First words: Mama, Dada, Ball, Dog-Dog, Marble, Night-night. His speech was very cute when he was a bit older (age 3) as there were several letters he couldn't pronounce (s, r).
- First flight - to SLC Dec 1968 for Merrill's wedding. Chris got sick on the flight down.
- Loved the water - summer of 1967 (8-12 months old) he spent more time in the wading pool than Scott. Learned to walk in the pool!
- Illnesses - Roseola at 6 months old (March1967), Mumps (June 1970).
- Noted Events: The war in Vietnam. The popularity of the Beatles. Fashion trends - long hair on boys, miniskirts, granny dresses, the twist (dance).
Check out the blog post "Baby Books and a Chris Questionnaire" for more memories of baby Chris!
Sunday, May 24, 1970
The Life of Joseph Ate Westra
- Joseph was 6th of 10 children. Only four survived to adulthood (in the picture in the top left, older brother John is not in the photograph).
- Joseph and Lucille were born only two days apart, both at LDS hospital. They likely "met" at the nursery there, and would re-acquaint 19 years later and be married for almost 30 years.
- Joseph and Lucille were engaged while he went on his mission to the Southern States.
- While he was a marble champion when young, golf was his passion, followed by fishing. He liked all sports though. Football in the fall, basketball in the winter. Baseball in the summer.
- Wilhelmina was born in 1904 and died in 1908
- Obe was born in 1905 and died in 1907
- Egbert was born in 1906 and died in 1907
- John was born Dec. 31, 1908 and died in 1998.
- George was born in 1909 and died in 1910
- Joseph was born in 1911 and died in 1965
- Allen was born in 1913 and died in 1914
- Alice was born Jan. 28, 1914
- Alma was born in 1915 and died in 1916
- Edward Paul was born July 23, 1923.
Joe's father was called on a mission to Holland and his mother took a job at the Forest Annex to help support her family. She kept the school clean and Joe had to help bring in the coal for the stoves. His mother was real strict and they were never allowed to go in the front rooms unless they had company. She kept a spotless home. They always had a nice garden and planted lots of vegetables. They had chickens and a cow. At a picnic at Lagoon Joe’s mother was badly burned when coffee was spilt in her lap. She was in bed for weeks, and Joe had to come home from school each day and scrub the kitchen floor. They had a nice bungalow type home at 2256 South 8th East. It had a long front porch and the family enjoyed sitting out there and visiting friends and relatives. The Westras had lots of friends from Holland, and they would always talk Dutch. Joe never learned the language, but could distinguish some of the words. His brother John went to Holland on his mission.
- Joseph LaMar, born May 28, 1937
- Sharon Lucille born September 16, 1938
- Diane born March 10, 1943
- Steven Arthur born June 22, 1946.
- Residences - Born in a home on 9th East, grew up at 2256 South 8th East, 1258 Emerson Avenue, 837 Sherman Avenue, 1261 Malvern Avenue, 246 East 21st South, 2740 Grandview Circle.
- Places of Work - Lauren W. Gibbs as a typist, Snelgrove Ice Cream as Ice Cream Dispenser and Manager, Garden Gate Ice Cream as Ice Cream Dispenser and Manager, Presiding Bishop’s Office, L.D.S. Church as Bookkeeper, Kennecott Copper, shift work during 2nd World War, Bingham-Garfield Railroad as Bookkeeper, Granite School District as Purchasing Agent, and was with Granite for 17 years until he passed away.
- Church positions - Elder, Seventy, High Priest, and Ward Clerk for 3 Bishoprics - Bishop H. D. Lowry, Bishop O. E. Aylett, and Bishop Feron Olson. He was also Sunday School Superintendent. His Wards - Forest Dale, Emerson, Wasatch, Hawthorne, Highland Park, Burton, Columbus, Grandview and Grandview II.
- LaMar married Marjorie Norman June 29, 1962 in the Salt Lake Temple. They have four children, Scott, Christopher, Wendy and Jenny.
- Sharon married Kent Amann June 27, 1957 in the Salt Lake Temple. They have three children, Randy, Ricky and Alyson.
- Diane married Jon Mauss October 17, 1962. They have two children. Mauri and Brad. They lost one baby (2 days old), Leslie Ann, their second baby.
- Steven married Diana Wathen June 28, 1967 in Frankfurt, Germany. They were divorced in July 1970. No children. He married Jan Thompson February 1, 1972. She has a boy Mike. As of August 15, 1973 this brings his grandchildren to (11).
Joe's siblings stories ...
- John married Melva Saunders in the Salt Lake Temple, and they had three children, Dorene, Jerry and Janet. John died in 1998.
- Alice married Paul Heller in October 1935, and they had two sons, Ronald and Bruce. Alica died in 1989.
- Edward Paul married Doreen Cobb in the Salt Lake Temple and they had four children, Kathy, Kenneth, Karen and Kyle. Edward died in 2011.
Daddy loved fishing. He would go fishing practically every weekend during the summer when he was in better health. Quite often he would take the family along. And as most fishermen do, he would say he would be back at 6:00 but would really mean 8:00. Lamar used to sell nightcrawlers when we lived on 21st South. Daddy would take Lamar to the golf course at night and help him catch worms.
Daddy was good at arithmetic. He would always help us with our homework. We probably never would have passed Algebra without him.
Daddy enjoyed doing things with the family. Every holiday he would take us all, and usually our friends too, to some resort for swimming and having fun. He would also take us, the whole family, on drives every Sunday; and we would always talk him into buying us an ice cream cone.
Although Daddy would take the boys fishing, he didn't neglect us girls. He was always willing to go with us to the daddy-daughter parties held in school and the ward. This meant a lot to us. He was always interested in the things we were doing.






