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Judy Ann (Finch) Smith

Posted 2021-01-29 by mhenderson
Published in The Miner on Jan. 28, 2021 -
Kingman, Arizona -

Longtime resident Judy Ann (Finch) Smith, who was born on Feb. 13,
1939, to Arlise and Vernie Finch in Kingman, Arizona died on Sunday,
Jan. 24, 2021 due to COVID-19 complications.

Her father’s family arrived in Kingman, Arizona in 1921 in an old
Model-T leaving the Sacramento Mountains in New Mexico to start a new
life in Kingman. The Elks Club and courthouse were already here, but
there were very few houses. What is now Topeka used to be the old
Highway 66. It came down through Slaughter House Canyon and down that
way. Judy’s father Arlise attended grades three and four in the Little
Red School House while his father went to work for the railroad. As a
young adult Arlise went back and forth from Kingman to Phoenix living
and working where the jobs took him. In 1930 he met and married his
beautiful wife Vernie and the two moved to Kingman in 1932.

Judy came into this world on Feb. 13, 1939, to a little town called
Kingman, Arizona. The country was just recovering from the Great
Depression and she was only 6 months old when Nazi Germany invaded
Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, the beginning of World War II. At age 7,
Judy’s father went into the service station business in 1946 in
Kingman, Arizona. It was a Texaco station up on the hill next to the
City café and he owned and operated it for 25 years. As a young
pioneer family, they witnessed many events over the years as Kingman
grew and changed with the times. Other than a few growing pains, life
was pretty simple in Kingman. Families spent a lot of time together.
Judy has shared stories about her life growing up in this small town
of Kingman. One particular story she shared with us is when she was
about 12 years old she was standing on her front porch of her home on
Spring Street and watching the glow in the sky coming from Las Vegas
and her father telling her to get in the house. And of the many times
she and her schoolmates would be at Palo Christi Elementary School out
on the playground playing or gathering with their teacher around the
flag pole to say the pledge of allegiance and the sky would glow over
the top of them. We can only imagine what that sight looked like. Many
people in the area were delighted in watching the mushroom clouds
spring up beyond the mountains. It was the middle of the Cold War, and
the federal government was engaged in a nuclear testing program in Las
Vegas. People were charmed by the beauty of the orange glow; the
atomic explosions that lit up the sky! The Nevada Test Site is only
135 miles away from Kingman, Arizona. For approximately 12 years, the
U.S. performed 100 atmospheric tests at the Nevada Test Site. Judy
stated at that time, no one in Kingman knew the impact this testing
would have on all of them for the rest of their lives. Many families
and friends have died from cancer as a result.

Judy had many childhood friends that lived on cattle ranches in the
1950s and she talks about the wonderful times she spent with Danielle
Stephens riding on the school bus and arriving at their ranch outside
of Wikieup for the weekend. They used to swim in the Cofer’s hot
springs. Judy remembered how the ranch hands would come in and how
much she admired Danielle’s mother (Jena Lee Bishop) for being able to
prepare wonderful homemade meals for 17-plus hungry ranch hands on a
daily basis.

Judy graduated from Mohave County High School in May of 1957 and
attended and received her certificates from Greg’s business college in
Phoenix. Judy was going to school and working at the State Theater on
the weekends when she met the love of her life, Clarence Smith. The
only problem was he was engaged to another at the time. Judy sent him
away, only to have him return no longer engaged and the two married on
Aug. 1, 1957 at the First United Methodist Church in downtown Kingman.

Judy worked for the State Theater, Corky Pigs, Valley National Bank,
for Roy Dunton at Dunton Motors, State Farm, Arizona Music, various
doctor’s offices and the hospital. Judy was part of the young girls
who were transported by school bus to help serve the actors Jeff
Chandler, Dan Duryea and Jane Russell who were starring in the movie
Foxfire, filmed in 1955 in Oatman, and she was very excited to get
their autographs.

On July 5, 1973, she was off work from the hospital the day of the
Doxel Explosion. Clarence, Judy, and their daughter were at the Ranch
Market on Andy Devine/Route 66 when the explosion occurred, and the
heat was so intense it was coming through the open window of the Ford
pickup they were in. They quickly loaded up as many of the injured
people in the back of their truck as they could and took them to the
hospital. Judy stated it was awful. She spent the rest of the day at
the hospital packing burn victims in ice. We lost 14 wonderful men
that day including Alan Hansen who was the class president of 1957. It
was a sad, sad day for Kingman.

Asked about the growth of Kingman from downtown to hilltop, she stated
the first 20 homes were built on Ricca Drive and then the next 20
homes were built and ended at our home on Van Marter Drive. Bill
Shuffler and Ed Curly were the land developers in this area and were
very instrumental in building up the community. The Interstate 40
changed everything. The box stores opened, the hospital moved and all
the land was subdivided. Elmer Butler was one of our first big land
developers who was selling land for $395. He advertised it as $10 down
and $10 a month. Judy said she doesn’t think we have progressed that
much. She said we had more shopping in downtown Kingman because
progress killed progress. The box store closed the family businesses
that everyone was working at. Her dad Arlise Finch said someday you
will see Kingman grow more than what you want it to grow because of
the railroad.

Judy Smith’s most proud accomplishments was as a wife, a homemaker,
mother of two, grandmother, great-grandmother, and being a member of
the Methodist Church her whole life. Judy was a faith-a-row girl, a
rainbow girl; she volunteered with Girl Scouts and was a Boy Scout
leader, belonged to Beta Cigna Phi Sorority and belonged to the
Kingman Cutups Square Dancing club. April Gross introduced Judy to
Pioneer Daughters in 1996 and Judy has served as a vice president and
president for about five years and continued to be an active member.
She served on the class reunion committee for years and even hosted
the first 10-year class reunion in her backyard when she lived on Van
Marter Drive and everyone really had a good time. Judy received the
Women Making History Award in 2018 in the category of lifetime
contributions to her community.

Judy is survived by her sister Darlene (Bob) Maher; brother in-law
Raymond (Elise) Smith; son Robert Wayne (Cheryl) Smith; daughter Lorri
(Mike) Jackson; grandsons Brandon (Shay) Smith, Johnathon (Kristi)
Fensterbush; granddaughters Nichole (Travis) Hood and Lacey Jackson;
great-grandchildren Jadyn Lehn, Asten Lehn, Briana Asplin, Sahirah
Fensterbush, Kiersten Vaughn, Kaden Vaughn, Tage Helm; and great-
great-granddaughter Zora Haines; and many beloved cousins, nieces,
nephews and friends. Judy is preceded in death by her beloved husband,
Clarence (Pee Wee) Smith; brother in-law Jim Smith; sister in-law
Gladys Terry; and sister in-law Opal Whalen, along with her mother and
father Arlise and Vernie Finch.

Gravesite services will be held at Mountain View Cemetery on Feb. 2,
2021 at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers please donate to the Mohave Museum,
Kingman Cancer Care Unit, or the Joan and Dianna Hospice House.

Judy stated she always loved Kingman and she never wanted to leave.
She was always happy about Kingman and never wished for anything more
than what was here. She never wanted to live anywhere else.

Judy stated I lived a pretty simple life; I was not what you called a
fancy person. I have never been fancy in my life and could get by with
the simple things in life. As long as we paid our bills and had food
on the table we didn’t get too interested in other things. Her words
for future generations “Is to take good care of each other.”



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