• Date Of Death: March 15, 2016
  • State: Idaho

Pamela June Porter Weston, age 75, returned to her Heavenly Father on March 15, 2016, at the Portneuf Medical Center in Pocatello, Idaho, due to complications of a stroke.

Pam was born to Francis E., and June Wilde Porter on December 13, 1940 in Coalville, Utah. She grew up in Devil’s Slide and Morgan, Utah, where she attended school, becoming a very allegiant fan of Trojan athletics. Pam’s fondest memories included playing with her many cousins, watching her dad and uncles play semi-pro baseball, and then cheering for her younger brothers as her father coached. Pam made fond memories working at Como Hot Springs.

Pam graduated from Weber State College and went to Utah State University where she met a shy but determined cowboy, Dale B. Weston. They were married on November 16, 1962. They became the parents of three children, Kevin Benjamin, Lyn Porter, and June Marie. In 1975 the family moved from Pickleville, Utah, to the old BQ Ranch in Sage, Wyoming. Dale and Pam later retired to a happy home in Cokeville, Wyoming. Pam was proud of the front porch Dale built for her, and she decorated it cheerily for each season and holiday.

Pam began teaching school at North Rich Elementary in 1972, and didn’t fully retire from Cokeville High School until May of 2015, working all of those years directly in Special Education. Pam loved her students with all of her heart, and championed the causes of any who were hurt, discouraged, or needing love. She carried the students’ burdens around with her, finding many creative ways to help and enrich both in and out of the classroom. Pam is known for sending cards, giving smiles, hugs, and sincerely cherishing her friends and family. She considered her grandchildren to be her crowning jewels, and followed them in sports and activities, always believing them to be the best at everything. She became a spirited, true blue, loyal fan of Bear Lake, Cokeville, and Rich athletics, music, and activities! When grandchildren played against grandchildren she counseled with the refs indiscriminately. She was known by many as Grandma Pam, or Baseball Grandma.

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