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Priscilla Joyce (Pursley) Hatch

Posted 2016-04-10 by Sharla
The White Mountain Independent,
Show Low, Arizona ~ 04/08/2016

Priscilla Joyce Pursley Hatch

Wife, mother and nana, Priscilla Joyce Pursley Hatch, 89, died March 30, 2016, surrounded by her family. She lived a quiet life but a noble and great one.

Joyce was born Aug. 22, 1926. She lived in Arizona nearly all the years of her life. She grew up in the Safford Valley, beloved daughter of Josephine and Buster Pursley. She was their first child, a wonderful sister to Bob, Mike and Sherry, who came after her, and has been greatly loved by them.

She went to college, served in the military and had many dear friends and good times. She had a close and special connection to her parents, especially her dear mother, Mamma Jo, and she learned from them the hard work, determination and great faith which would become part of her life and her legacy.

In Thatcher she met a young man who was coaching and teaching and began a new part of her life which would last for nearly 64 years. Boyd Hill Hatch was the perfect counterpart to Joyce, a man of few words with a sometimes gruff demeanor over a giant giving heart.

With the polish and refinement of her gracious ways, the couple became a wonderful team. Theirs was a love for the ages. Together they raised seven children, Tony, Debbie, Brenda, Guy, Adele, Kirk and Becky.

Joyce was well-read, refined and educated. The seasons of her life were devoted to her husband, home and family. Her greatest joy and deepest affection were for her family, and each day was spent putting our needs ahead of her own. She was up early every morning and her hands were busy each day, running the house with efficiency. She made her home lovely and welcoming, did laundry with zeal and went about all of her tasks with a glad heart.

Mom loved music. From Andy Williams to the Beatles, she always had something playing on the radio.

Joyce had a great combination of qualities that fit her for motherhood—she worked hard but she knew how to have fun, was smart and serious but could take the teasing, she was strong and resilient but amazingly gentle and kind. There was an added measure of comfort and love whenever she was about, and her serving and giving ways blessed all of the lives of her family.

She made the world a better place by being in it. The people who have known her have often commented on how kind and gracious she was and how much love they felt emanated from her. The communities in which she lived, first Mesa and then later Snowflake and Pinedale, are filled with people who knew and loved her.

As Dad worked teaching, coaching and in construction, she backed him up and supported him always. She was the best coach’s wife, supportive through all the years of baseball and basketball. Winning or losing, she was always there to cheer the teams on.

Later in life they moved to the cabin in Pinedale, and one of mother’s greatest joys was to be out there amongst the tall pines, her ivy and her honeysuckle covering the porch, a quiet place of beauty and peace in which to pass the days. They lived there for over 20 years, and for all the children and the grandchildren, it was a place to restore and renew, a place to escape the world, the comfort of coming home. They enjoyed this time together and spent several years in temple service at the Snowflake Temple.

“Our mom endured so well through the many adversities and afflictions of her life. Near the end she was simply going along on sheer will, and yet she rallied through time and again, trying to stay and watch over her family. Our family has been so grateful in the last three years when our mom and dad came back to live in Mesa for the constant loving care from her daughters Adele and Debbie and son-in-law Kenny Lewis.

“There has been helping hands from the rest of the family, respite from Brenda and Becky coming from Utah to help, and added efforts and service from many of the grandchildren. We are grateful for the loving and gentle care of the Reflections Hospice workers, especially Jill and Amy, Lucy and Andrea, and Dr. Shirif. We so dearly loved our mother and Nana. We feel blessed and honored to have had her in our lives for so long.”

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, April 9, preceded by a visitation at 12:30 p.m. at the LDS Linden Valley Chapel, 971 Timberland Road, Linden, just off Highway 260.

Bunker’s Garden Chapel handled arrangements.




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