Wayne Scott Gardner

Image of Wayne Gardner
Birth Date: January 11, 1920
Death Date: April 19, 2014
Age at Death: 94
Veteran Of: Army Air Corps WW II

Marriages

Leona Oberly

In Clifton, Colorado

Obituaries

Grand Junction Daily Sentinel page 3 D Obituary - May 18, 2014

Wayne Scott Gardner died peacefully
at his home in Woodland,
California on April 19, 2014. He
was 94.
Wayne was born January 11,
1920, at the Gardner home two
miles east of Clifton, Colorado. He
was the youngest of six children of
Dora Levi and Violetta Scott Gardner,
who earlier been homesteaders in Whitewater. Wayne grew up
helping farm apples, pears and peaches in his parent’s orchard, attended
Clifton schools and graduated from Grand Junction High School.
Staff Sergeant Gardner served three years in the Army Air Corps
during World War II, including a tour of duty on Guadalcanal, retiring
as an oxygen generator Instructor. Just before the war ended, he married
his sweetheart, Leona Oberly, in their hometown of Clifton.
On the GI Bill, he earned B.S. and M.S. degrees in botany and plant
pathology at Utah State Agricultural College, Logan. He was employed
as a civilian researcher by the US Army in Utah and conducted environmental
and crop research for US Steel Corporation in Utah and
Pennsylvania. He and Leona welcomed four daughters along the way.
Wayne returned to school at age 43 under a Regents Fellowship at University
of California, Davis, where he earned a Ph.D. in Plant Pathology
in 1967. His doctoral thesis project was a study of barley stripe
mosaic virus, and he was honored for outstanding accomplishment in
the field of electron microscopy at UC Davis.
He was hired as an associate professor at South Dakota State University
in Brookings, South Dakota, where he focused on research and
teaching using the electron microscope. Wayne was a devoted mentor
to his graduate students and also served a USAID mission to Botswana.
In Brookings, Wayne was active in Toastmasters and the Pitchblenders
barbershop chorus. He and Leona grew a huge vegetable garden and
painted in acrylics in their spare time.
When Wayne retired in 1985, he and Leona purchased a motor home
and traveled all over the United States, including visits to Colorado and
California family. They moved back to California in 1990 to be near
their daughters. Wayne’s joy in living set an example for everyone who
knew him. He had many interests, wrote several memoirs about his
early life and studied his family history back to the first English settlers
of Nantucket Island.
Wayne was active in resident activities at Leisureville Mobile Home
Park in Woodland, California for many years. He was honored on April
6 at the Founders’ Day program and reception as the last surviving
member of the Leisureville Community Association committee that
engineered the 1995 purchase of the park to become a cooperative
owned by the residents.
Wayne was predeceased by his parents and his brothers, J. Ivan Gardner
and W.L. “Bill” Gardner and by his sisters, Ruth Rigg, Demis Griffith,
and Laura Lampshire.
He is survived by his wife of 69 years, Leona Gardner of Woodland,
and by their daughters, Susan Larock, Barbara Gardner, Janet Lee, and
Kathrine Gardner. Wayne is also survived by four grandchildren; two
great-grandchildren and seven nieces and nephews and their families.
Memorials may be directed to Hospice or a charity of the donor’s
choice.

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