Alphabetical Alumni
Stevens, Edward Franklin

Stevens, Edward Franklin
Holden, Utah US

Edward and Emma Stevens

Class of 1892 ~ Honorary. Edward Franklin Stevens was born on November 14,1874, in Holden, Millard County, Utah, the first son of Edward Stevens and Mettie Johanna Stephenson. As a child, he went to school and was known as something of a cowboy. He attended Brigham Young Academy in Provo, Utah, to study Commerce. His cousin David described him as being very bashful around girls, and said he did not mix well with them while in Provo. Despite this shyness, however, he quickly became interested in a girl from Scipio, named Emma Maud(e) Robins, who often came to Holden to visit her uncle who lived there. At age 21, Edward left Utah on June 25, 1895 to serve in the Southern States Mission, which included Alabama and Mississippi, for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was one of the first younger men to be called to serve a mission, as most missionaries had previously been older men. He served for 38 months. Soon after he returned home to Utah he married Emma Robins, who had waited for him while he served his mission. They were married in the LDS Salt Lake Temple on September 14, 1898. Together they had eight children. Edward took a position teaching school in Holden with a salary of $45 a month. During the summers he farmed with his father, and in 1915, his father divided his farm land among his three sons, and Edward received the southern portion of Whitebush Farm. He also served as Justice of the Peace for several years, as well as serving as president of the first town board of Holden, along with many other positions within the town. His health began to fail him after he contracted a severe disease that affected the Whitebush cattle herd in the winter of 1943-1944. Edward Stevens died on April 27, 1944.

Stevens, Glen M.

Stevens, Glen M.

Glen and Ruby Stevens

Class of 1936 ~ Honorary. Glen Stevens. He appears in the 1935 BYH Wildcat yearbook as a junior, but does not appear in the 1936 BYH Wildcat yearbook as a senior. Must assume he did not graduate in 1936. ~ ~ ~ ~ Glen M. Stevens was born on February 15, 1919 in Richfield, Utah. His parents were Charles W. Stevens and Juanita Jensen. He married Ruby Milner on April 7, 1939 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He died on February 27, 1986.

Stevens, Homer M.

Stevens, Homer M.
Kennewick, Washington US

Homer & Patricia Stevens

Class of 1943. Homer M. Stevens. BYU 1949. ~ ~ ~ ~ HIS OBITUARY: Homer M. Stevens was born June 18, 1925 in Parowan, Utah to Joseph Ervin Stevens and Violet Matheson and died on June 3, 2021 just 2 weeks before his 96th birthday. Homer grew up in Southern Utah where times were hard and much was expected of a small boy. He was often left at home to do all the farm chores while his father was out shearing sheep for extra income. As a teen he attended the original Brigham Young High School in Provo Utah, graduating in the Class of 1943. He was drafted into the Army at the age of 18 and served on the front lines of World War II. After being initially based in Oregon, he was transferred to San Luis Obispo, California where his life would be forever changed. At a church meeting a beautiful young lady named Patricia came up and introduced herself and invited him to dinner. One and a half years later, after his deployment in the European Theater, in 1945 they were married in the Salt Lake Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Pat and Homer had 5 children 3 boys and 2 girls. Ronald Stevens (Jeanine), Roger Stevens (Gayle), Gary Stevens (Dori), Kerrie Yeafoli (John) and LaRae Claybrook (Gary). Several years later in 1952, Homer was able to secure a job with El Paso Natural Gas Company (now known as Williams company). He retired in 1983 as Superintendent of the Plymouth, Washington gas plant. He loved hunting and fishing but most of all playing pool. He won trophies and was quite the pool shark, earning extra money when he needed it. He loved serving in the Church and had many varied responsibilities throughout the years. Homer and Pat served 3 missions for the Church in their later years. He was a loving husband and father and left behind 4 more generations including 25 grandchildren, and 60 plus great-grandchildren and 1 great-great-grandchild. Homer is preceded in death by the love of his life Patricia, his parents, a daughter-in-law Deborah Stevens and grandson Mark Stevens. Source.

Stevens, Kate

Stevens, Kate

Kate Stevens

Class of 1922. Kate Stevens. Source: 1922 BYU Banyan yearbook, BYH section.

Stevens, Merlin

Merlin Stevens

Class of 1948. Merlin Stevens. Tooele 2. BYH 3. Football 1. "The Washington Years" play 3.

Stevens, Ruth

Stevens, Ruth

Ruth Spicer

Class of 1915. Ruth Stevens [Spicer]. She received a BYH Normal Certificate in 1915. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 8, page 420.

Stevens, Vera

Stevens, Vera

Vera Stevens

Class of 1919. Vera Stevens. Graduated from Brigham Young High School in 1919. Source: 1919 BYU Banyan yearbook, BYH section, pages 61-74.

Stevens, William R.

Stevens, William R.

William R. Stevens

BY Academy High School Class of 1886. William R. Stevens. Awarded Special Certificate in Bookkeeping. Source: The (Provo) Daily Enquirer, May 25, 1886.

Stevenson, Leora

Leora Stevenson

Faculty & Staff Early 1960s, including 1962-63 - Home Economics Teacher.

Stewart, Agnes Speirs

Stewart, Agnes Speirs
Rexburg, Idaho US

Agnes and James Bevan

Class of 1912. Agnes Stewart, of Tooele, Utah. Graduated from Brigham Young High School in 1912. Source 1: 1912 BYU Mizpah, BYH section, photos and names on pp. 1 - 62, 105. ~ ~ ~ ~ Class of 1912. Agnes Stewart. She received a BYH Normal Diploma in 1912. Source 2: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 7, page 242. ~ ~ ~ ~ Agnes Speirs Stewart was born on October 10, 1890 in Tooele, Utah. Her parents were William Gillespie Stewart and Ellen Lyon Speirs Stewart. Agnes married James Clifton Bevan on September 24, 1924 in Salt Lake City, Utah. She died on September 16, 1970 in Rexburg, Idaho. Interment, Cache-Clawson Cemetery, Tetonia, Idaho.

Stewart, Andrew Jackson B.

Stewart, Andrew Jackson B.
Sandy, Utah US

Andrew and Susanna Stewart

BY Academy High School Class of 1883. Andrew J. Stewart of Benjamin, Utah. Graduated Friday, June 15, 1883, with a Normal diploma. Source: Territorial Enquirer, Friday, June 15, 1883. Faculty & Staff. Andrew J. Stewart, [Jr. (sic)], Training School & Physician, 1881-1884, 1914-1915. ~ ~ ~ ~ Andrew Jackson "B" Stewart was born on February 28, 1861 in Payson, Utah. His parents were Benjamin Franklin Stewart and Elizabeth Jane Davis Stewart. He married Susanna Wall on May 23, 1884 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He died on October 22, 1943 in Sandy, Utah. His interment, Benjamin, Utah.

Stewart, Brent T.
2144 Oak Lane
Provo, Utah US

Brent and Karen Stewart

Class of 1972. Brent Stewart. Graduated Provo High School 1972. LDS Mission to Scotland 1974-1976. Graduated BYU Bachelor Chemical Engineering 1979. Married Karen Gardner of Provo Utah 1976. Brother, Kim Stewart, is BYH Class of 1974. @2011

Stewart, Charles
478 West 650 South
Orem, Utah 84058 US

Chuck Stewart
  • Work: 801.492.1428

Class of 1970. Charles Stewart.

Stewart, Dennis

Dennis Stewart

Class of 1970. Dennis Stewart. [Need middle initial, current location.] [TM]

Stewart, Eunice Polly

Stewart, Eunice Polly

Eunice and Dennison Harris

BYA Class of 1879. Eunice Polly Stewart. From 1876 to 1879, Eunice attended school at Brigham Young Academy in Provo, Utah. She graduated from the Normal Department in May 1879. At BYA she met and befriended Dennison Emer Harris, her future husband. More. In the fall of 1876, when I was sixteen, I went to Provo to attend school at the Brigham Young Academy. Most of my life had been spent on a farm, and I now remember how I trembled when I realized how unfitted I thought I was to attend a school like I imagined the Brigham Young Academy was. Now in my seventy-second year my heart swells with gratitude and my eyes are blurred with tears of thanksgiving when I think how blessed I was in having had the opportunity of attending that wonderful school where I was privileged to be under the influence of Karl G. Maeser, that great educator and character builder. He was a teacher as well as being president of the school, and I had the privilege of having him for the teacher of several classes each year. He labored unceasingly to keep the school thoroughly democratic. He strove to make simplicity, humility, and a common brotherhood and sisterhood the slogan of the school. He wanted all to be peers while in school. He used to say to the girls, “If any of you have jewelry, please leave it home.” His students almost deified him. In his child-like humility and devotion to his religion, to me he seemed really divine. Even the walls of the old B.Y.A. seemed sacred. I attended this school three years. In the fall of 1878, Dennison Emer Harris, a young man from Monroe, Sevier County, Utah, entered the school and took a seat just across the aisle from mine. We soon became acquainted and a warm friendship sprang up between us and we very often studied together. He would help me with knotty problems in arithmetic and I would help him in diagramming and analyzing difficult sentences in grammar. Friendship was all that was allowed between boys and girls when students at the B.Y.A. in Brother Maesar’s day. We enjoyed each other’s friendship until the end of the school year [1879], when I graduated from the Normal Department and he returned to his home in Monroe. During the school year, 1879 and 1880, he taught school in Richfield, Sevier County, and I taught in Benjamin. In September, 1880, I went to Provo to visit my dear friend and cousin, Melissa Stewart, where I again met D.E. Harris, who was in Provo attending court as a juryman. After a separation of more than a year we met soul to soul. Our time together was short as I had to return home the next day, and he had to hasten home to make preparations to go on a mission in two weeks. The sweetest story ever told can be said in a few words under some circumstances. D.E. Harris left for his mission where he labored in Michigan and Ohio in October, 1880, and returned July, 1882. During the school year of 1880 and 1881 I taught school in Benjamin and in 1881 and 1882 I taught in Payson until the first of April. I then had an opportunity to go to Monroe and teach a spring term. Monroe was the home of the Harris family, and as I desired to get acquainted with the family before becoming one of its members, I went. I traveled from Juab, the railroad terminus with Bishop Harris, my intended father-in-law. He was returning from Salt Lake City where he had been attending the general conference. I rode all the way in the seat by his side. He was a good conversationalist and a splendid story-teller, and I had a good opportunity of getting acquainted with him. I immediately liked him, as everyone did who came under his influence. I stayed in the Harris home for several days while I was locating a boarding place. I enjoyed my work in Monroe very much. I met all of the members of the Harris family and liked them all. They all seemed to welcome me as one of the family. The people were all very kind to me and the trip and experiences were very pleasurable, and I considered it one of profit too. One of the pleasures of this trip to Monroe was the privilege of visiting, in her home near Richfield, Estelle Dixon Fairbanks, who had married and moved there two years before. At the end of the school term, early in July, I returned home traveling in the conveyance Bishop Harris sent to Juab for his son, Denny, who was returning from a mission where he had been laboring in Ohio and Michigan for nearly two years. In Juab we met, after our long separation, where we had a short, but very joyous and happy visit. We made plans for our marriage. As he was anxious to return to school the coming school year, we planned to be married just before the opening of school. On August 24, 1882, we were married in the old Endowment House in Salt Lake City, he being twenty-eight years of age, and I, twenty-two. Autobiographical Sketch of Eunice Stewart Harris.

Stewart, Grace

Stewart, Grace

Grace Nixon

Collegiate Grad of BYU, Class of 1925. Grace Stewart [Nixon]. She received a BS Degree in Dramatic Arts in 1925. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 38.

Stewart, Halbert Clark [Holbert]

Stewart, Halbert Clark [Holbert]
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Halbert and Helen Stewart

Class of 1922. Holbert Stewart [actually Halbert Clark Stewart]. Source: 1922 BYU Banyan yearbook, BYH section. ~ ~ ~ ~ Collegiate Grad of BYU, Class of 1927. Halbert C. Stewart. He received a BS Degree in 1927. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 470. ~ ~ ~ ~ Halbert Clark Stewart was born on May 22, 1903 in Ogden, Utah. His parents were Otto Ren Stewart and Millicent Tollestrup Stewart. He married Helen Vera Anderson on May 31, 1931 in Utah. She was born on August 26, 1905 in Salina, Utah. She died on April 30, 1998 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her interment, Benjamin, Utah. Halbert died on March 3, 1983 in Salt Lake City, Utah. His interment, Benjamin Cemetery, Utah.

Stewart, Helena

Stewart, Helena
Provo, Utah US

Helena Stewart

Class of 1924. Helena Stewart. Helena Stewart received a Normal Diploma, Class of 1924. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, Page 302. ~ ~ ~ ~ Collegiate Grad of BYU, Class of 1929. Helena Stewart. She received an AB Degree in Zoology in 1929. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 302.

Stewart, Henry M.

Henry Stewart

Class of 1928. Henry M. Stewart. Graduated from Brigham Young High School on Thursday, May 24, 1928. Source: The Evening Herald, Provo, Utah, May 23, 1928.

Stewart, Jan
1035 S Pineview Dr
Woodland Hills, Utah 84653 US

Jan Schindler
  • Cell: 703-431-4872
  • Home: 703-723-0252

Class of 1978. Jan Stewart (female). BYU BS Physical Education 1986. She married Kevin George Schindler Sr.

Stewart, Kim

Kim Stewart

Class of 1974. Kim Stewart (male). He is now a dentist. We have heard that he practices dentistry at the Omark Health Center of the Federated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, in the State of Washington. ? Kim Stewart, Spokane, WA 99201 - Phone: (509) 464-1981. Members of this class were in the BY elementary school's sixth grade in 1968. Had the school remained open, many would have graduated together in 1974. His brother, Brent Steward, is BYH Class of 1972. [TM] [Another possiblity: Kim Stewart DDS, Family Dentistry, 1607 West Ina Road, Tucson, Arizona 85704 - (520) 742-2167]

Stewart, Lucile [Eunice Lucile]

Stewart, Lucile [Eunice Lucile]
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Lucile and John Conyers

Class of 1912. Lucille Stewart [actually Eunice Lucile Stewart], of Provo, Utah. Graduated from Brigham Young High School in 1912. Source 1: 1912 BYU Mizpah, BYH section, photos and names on pp. 1 - 62, 105. ~ ~ ~ ~ Class of 1912. Lucile Stewart. She received a High School Diploma in 1912. Source 2: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 5, page 204. ~ ~ ~ ~ Eunice Lucile Stewart was born on July 26, 1891 in Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico. Her parents were Andrew Jackson Stewart, Jr., and Mary Eliza Smith Stewart. Lucille's family lived variously in Provo, Utah; Benjamin, Utah; Juarez, Mexico; and Payson, Utah. She married John William Conyers on August 18, 1915 in Provo, Utah. She died on March 5, 1985 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her interment, Salt Lake City, Utah. Her sister, Marguerite Stewart, was also a member of the BYH Class of 1912. Their sister, Theresa Stewart, was a member of the BYH Class of 1915.

Stewart, Luella Francis Tobitha

Stewart, Luella Francis Tobitha
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Luella and Wilkie Blood

Brigham Young High School Graduate, Class of 1905. Luella Stewart graduated from the BY High School Normal Department on Wednesday, May 31, 1905, in College Hall. Source 1: Program, Normal & High School Graduating Exercises, Wednesday, May 31, 1905, College Hall. ~ ~ ~ ~ Brigham Young High School Class of 1905. Francis Luella Steward. She received a Normal Diploma. Source 2: Students Record of Class Standings B. Y. Academy, Book 2, Page 196. ~ ~ ~ ~ Luella F. Stewart was born on August 22, 1884 in Kaysville, Davis County, Utah. She died on August 15, 1973. Her parents were Hyrum Stewart and Cynthia Hyde Stewart. ~ ~ ~ ~ Luella Tobitha Stewart was born on 22 Aug 1884 in Kaysville, Davis County, Utah. Her parents were Hyrum Stewart and Cynthia Artena Hyde Stewart. She married Wilkie Hooper Blood on June 12, 1907 in Salt Lake City, Utah. She died on August 15, 1973 in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Stewart, Luther K., Jr.

Stewart, Luther K., Jr.

Luther Stewart

Brigham Young High School, Class of 1906. Luther K. Stewart, Jr. He also received a Diploma in Instrumental Music. Source: Students Record of Class Standings B.Y. Academy, Book 2, Page 266. ~ ~ ~ ~ BYH Class of 1906. Luther K. Stewart, a Music School graduate. BYU [& BYH] Class of 1906 Listing of BYH Normal, High School, Commercial, and Music School graduates. Source: Brigham Young Academy & Normal Training School, Catalogues & Announcements, for 31st Academic Year, 1906-1907, p. 140.

Stewart, Marguerite

Stewart, Marguerite
Salt Lake City, Utah US

Marguerite & Frank Olstowski

Class of 1912. Marguerite Stewart, of Provo, Utah. Graduated from Brigham Young High School in 1912. Source 1: 1912 BYU Mizpah, BYH section, photos and names on pp. 1 - 62, 105. ~ ~ ~ ~ Class of 1912. Marguerite Stewart. She received a High School Diploma in 1912. Source 2: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 5, page 203. Marguerite Stewart was born on October 7, 1893 in Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico. Her parents were Andrew Jackson Stewart, Jr., and Mary Eliza Smith Stewart. She married Franceszek [or Francizek][Frank] Olstowski on May 24, 1925 in Greenwich, Fairfield County, Connecticut. He was born on March 23, 1901 in Buffalo, New York. His parents were Franceszek [Frank] Olstowski and Antoinette Gudell. He died on September 17, 1968 in Corpus Christi, Texas. His interment, Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas. She died on August 5, 1967 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her interment, Provo, Utah. Her sister, Eunice Lucile Stewart, was also a member of the BYH Class of 1912. Their sister, Theresa Stewart, was a member of the BYH Class of 1915.

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