Russell M. Nelson

@Religious Leaders, Family and Facts

Russell M

Sep 9, 1924

UtahPhilanthropistsAmericanUniversity Of MinnesotaLeadersSpiritual & Religious LeadersSurgeonsVirgo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 9, 1924
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Religious Leaders, Philanthropists, University Of Minnesota, Leaders, Spiritual & Religious Leaders, Surgeons
  • City/State: Utah
  • Spouses: Wendy Lee Watson (m. 2006), Dantzel White (1945–2005; deceased)
  • Siblings: Enid Nelson DeBirk, Marjory Edna Nelson Rohlfing, Robert Harold Nelson
  • Known as: Russell Marion Nelson Sr.

Russell M. Nelson born at

Salt Lake City, Utah

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Birth Place

Russell M. Nelson and his first wife, fellow University of Utah student Dantzel White, met while they both were attending college. After dating for three years, the couple married on August 31, 1945, in the Salt Lake Temple. They had ten children together, nine daughters, Rosalie, Sylvia, Marsha, Wendy, Brenda, Emily, Laurie, Marjorie, and Gloria, and one son, Russell. On January 29, 1995, Emily died of cancer when she was 37 years old.

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Personal Life

On February 12, 2005, Nelson lost his first wife unexpectedly. She was 78 at the time of her sudden death. He remarried the following year. His second wife is the Canadian nurse and educator Wendy L. Watson. This ceremony took place at the Salt Lake Temple as well. This is Watson’s first marriage.

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Personal Life

Nelson has published several books over the years, including a memoir titled ‘From Heart to Heart’ (1979).

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Personal Life

Born on September 9, 1924, in Salt Lake City, Utah, Russell Nelson was one of the four children of Marion Clavar Nelson (1897–1990) and Floss Edna Nelson (née Anderson; 1893–1983). He had three siblings, one brother, Robert Harold (1931–2014), and two sisters, Marjory Edna (1920–2016) and Enid (b. 1926).

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Childhood & Early Life

Nelson’s father was a journalist who worked for the Deseret News. He later became the manager of Gillham Advertising Agency. Neither of his parents was an active Mormon when Nelson was young. However, they made sure that he attended Sunday School regularly. When he was 16 years old, he was baptised and became a member of the LDS Church.

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Childhood & Early Life

Nelson attended LDS Business College, concurrently with high school enrolment. He also landed a job as an assistant secretary at a bank. At the age of 16, he graduated from high school and subsequently started attending the University of Utah.

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Childhood & Early Life

He earned his B.A. degree in 1945 and M.D. degree in 1947. He enrolled at the medical school while still working on his bachelor’s degree and finished the four-year M.D. program a year early.

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Childhood & Early Life

After becoming an M.D., Nelson enrolled at the University of Minnesota for surgical training and doctoral studies. In 1951, he earned his Ph.D. He then joined the group of researchers who created the heart-lung machine that was utilized during the first-ever human open-heart surgery using cardiopulmonary bypass in March 1951.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1955, Russell Nelson joined the University of Utah School of Medicine as a faculty member. Soon, he developed his own heart-lung bypass machine and used it to perform the first open-heart surgery in the state of Utah at the Salt Lake General Hospital (SLGH). The patient was an adult with an atrial septal defect. For a considerable period, he served as the director of the University of Utah thoracic surgery residency program.

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Career as a Surgeon

This set off an illustrious career with countless achievements. He conducted the first successful paediatric cardiac operation at the SLGH, a complete mending of “Tetralogy of Fallot” in a four-year-old girl, in March 1956.

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Career as a Surgeon

Nelson was one of the leading surgeons who worked with patients suffering from coronary artery disease. He was also significantly involved in the advancement of valvular surgery. He conducted one of the first repairs of tricuspid valve regurgitation on a Latter-day Saint stake patriarch in 1960 and later, on the future LDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball.

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Career as a Surgeon

In 1965, Nelson declined to join the University of Chicago as the head of their department of thoracic surgery. Instead, he started taking part in the administrative side of medicine and was subsequently picked as the president of the Utah State Medical Association. He also served as the Chairperson of the Division of Thoracic Surgery at LDS Hospital.

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Career as a Surgeon

Nelson received the national honour of being the president of the Society for Vascular Surgery for 1975. Furthermore, he was chosen as the director of the American Board of Thoracic Surgery. Nelson visited various countries in South America and Africa as well as China and India as a medical doctor and to speak in conferences.

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Career as a Surgeon

As a devout member of the LDS Church, Russell M. Nelson has been actively involved in the matters pertaining to the church while simultaneously maintaining a busy career in medicine. After his first marriage in 1945, he served the church as a counsellor in bishoprics and as a member of a stake high council.

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Religious Service

In 1964, he was appointed as a stake president in Salt Lake City and would perform the duties the position required until 1971. He spent eight years as the church's Sunday School General President as well as four years as a regional representative.

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Religious Service

On April 12, 1984, he was made an apostle by Gordon B. Hinckley. Following the deaths of the Quorum members LeGrand Richards and Mark E. Petersen, Nelson became the member of the Quorum of the Twelve and Dallin H. Oaks was also sustained in the same position.

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Religious Service

Between 2007 and 2015, he served as a member of the Church Boards of Trustees/Education, which is the governing body of the Church Educational System. He was later elected as the chairman of its executive committee.

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Religious Service

On July 3, 2015, the president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the LDS Church Boyd K. Packer passed away, and Nelson effectively became the senior most member of the Quorum of the Twelve and was later ordained the quorum's president.

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Religious Service