Patricia Camilla "Stormy" Nash

Brief Life History of Patricia Camilla "Stormy"

When Patricia Camilla "Stormy" Nash was born on 6 May 1944, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, her father, Albert Crawford Nash, was 27 and her mother, Virginia Buchholdt, was 32. She married Trent Garold Jackson on 17 November 1964, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 son. She lived in United States in 1949. She died on 29 April 2004, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, at the age of 59, and was buried in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States.

Photos and Memories (2)

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Family Time Line

Trent Garold Jackson
1944–2018
Patricia Camilla "Stormy" Nash
1944–2004
Marriage: 17 November 1964
Jason Dryer
1969–2013

Sources (15)

  • Patricia C Nash, "United States 1950 Census"
  • Patricia Camella Nash, "United States Western States Marriage Index"
  • Patricia C Roylance, "United States Social Security Death Index"

Spouse and Children

World Events (8)

1945 · Peace in a Post War World

The Yalta Conference was held in Crimea to talk about establishing peace and postwar reorganization in post-World War II Europe. The heads of government that were attending were from the United States, the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union. Later the Conference would become a subject of controversy at the start of the Cold War.

1952 · Uranium in Moab

Uranium mining in Utah has a history going back more than 100 years but, it started as a byproduct of vanadium mining. With the development of Nuclear Weapons, Utah saw a uranium boom in the late 1940s and early 1950s, but uranium mining declined near the end of the Cold War. Currently Uranium is still being mined but just a small amount for power plants and for research.

1960

Squaw Valley, California, United States hosts Winter Olympic Games.

Name Meaning

English: topographic name for someone who lived by an ash tree, a variant of Ash by misdivision of Middle English atten ash ‘at the ash’, or a habitational name from any of the many places in England and Wales named Nash, from this phrase, as for example Nash in Buckinghamshire, Herefordshire, or Shropshire. The name was established from an early date in Wales and Ireland.

Jewish: possibly an Americanized form of one or more similar (like-sounding) Jewish surnames.

History: The surname Nash was taken to Ireland from England or Wales by a family who established themselves in County Kerry in the 13th century, during the second wave of Anglo-Norman settlement. — Abner Nash (c. 1740–86), governor of NC, was of Welsh origin, his parents having emigrated to VA from Wales in 1730. His brother Francis (c. 1742–77) was a general in the Continental army; the city of Nashville, TN, was named in his honor.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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