From Deseret News archives:

Elder Haight dies at 97 as oldest LDS apostle

Published: Saturday, July 31, 2004 11:03 p.m. MDT
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His generosity was also a hallmark, according to those close to him. After returning from serving as mission president in Scotland, Elder Haight was approached by BYU President Ernest L. Wilkinson to assist him in establishing an endowment program for potential students who couldn't afford to attend school.

To this request he said, "My wife and I felt we could help assist youth financially. We love the youth, and we feel that if the world is to get back on its feet morally, we must develop strong, moral leaders of the world."

In a 1986 profile in the church's Ensign magazine, Elder Ronald E. Poelman of the First Quorum of the Seventy described how both Elder and Ruby Haight went out of their way to be of service to others. In fact, their home was open to any who needed a place to stay for a night.

Their daughter, Karen Huntsman, said, "I could come home from college and never know who would be sleeping in our house, who would be eating around our table."

Son-in-law and billionaire industrialist Jon Huntsman said he regarded Elder Haight as a combination of a brother, close friend and father. "He could not be in a crowd, or even with an individual, without saying something that would build them collectively or individually."

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Elder Haight once said that one of the things he enjoyed most about representing the church around the world was meeting people that LDS missionaries had been teaching so he could testify in person that what they had been taught about the gospel was true.

Service and honors

David Bruce Haight was born Sept. 2, 1906, in Oakley, Idaho, to Hector C. and Clara Tuttle Haight. His father died when he was 9 years old, and he was reared primarily by his mother and his older brothers and sisters. After attending Oakley High School and Albion State Normal School in Idaho, he completed his schooling at Utah State University and served as a commander in the Navy during World War II, where he earned a special citation from the Pacific fleet commander.

He married Ruby Olson on Sept. 4, 1930, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple, and they have three children: Bruce, Robert and Karen. He served as mayor of Palo Alto, Calif., from 1959 to 1963, and resigned that position to serve the church as president of the Scottish Mission. After returning from Scotland, he served as assistant to the president of Brigham Young University.

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Elder David B. Haight speaks during the Saturday morning session of LDS conference in April 2004.

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