1935 - 2011 (75 years)
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Name |
Max Grow Pitcher |
Born |
22 Apr 1935 |
Calgary, Alberta, Canada |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
16 Feb 2011 |
Alpine, Utah, Utah |
- Max Grow Pitcher, born April 22, 1935 in Calgary, AB, Canada, to Mary Favorite Grow and Morgan Hinman Pitcher; peacefully passed away at his Alpine home with his family Wednesday, February 16, 2011 due to complications of a stroke. Max wan with an immense love of the outdoors. From his youth in Calgary and Edmonton where he was an avid skier and swimmer, to his last months when he enjoyed the outdoors from the comfort of his breezeway in Alpine, listening to Fort Creek, it was clear that the open air is where he felt most at home. From 1954-56, Max served as a missionary in the Australia Mission for the LDS Church, making many fond memories and dear life-long friends. His love for the earth was the force behind his chosen career in geology. He received a BS and MS in Geology from Brigham Young University. It was there that he met and fell in love with the beautiful Diana Nutter. They were married on February 12, 1960. Later that year, when Max returned from several months of field work in the Canadian Yukon, Diana didn't recognize him with his full beard and looking like a character out of a Jack London novel. Max continued his studies at Columbia University in New York, receiving a PhD in Paleontology in 1963. Max then began what would be 30-year career with Continental Oil Company (Conoco), taking the family first to Ponca City (OK), then Houston, Denver, and back to Houston. While at Conoco, Max quickly rose up the corporate ranks, with his intense commitment to hard work, scientific rigor, deep relationships and complete integrity. After serving as a field geologist, he took posts ranging from regional head to the highest levels of executive management. Max ended his career directing oil and gas exploration in countries like the Congo and Gabon in Africa, England, Scotland, Indonesia and the former Soviet Union. He fell in love with the remarkable culture and transformation of Russia, and eventually developed the Polar Lights gas field, the first Western venture in Russia in over 75 years. Max and Diana often traveled together, cementing life-long friendships around the world. In 1993, he and Diana retired to Alpine, Utah. They loved gatherings of family and friends, so Max made a lovely park at their home for summer barbecues, wedding receptions, fathers and sons outings, and any other excuse they could think of for getting people together. In '96 and '97, Max and Diana traveled by covered wagon from Nauvoo to the Salt Lake Valley, as part of the re-enactment of the pioneer trek of 150 years earlier. This was a highlight of Max's life; he was instrumental in organizing the trek and in creating its authentic camps. As they traveled across the plains, he would explain the geology, and Diana would paint the beautiful scenes. Many a weary fellow traveler would find refreshment in the bottomless donut barrel on the side of his wagon. The following year he organized a continuation of this trek from Salt Lake City to Cardston, Canada, to commemorate its settlement by his ancestors. It is surely a great reunion he is having with them now. Max cherished his beloved Bar DM ranch in Grand Lake, Colorado. For over 40 years, he and his family have gathered there for Christmas and summer "vacations" (bring your work gloves). Max was happiest there on a tractor or snowmobile before dawn. Perhaps his greatest satisfaction came when the third generation, his grandchildren, came to know and enjoy "the Place" as much as he and his children had over the years. Max was a treasured patriarch of our family. Dinner was often preceded by a little "preachin'" in which he would offer timely counsel or advice. He was a gospel scholar, and loved his study groups over the years. He served in many callings in the church; his favorite was home teacher. His parents and one brother, Kay Pitcher, preceded him in death. Another brother, Grant Pitcher, survives him. He is also survived by his wife Diana and his children Stephen (Mindy), Alpine; Shauna (Roger) Andersen, Alpine; Tom (Karine), Park City; Andi (Mark) Davis, Orem; Marcia (Kenton) Wride, Denver; 21 grandchildren; two great-grand-children; all of whom will forever benefit from the indelible mark he left on this world. Funeral services for Max will be held Tuesday, February 22, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. in the Alpine North LDS Stake Center Chapel located at 1125 East Alpine Boulevard, Alpine, Utah. Family and friends may call on Monday evening from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at the Warenski Funeral Home, 1776 North 900 East, American Fork, Utah and at an additional viewing at the church on Tuesday morning from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. prior to services. Interment will be at the East Lawn Memorial Hills Cemetery in Provo, Utah.
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Buried |
East Lawn Cemetery, Provo, Utah, Utah |
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Memorial for Max Grow Pitcher Find a Grave |
Person ID |
I7432 |
Grow |
Last Modified |
28 Feb 2012 |
Father |
Morgan Hinman Pitcher, b. 15 Dec 1901, Cardston, Alberta, Canada , d. 9 Nov 1981, Provo, Utah, Utah (Age 79 years) |
Mother |
Mary Favorite Grow, b. 12 Apr 1906, Ogden, Weber, Utah , d. 31 Jul 1991, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (Age 85 years) |
Married |
23 Jun 1927 |
Cardston, Alberta, Canada |
Family ID |
F2384 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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