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Harry van Soolen

Harry van Soolen

Harry van Soolen was born April 24, 1940 in Rotterdam, the Netherlands to

Hendrikus Marcel Johannes van Soolen and Johanna Hendrika de Ligt.

Three weeks later, while introducing relatives to her first-born son on the

outskirts of the city, Johanna watched as the Luftwaffe carried out the infamous

Rotterdam Blitzkrieg by raining bombs from the sky. Much of the city was destroyed.

In this, Harry began life under military occupation during the most destructive

and cruel war the world has ever known. Even under the duress and stress of

occupation, Harry developed his curious and creative mind.

At the end of World War II, Harry’s parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of

Latter-day Saints in Rotterdam. The van Soolen family, then with four children,

was offered a lottery to seek residency in the United States. Two years later,

they won the lottery, boarded a steamship across the Atlantic to America,

and took a chartered bus into Salt Lake City, arriving just before Christmas 1950.

He attended West High School in Salt Lake City. After high school,

Harry joined the United Sates Army and the 101st Airborne, where he was a

paratrooper and weapons specialist. From his experience in the military,

Harry learned the importance of education. He then graduated in

Mechanical Drafting from the Technical Engineering Institute in Salt Lake City.

He would spend the rest of his life — in one capacity or another, professionally or

personally, with a pencil or a pen-and-napkin or a computer — drafting and

esigning everything from top secret military equipment, large power systems,

HVAC, and house plans, to widgets, knickknacks and whirligigs. Harry also

had the skills to physically conjure almost any design he could dream up on

paper. Upon constructing an 8-foot x 8-foot quad drone, he said, “I wonder what

I could do if I had a real budget.”

Harry further studied at Utah Technical College, Northrup University — where

he earned the Aircraft Mechanics License, Airframe and Powerplant – and

earned BS degrees in Computer Science, Mathematics, and Art, each from

Westminster College. While studying art under Don Doxey, Harry’s excellent

portraiture skills earned him a spot in the MFA program at the University of Utah

under portrait artist Alvin Gittins. Deciding not to pursue painting, he said,

“Painting is a lonely existence.” Harry preferred to collaborate with others on

 highly technical projects.

Harry would get involved in electric vehicles, becoming the president of the

Utah Electric Vehicle Association, violin making, bike building, building Electrathon

cars with local high schools, filmmaking, chess, philosophy, woodworking, rocket science

electronics, robotics, knife making, leather working, bike racing, flying and soaring,

quadcopters and model planes, gardening, computer programming, sailing, prospecting,

and a bunch of other stuff. Harry’s life, interests and personality cannot be confined to a

sheet or two of paper. Harry was a true polymath, a man of deep intelligence and broad talent.

Harry married the love of his life, Gloria Lee Morrison, on September 19, 1969.

Together they traveled throughout the United States, Canada and Europe. They were

married for fifty-three years, when Harry’s heart was broken at the time of Gloria’s passing.

Their marriage was blessed with the addition of their son, Benjamin Lee van Soolen.

Together, their small family could be found engrossed in one of their many passion projects.

Gloria said of the family, they believed that together they could accomplish the impossible,

“the impossible just takes a little longer.”

Harry passed away peacefully at home December 30, 2024, after a year-long battle with cancer.

Harry is preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Gloria; and his brother Eduard.

Harry is survived by his son Benjamin, brothers Rudy, Robert, and Jerry, and many

nieces and nephews.   

Services will be held on Wednesday, January 8, 2025, at 12 Noon at the Pavant Ward chapel,

5000 West Pavant Ave (3725 So), West Valley City, Utah. Interment will follow with

Full Military Honors in the Memorial Estates Mountain View Cemetery, 3115 East Bengal Blvd (7800 So).

Cottonwood Heights, Utah. Online condolences and memories can be shared at www.daltonhoopes.com.

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