Theodore Ossip Thatcher
Theodore Ossip Thatcher, 97, passed away November 23,
2007, at his home in River Heights of causes incident
to age.
Ted was born May 3, 1910, in Ogden, Utah, to Franklin
Davis Thatcher and Hannah Mathews Thatcher. Ted’s
earliest years included living in Ogden and Sandy
before the family returned to Cache Valley. He lived
in River Heights from the age of 12, and in 1929, he
graduated from North Cache High School, where his
father taught wood shop.
Ted attended Utah Agricultural College from 1929 to
1935 and earned a bachelor’s degree in botany and
entomology, then a master’s in entomology. In 1936 he
went to work for the National Park Service as the
first full-time ranger at Lehman Caves National
Monument, now part of Great Basin National Park. While
there, he set up the first official weather reporting
station in eastern Nevada and later received an award
from the National Weather Service for it.
He married Zella Wood, daughter of J. Karl Wood and
Phebe Ricks Wood, on June 21, 1938, in the Logan LDS
temple. They spent their first two years living at
Lehman Caves and loved being out in the wilderness
together.
Having been in ROTC throughout his college years, he
was called up to active duty in the Army in January
1941, leaving his wife and young daughter Evelyn in
Utah, and served three years in Europe commanding an
anti-aircraft battery. Upon his return, he used the GI
Bill to earn his Ph.D. in entomology from the
University of California at Berkeley.
He was hired by Colorado State University’s Entomology
Department in 1949, and he taught there until his
retirement in 1973, when he and Zella moved back to
River Heights to look after his aging mother. In 1961,
he interrupted his teaching at CSU to take a contract
with USAID in Peshawar, Pakistan, where he was an
advisor at Peshawar University, helping to develop a
science curriculum there. With his native intellectual
curiosity about the world, this experience was
wonderful for him and for his family, and they made
many friends in Pakistan. In his retirement, he
continued to love working with insects, and he took
several overseas contracts to assist people with grain
storage issues in Senegal, Kenya, and Pakistan.
Ted was always interested in the world around him. He
loved nature and enjoyed teaching people about plants
and animals until his death. He particularly enjoyed
showing children how to identify and collect insects.
He also loved the arts and bought season tickets at
the opera until his health would no longer permit it.
Science and technology also interested him, and he
took an interest in computers and other modern
technology well into his 90s.
Ted joined the LDS Church in 1938 and had a testimony
of it throughout his life. He served in numerous ward
and stake positions, including in a bishopric, a high
council, and as stake librarian.
Ted was preceded in death by his wife Zella in 1995
and daughter Evelyn in 2001. He is survived by his
daughter Elaine of River Heights and his son Bruce F.
(Laura) of Orem.
Funeral services will be held at 11:00 AM on
Wednesday, November 28, 2007 in the Providence Stake
Center, 800 South 600 East in River Heights. A
viewing will be held prior to services at the church
from 9:00 to 10:30 AM. Interment will be in the
Providence City Cemetery. Condolences may be sent to
the family at Allen Mortuaries.