
Nola Jones
February 20, 1929 – February 20, 2023
Passing away quietly on her birthday, February 20th, Edith Nola Christensen Jones lived
exactly 94 years. No doubt she moved on joyfully to join Myron, her husband of 68 years,
and her son Paul. She is survived by her children; Camille (Boyd) Baker, Marie (Wes)
Larson, Christie (Larry) Oja, Ann (Tom) Knighton, Kathryn (Ernest) Fossum, Don (Annette)
Jones and Jedd (Kim) Jones.
Grandma Nola, as so many knew her, leaves behind 7 children, 29 grandchildren and 50
great grandchildren. Down to each individual in this significant posterity, we all treasure
her loving care, example of hard work and gentle sense of humor.
Born in Ephraim, Utah to Seymour and Iva Christensen, Nola grew up in Sanpete County.
She told many stories of herding sheep and overnight stays in summer sheep camps. As a
high school senior attending Snow College, Nola met Myron Jones and captured his heart.
Nola and Myron married on March 3, 1948 and moved to Idaho where Nola faced
significant challenges living in remote Elkhorn-Daniels area of Oneida County: life without
power or running water, loneliness, cooking for hired hands, working in the fields, and
battling flies, box elder bugs and the weather—cold, snow, mud, scorching heat, summer flash floods and more. With persistence, she worked through those challenges. She loved
hiking the hills, gathering wildflowers, watching sunsets and—on summer evenings—driving
the dirt roads to visit neighbors.
Nola balanced farm work, kitchen work and chauffeuring her children to town. She was
always making a home, serving those in need and tirelessly supporting her children,
especially in music and dance. Along the way, she planned toboggan and skating parties,
sewed clothes, taught sewing in 4-H, worked privately as a seamstress, served others
through the Relief Society, ran a catering business and later became famous as a specialty
candy-maker. And in most of the 12 years that Myron served as a Representative in the
Idaho State Legislature, Nola moved with him to Boise—children in tow—to support his
efforts.
Nola and Myron served a mission in Nauvoo, Illinois where she gave tours in the Heber C.
Kimball home and the Tin Shop. In recent years Nola valued serving as an ordinance worker
in the Brigham and Logan temples.
Nola’s funeral will be held on Saturday, February 25 at 2:00 pm at the Malad L.D.S. Second
Ward Chapel (20 South 100 West). Friends and neighbors may join the family prior to the services at the church between 12:30 pm and 1:45 pm to pay tribute to Nola. The dedication of her grave will occur at the Malad City Cemetery following the service.