Richard Powell Lindsay was a Utah politician and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1989 to 1994.
Background
Lindsay was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Samuel J. Lindsay and his wife, Mary Alice Powell. Lindsay was able to began his college studies because Samuel S. Smith, a son of Joseph F. Smith who had been a bishop in the West Jordan Stake at the same time as his father, gave him a ride to the University of Utah every day.
Career
She had been trained as a nurse and through these means was able to support the family. At age 18, Lindsay joined the United States. Navy, but World World War II ended before he was sent into combat and he spent most of his time in the navy in Colorado. Lindsay earned a bachelor"s degree from the University of Denver and a masters and Doctor of Philosophy degrees from the University of Utah.
In November 1949, Lindsay married Marian Bangerter in the Salt Lake Temple.
While living in Denver, Lindsay served as a counselor in a bishopric to Victor L. Brown. In 1959, Lindsay began a career with the government of the State of Utah.
He served as Utah State Commissioner of Finance, with the Utah Juvenile Court System, as director of the Utah Council on Criminal Justice Administration and starting in 1979 as director of the Utah State Department of Human Services. During the time he was a state legislator, Lindsay was the director of the University of Utah Bureau of Community Development and an adjunct professor at Brigham Young University (Brigham Young University).
Among other church positions, Lindsay served as a bishop and stake president
He was named the national education director of the Religious Alliance Against Pornography in 1995. He also worked on fighting alcohol abuse, for which he was honored by the American Council on Alcohol Problems in 1996. Richard and Marian Lindsay are the parents of six children and were named Utah"s Parents of the Year in 2001.
Lindsay died of cancer in Salt Lake City.
Membership
He was a Democratic Utah State Senator in 1965 and a member of the Utah House of Representatives from 1973 to 1976. In 1989, Lindsay was called as a general authority and member of the Second Quorum of the Seventy. As a member of the Seventy, he served as the first president of the church"s Africa Area.