This is my personal genealogy hobby site. The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some of it is my research, much of it has been shared with me.

DISCLAIMER: This is my speculative data. I've verified very little of it. Use it for hints and pointers, but do your own research!

It costs me over $50 (US) a month to have this data on the web, so your support would be appreciated! If clicking on advertisments is not your thing, please consider a donation!

Rob Salzman
e-familytree.net
PO Box 25335
Beaverton, OR
97298-0335

sponsored links

This data changes often. If you've arrived from a search engine, it's could be that you don't see the information you were looking for. The current index for e-familytree.net can be found here. You can email me at genealogy at e-familytree.net for updates, removal requests, etc.

Family Sheet

HUSBAND
Name: Rodney Jay Price Note Born: (suppressed / living) Married: (suppressed / living) Died: Father: Joseph Earl Price Mother: Nola Ann Iverson
WIFE
Name: Marnie Gayle Rogers Born: (suppressed / living) Married: (suppressed / living) Died:
CHILDREN
Name: Jason John Price Born: (suppressed / living) Died:
Name: Tyler Joseph Price Born: (suppressed / living) Died:
NOTES
1). ..Rodney Jay Price PRR00006.TXT ..edited March 7, 1996 Rodney attended Greenacres Elementary School, Alameda Junior High School and Highland High School. He was in a Cub Scout pack that met at the First Methodist Church. He completed his Bear and lion ranks. He entered the pine wood derby twice. When Rodney was about three years old he liked to play at being a farmer. Nothing had been planted for about six feet from the north edge of the lot along the back fence. On several times lookingout the dinning room window he would look up at that area and say something about tending the cows, or that the cows got out and that he should round them up. One time the family was having ice cream for desert and he brought up the ice cream from the freezer in the basement. After it was dished up he took the carton back downstairs. His father hid Rodney s dish of ice cream under the table in his father s lap. When Rodney came back up, he looked around and could not see his dish. He mumbled somethingabout he must have taken it downstairs when he took the carton down, and he went back downstairs with everybody upstairs having a hard time containing themselves. While he was downstairs the dish was put back up on the table. At a rather early age Rodney was willing to cook things. One day his parents came home and a strange smell greeted them. Rodney tried to melt butter in plastic measuring cup on the stove, and the cup melted. He played trumpet in the Alameda band. He played the trumpet in the high school band, and, during his junior and senior years, he played the bagpipes. He lettered in golf during his sophomore and junior years. A bad case of viral flu during the spring of his senior year prevented him from getting a golf letter in his senior year. For a while he had an old green VW to drive. Someone ran a stop sign and totaled the car, but no one was injured. This was replaced by a two door Toyota Celica. During one snowy winter he got it stuck in the snow on Bonneville street. The cityplowed the snow into a bank while the car was at the curb in from of his house and it was snowbound for a week. The car had a very low clearance. About 1968 Marj and Tal Neill, and their two sons, moved into the house three doors to north of the Price house. Rodney and Adam & Mike were constant friends through high school. Adam was one year younger that Rodney, and Mike was two years younger. A few years later Rodney made friends with Jeff Lycan who was in his class at school and lived on the other side of Empire Park. When the backyard at 26 Davis Dr. was initially graded, a hill was left all across the backyard that was about five feet high. When there was snow, the back gate could be opened and a sled could be ridden down to the patio. One summerRodney designed a terrace system to replace the hill. He and his dad started moving dirt and petting railroad ties up for a wall. ABout half way through the project Rodney got a job with NitroGreen and his dad finished the work. There was a pile of dirt on the patio for about a month. On the few times that there was enough snow Rodney and friends sled on the hill behind the house. The hill is named Sleigh Hill. During ninth grade Rodney and Shelly Brown went together. For the annual dance Rodney arranged to pick up a corsage at the Pocatello Greenhouse, get on the bus by Greenacres, and take it to Alameda where he had the cafeteria workers keep it in their refrigerator till the dance.

						

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
e-familytree.net is a welldesigned.net website