Ruth Carol Johnson Keller passed away on April 15, 2018, at the age of 89. She was born on February 7, 1929, in Inglewood, California, to Fred Turner Ashley and Alta Mariah Parkinson Ashley. She was the second child in the family and adored her older brother, John. Her childhood was filled with memories of playing sports with her brother and father, including making and using a homemade pole vault. When she was 12 years old her brother served in Hawaii during World War II. She treasured the letters he sent to her. She learned to play the piano as a child and felt that it was a means for her to express herself when she had no voice.
A young man who served in the Navy during the Korean War fell in love with a photo of her. They became pen pals and exchanged letters for several months. He had no doubt he wanted to marry her, even before he met her in person. He drove from his home in Illinois on Route 66 to her home in California to be near her. She and Wallace Kenneth Johnson married a year later on April 3, 1954. They made their home in Torrance, California, where their family grew to include three daughters: Cynthia, Debra and Kristin.
Their family moved to Vista, California, in December 1968, where they were very active in the LDS church. In December of 1976 they took a trip to Castle Valley, Utah, to visit the Ehlers family, friends they had gone to church with in Vista. They became part of a California migration of families that were all friends with the Ehlers family to become early settlers in Castle Valley. Living in Castle Valley was much different than the California suburbs Ruth had known. There were no telephones for a few years, no television and she learned to keep their home warm by building a fire in the wood stove.
She endured years of loneliness when her husband returned to California to work. She worked at Yellow Front while raising her teenage daughter. When her daughter graduated from high school in 1985, she went to live with her husband Ken in California as he worked the last few years before retirement. In 1992, they returned to Castle Valley to finish the home they began building together in 1977.
Retirement brought great joy to the couple. They served in the Moab community, enjoyed their grandchildren and their grandchildren’s interests, traveled around the world and invited friends and neighbors to enjoy their swimming pool.
Her husband Ken fell ill in 2011 and she faithfully cared for him until his death on September 7, 2012. Her daughter Debra took great care of her mother Ruth until Debra succumbed to cancer in 2014. Ruth moved to an assisted care living facility in Brigham City, Utah, near where her daughter Cynthia lived. There she found love again and married Preston Keller in October of 2015. She was lovingly embraced by his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. He passed away on March 2, 2018.
Ruth enjoyed good health up until a week before her death. She played her beloved grand piano daily for residents and guests of the assisted living center where she lived. When she knew that death was imminent, she faced it bravely and with grace, wearing bright pink lipstick. She planned her own funeral and shared her love with her friends and family before passing away peacefully on April 15, 2018.
She is survived by daughters Cynthia (Alan) Day and Kristin (Jeffrey) Godwin; 10 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. She is preceded in death by her parents; her brother John Ashley; her husbands Ken Johnson and Preston Keller; her daughter Debra Officer; and grandsons Erik Day and Zachary Taylor.
A viewing will be held at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 21, at the Myers Funeral Home in Brigham City, with the funeral services following at 1 p.m. A graveside service will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday, April 24, at the Castle Valley graveyard, where she will be laid next to her husband Ken Johnson. A luncheon will be held at 11:30 a.m. at the LDS Church on 400 North after her interment. Friends and family are welcome to attend to share her memory.