It is still possible to meet many people who admired the first wife of Russell M. Nelson, the later President of the Church – Dantzel White Nelson – not mentioning her beautiful singing and her activities as the teacher. Her life was devoted to loyalty to family, music, as well as the welfare of others.
Early Life
Dantzel White was born on February 17, 1926, in Perry, Utah to Vilate and Spencer Blackburn who encouraged her and her siblings to be parts of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Perry’s child hood initiated her to the love for the arts and to the need for excellence in any endeavor.
In her young age, Dantzel had incredible passion for music and exceptional talents to embrace people around her. In local schools, she took part in several musical shows and church events as well. The lady was able to sing beautifully and easily to a soprano pitch, and this made her to sing at community functions and on church occasions.
Career
Music and education were the most crucial activities in Dantzel’s professional career. She completed her education at the University of Utah but was also musical, acting as a vocalist for the school’s music programs.
She performed regularly as a soloist with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, now under the name of the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square and her soprano voice enriched many memorable performances. All her life she was a musician and a wife, a mother and a provider for her talented husband’s ambitious medical career and church ministry.
They got married and had ten children through whom she bore and raised and at the same time continued working as a performer and a teacher.
About Spouse: Russell M. Nelson
Dantzel married Russell M. Nelson when they both were at the university level to continue their studies. However, they exchanged their vows and tied the knot on August 31, 1945, in the Salt Lake Temple. Although they would become only business partners and not a married couple, their union would last for 58 years up to her death in 2005.
Russell M. Nelson was an eminent cardiothoracic surgery who, at the later part of his professional career, testified as one of the prophets of the Latter-day Saints Church and became the president of this church. Thus, Dantzel not only set up his career to provide and make a living in the field of medicine and in the church service.
Dantzel died a sudden death on February 12, 2005, which was six days to her seventy-ninth birthday. She was at home waiting by her husband one day when she miraculously developed heart failure and died.
She is remembered for her beautiful voice, strong-will worker, a devoted educationist, faithfulness, and a good mother who managed both family and her personal goals. Dantzel White Nelson stands for the beautiful example of how it is possible to sustain personal skills and dreams in case the partner faces high work and church expectations.
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