Sharon Fuller
Cox
Eulogy
delivered at Sharon’s memorial service, Janaury 25th, 2020 in Camp
Verde, Arizona by Darrel Fuller
“And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the
greatest of these is charity.”
(1st Corinthians 13:13)
While November 5th, 1943 might be a reasonable beginning to my
remarks, bear with me as I make a slight detour. About an hour’s drive from here, up on the
rim, lies Pine, Arizona. As you come
into town, if you take a left onto Pine Creek Road, about a quarter mile down
on the right, you’ll see a modest home. If you pull into the gravel driveway,
you’ll see a bronze plaque that pays tribute to Alma Moroni Hunt. It was faith in God that brought Alma to Pine
in 1891. He was one of the founders of the community. He was a man’s man. In today’s vernacular, he
was a stud. How else do you describe a man who caught and killed a deer with
his bare hands?
Of similar ilk, was Revilo Fuller. He had an unusual name, Oliver
spelled backwards. Like Alma, Revilo was a pioneer, one of the first settlers
of Pine and a man of faith. These two
men and their wives, cleared the land,
planted crops, built homes, tamed a harsh wilderness, and raised large
families. The couples lived long enough to see grandchildren. One of those was Loran,
born to Harry and Etta Fuller in 1915.
Two years later Lois was born to Isaac and Florence Hunt. As children, Lois
and Loran attended church and school together. I’m not sure when the spark of
romance began to burn, but it was a veritable blaze when they eloped to
Flagstaff in 1935.
Fast forward eight years to 1943, when these two loving parents
were blessed with their first daughter.
They named her Virginia after an aunt, but always called her by her
middle name, Sharon. Sharon was the first of their children that was born in a
hospital. When Sharon came into the world, she already had two older brothers, seven
year old Leon and four year old Loran Dennis.
Over the next thirteen years, at the pace of every two or three years, she
gained another sibling, beginning with Jerry, then Linda, Doug, Jeanette, and
last of all, when she was thirteen, her littlest brother, Darrel. If you’ve
lost track, that’s eight children.
When she was a child, Sharon’s dad worked in the timber industry
in some very remote areas. Most notable was
the small community of Pleasant Valley. There were few modern conveniences.
Electric power lines wouldn’t reach this valley for another generation. In the
evenings, butane lamps provided light. Water came from a hand pumped well out back. Her
mother was thrilled to get a butane-powered refrigerator, and a
gasoline-powered wash machine.
Lack of television was indeed a blessing. Sharon’s mother was an
exceptional storyteller. Sharon would gather with her brothers and sisters to
hear Goldilocks or The Three Billy Goats Gruff. Her mother also read them Tom Sawyer,
Huckleberry Finn, and other classics.
Sharon’s dad owned a sawmill. Years later she recalled two work
horses that were used to move and handle logs.
Sharon loved those horses so much she just wanted to kiss them. One day she was startled when standing close
to one, it took a long drink from the trough, turned its head and gave her a
big wet-tongue kiss right across the face. She didn’t wish for that again.
Before she turned five, she was eager to be like her older brothers
and go to school. The reality of school didn’t mesh with her dreams. She
thought her teacher, Mrs. Stockett, was one of the meanest teachers ever. Her
practice was to crack her student’s knuckles with a ruler if they weren’t doing
their work or if they were talking. Sharon’s
best friend was Laverne. They loved
playing jacks, jumping rope, swinging, and spinning in circles until they both
fell down. When they got a little older,
they played red rover and baseball.
When Sharon was in fourth grade, her dad leased his sawmill to a
third party. The family moved to Phoenix. It was quite a change from the rustic
setting of Pleasant Valley. They lived comfortably in a nice home. It had
electricity and indoor plumbing. But then the individual defaulted on the
sawmill lease. Money became scarce. The
family moved from a nice home to one not quite as nice, and then another a tier
below that. When utility bills couldn’t
be paid, Sharon and her brothers would walk to a neighborhood gas station to
fill up water jugs. Life had gotten
hard.
Sharon’s Aunt Virginia lived in Prescott. When Sharon was in the 5th or 6th grade, Aunt
Virginia talked Sharon into living with her for a time. This aunt loved her niece and promised her
some new dresses if she came. Aunt
Virginia had some fabric, actually used flour sacks with printed flowers. She hired a seamstress to make Sharon
dresses. Sharon was grateful. Despite her aunt’s love, she was unbearably
homesick. She missed her mom. She missed
her brothers and sisters.
During this time, tragedy struck her family back in Phoenix.
Three of the kids waited in the car for their mom. When the family dog jumped out of the widow,
Jerry got out to retrieve him. When he had trouble, five-year-old Linda got
out to help, leaving strict instructions to her three-year-old brother Doug to
stay put. Three-year-olds don’t always listen. Doug followed his sister, got
into traffic and was hit by a car. Linda heard the screech of brakes and turned
to see her little brother’s limp body come to rest and lay motionless in the
street, tire tracks evident across his body.
While Doug lay in a coma, on the brink of death for ten days, eleven
year old Sharon blamed herself. If she had only been home, she would have been
there, she would have been in the car with him. She wouldn’t have let him get out
and get into traffic. For those of you who don’t know the happy ending, Doug is
with us today, sitting in the fifth row.
In telling the story of Sharon’s life, to understand her
strength, her resolve, her work ethic and her faith, one must know her
parents. Her mother was a proud woman,
independent, sometimes a little gruff.
She dedicated her life to her family. She was a woman of faith and did
her best to instill the same in her children. Sharon remained very close to her
mom throughout her life and shared many of her qualities.
Sharon’s dad was a good man, but one who became entangled in the
tentacles of addiction. Early in life he was a successful businessman, the
owner of a sawmill. His alcoholism eventually cost him his business, wreaked
untold pain on his family, and inflicted mental illness on himself. In the end,
his addiction cost him his life. I think Sharon would agree, that we were not
thankful for the hardships that our dad caused our family, but we are so
grateful for the life-long bonds it forged between us kids.
From Phoenix, Sharon’s family moved back to Pleasant Valley for
a short time, and then moved for the last time to Prescott. Here, Sharon lived her teenage years. Out of
necessity, her mother was forced to go to work. As result, big responsibility
was heaped on this 13-year-old young lady.
Soon after I was born, Mom worked the 3-in-the-afternoon-to-11-at-night
shift at a local plastic factory. Who would watch her kids? Sixteen-year-old
Dennis would race home from high school and watch the younger ones until Sharon
got home from school. Dennis would then leave for his job at the A&W Root
Beer stand, leaving Sharon to watch her younger siblings through the evening.
She fed us, helped with homework, “bossed” us and got us in bed. I was a baby
and Jeanette was only three years old. For us, Sharon was almost like a second
mom.
She could be a prankster. The “grasshopper” gravy she made for
dinner one evening may have been hamburger gravy, but she was convincing enough
to cause concern. When I was a little
older, she convinced me that everyone was born with a tail. “You can feel
your tailbone where your tail used to connect. The doctor cut it off at the hospital before
you came home.” I believed her.
The late 50’s/early 60’s were the Elvis Presley era. Sharon loved Elvis and his movies. In the
afternoons, she watched American Bandstand. (The younger crowd will need to
Google that). While watching, she would
practice dancing the jitterbug and other dances. Sometimes her partner was a
friend, sometimes the bedroom door.
Let me share one experience from the darker side of life. Sometime
during her teen years Sharon started experiencing severe stomach pain. Later she was diagnosed with appendicitis and
had surgery, but at the time didn’t know the cause. This unfortunately
coincided with a drinking binge by our dad. When under the influence, he could
be downright crazy. On this occasion he chased Sharon and her mother around the
yard with a butcher knife. Sharon would run until she was doubled over in pain,
mom would distract the drunk mad man, then Sharon would run some more. There were other ugly instances that might be
devastating to a teenage girl, but Sharon never let them get in the way of
life.
She learned to drive when she was 16, taught by her brother
Dennis in his 1950 Ford. It had a
flat-head V8, the preferred choice of most hot rodders of the day. Sharon loved to drag race.
Her love for one of her little brothers was severely tested when
he sold her diary to a neighbor kid. Another time, a boy came to the house to
pick her up for a date. She really didn’t
want to go out with him. Seeing his car outside, Sharon told Doug, “Tell him
I’m not home.” So Doug opened the front
door and did just that. The boy obviously
was skeptical since he offered money and asked, “Where is she really?” Doug was quick to grab the cash and rat out
his sister. “She’s hiding in the closet.”
In the believe-it-or-not category, is the occasion that Sharron
broke her dad out of jail. He was in for some minor infraction, almost
certainly alcohol related. The low-risk prisoners were allowed outside the jail
for work detail at the city dump. Dad snuck away. Sharon was the get-away
driver. Inside the car was her accomplice, her brother Jerry. Anyone that knew our mother will be
absolutely dumbfounded to know it was done at her urging. Sharon drove dad to
Williams, outside the Yavapai county line. All these years later, I find it
hard to get my head around this incident, but it’s absolutely true!
Our mother eventually went to work at a rest home, the Pioneer’s
Home in Prescott. She worked the midnight shift. Sharon didn’t have a car of her own. One night, I’m not sure who she was with,
either a brother or some friends. They went to the Pioneer’s Home and hot-wired mom’s car. She and her cohorts did
what teenage kids did back in the day, drove around, cruised Gurley (the main
street). When Sharon drove back to the Pioneer’s Home to return the car, her
stomach sank when another car was parked in the parking space. When Mom found her car in a different place, Sharon
was busted.
She attended Prescott High School, and subsequently went to beauty
school. Whether termed a hair stylist, a beautician, or a cosmetologist, she
was a natural. Later in life she was the
co-owner of her own shop. For 37 years
she was hairdresser, confidant, therapist, and friend to countless patrons of
the Hair Escape salon in Cottonwood.
In March of 1961, at the tender age of 17, Sharon became a
mother. She named her baby Lynette. I
was one happy kid, only four years old at the time. Technically I was an uncle,
but in practice, Jeanette and I sort of gained the little sister that we never
had.
In 1964, Sharon’s soul mate entered the picture. She was on a date with another guy when she
met William Charles Cox, known to all simply as Bill. Sharon later exclaimed
that he was, “The most handsome man I had ever seen.” She ran into him again at
a dance. The two started dating. They eloped and were Married in Las Vegas in
May,1964.
I feel safe in saying that our mother initially had reservations
about Sharon’s choice of a husband, but Bill was quick to change her mind. He
loved his mother-in-law like his own mother. He helped her financially and was
generous in so many ways. Bill had
similar interests to many of Sharon’s brothers. He fit in well with the family and
was a great addition.
On November 16th, 1964, while still living in Prescott, the
couple welcomed their son Mike into the world. Not long after, Bill joined the
Union of Operating Engineers and became a heavy equipment operator. Road construction took the family around the
state. The eleven places they lived included Black Canyon City, Flagstaff,
Page, Holbrook, and St. George Utah.
It was during their stay in Flagstaff that their family was
completed. Anna was born, November 16,
1967.
After bouncing around the state, Sharon and Bill bought land
here in Camp Verde and built the house that they would both call home for the
rest of their lives. When I say, “they built it”, I mean that literally. There
was no contractor. It was a family affair, which included Sharon’s brother
Jerry. With shovel in hand, Sharon
helped dig the footings. Lynette was allowed to ditch school to help with the
effort. Mortar was mixed, blocks laid and walls framed. They did it all.
Sharon enjoyed the outdoors.
When she was younger, she loved to hunt with her brothers. When Sharon
and Bill bought a motor home, there were plenty of weekend trips to Lake
Roosevelt. She loved to read, mostly cheesy romance novels. Her entire life,
she loved to play cards with family and friends. And of course, she was a
homemaker. She canned vegetables out of the garden and fruit from her trees.
But above all, she was a mom. She loved
her kids. In more general terms, she
loved all kids, including her nieces and nephews. When grandkids
arrived, she loved them too, and then great grandkids.
I can’t tell Sharon’s story, without including an extraordinary
experience that occurred almost 21 years ago. It was life changing. I mentioned
earlier that she was very close to her mother, even to the extent of being called
a “mama’s baby”. When her mother was diagnosed with a rare virus and was
pronounced terminal, Sharon was devastated.
In fact, our entire family was devastated. The weeks that followed
leading up to our mother’s death were filled with sorrow and anguish, but also
brought an eternal perspective. The
Spirit of the Lord rested upon our family, as strong as I’ve ever felt. Many
hearts were touched, but perhaps none more so than Sharon’s. It sparked a desire and determination to be
more like her mother, to live closer to our Father in Heaven, to have a better relationship
with our Savior. Our mother passed
away, but Sharon’s resolve lived. She never wavered. She made changes. She went to the temple. From that point on, a very good woman became
even better. We can all learn from her example.
Now, if I were to summarize my closing remarks in one word, it
would be STRENGTH. She was in her
thirties when first diagnosed with cancer. She beat it. For a long time, she
suffered from stomach ulcers. She was
diagnosed with Lupus and suffered for years with this very painful immune
system disorder. She had bladder cancer. The diagnoses of non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma resulted in an initial round of strong chemotherapy, followed by another
round after that. During the second
round, after four doses, she put the brakes on.
She had had enough. Only then did the doctors tell her that most people could
only handle two. At the time, a nurse practitioner only expected her to last a few weeks. That
was more than six years ago. I call those bonus years. They might be attributed to a change in diet or simply the grace of a
loving Father-in-Heaven. Regardless, they most certainly wouldn't have happened without Sharon's strong will, her resolve, and uncommon strength.
My heart is full. I thank
God that my life has been graced by this good woman. Like many of you, I have
been so blessed by her unconditional love.
I take comfort in the resurrection, for I know that I will walk and talk
with my dear sister again.