Click here to find out more
 


Click Here to Shop  -- Meridian Marketplace

LDSGetaway.com
LDSPro.com




Click here to find out more






Share the article on this page with a friend.
Click here.
Meridian Magazine : : Home

Helen Spencer Schlie has been creating things all her life. In her winter years, she is finally fulfilling a dream that will bring ice cream and prospective missionaries together in a new and compelling way.

At the age of 21, Helen owned a bakery in Oxford, Michigan, the state of her birth, where she learned culinary arts from a Viennese baker of some renown. When getting up in the middle of the night to create loaves of bread became tiresome, she sold the business and bought a millinery shop.  Her up-to-date hat designs sold well but Helen decided she could use her talents in a different way. She joined the J.C. Penney Company in their advertising and display department and enjoyed many years of service, acting as hostess for Mr. Penney himself on many occasions.

Helen Spencer Schlie

Creating magnificent music is another of Helen’s talents. She played clarinet in concert and marching bands and orchestras, sang alto in operettas and chorale groups, and enjoyed singing duets with a friend who had a fine soprano voice.  Helen directed a Presbyterian Church choir for fifteen years before discovering The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints through an introduction to the Tabernacle Choir on her initial trip to Salt Lake City.   She sang in the Detroit Stake choir for 2 years, and even though she recognized the Book of Mormon as a second witness of Jesus Christ, it took four years of study--two as a member of the Detroit Stake choir--before she knew the Book of Mormon was true and accepted baptism. She delights in remembering, “Governor George Romney was my stake president, and his wife, Lenore, was one of the finest friends anyone could imagine. And I was Mitt Romney’s Sunday school teacher!”

It was five more years before Helen’s husband, Walter Schlie, joined the church in June 1961, during which time they moved home and bought a bookstore a block west of the Mesa Temple in Arizona.

After some 25 years of exceptional bookstore experience, opposition struck. “As a result of financial setbacks because of the downturn in real estate values in the early '80s," says Helen, “we were out of the bookstore and lost everything, including our home. Then Walter contracted cancer. I nursed him for 11 years prior to his death in 1995. In the year 2000 I discovered I had breast cancer, which required an operation, chemotherapy and radiation. I’ve been in remission for two years, and my hair has grown back enough to have my braid again, so I have a place to park my poetry pen.”

Since then, Helen Spencer Schlie has been blessed with the kind of faith that overcomes tribulation and turns sorrow into joy both for herself and countless others. Despite the ripening years, she has unusual energy. By means of determination, fortitude, and a series of miracles, she has opened another store—this time a collection of outstanding works of art by well-known LDS artists and others.

In a most unusual way, it is through this art gallery in beautiful downtown Apache Junction, Arizona that Helen and Walter’s original dream of helping young people save for missions, experience the blessings of hard work, and learn business skills, is coming to fruition.

It all began thirty-five years ago, when an authentic copy of an original Book of Mormon came into Helen and Walter’s possession. Mrs. R. W. Young was the first owner, and later passed it to a gentleman named Wilfred Stoke.

“When we lost the bookstore,” Helen recalls, “we decided to put the treasured book up for collateral against a loan in order to survive. A man eventually bought the book. That was fifteen years ago.”

Time and its many trials passed, until the day arrived when Helen felt a strong prompting—it was time to bring about the missionary project. Realizing that her years on earth wouldn’t last indefinitely, and not wanting the dreams she and Walter had shared to die with her, she began contemplating ways to move forward. It was then she remembered the old Book of Mormon.

“When I called the stake president who had bought the book, I could hardly believe it,” she says. “He immediately asked if I would like the book back. And then he did a marvelous thing. He offered it to me for exactly the same price he’d paid so long ago.”

With the book safely in her possession once more, Helen began planning.  “It was too fragile to read,” she says. “After discussing the whole idea with the First Presidency of the Church, I decided to have a professional framer, one of America's most skilled craftsmen, take the book apart and preserve every page with museum quality mat boards and special ultraviolet-screening double-faced glass panels. He then surrounded each one in beautiful Purple Heart hardwood (like dense ebony), cornered with 14k gold filigree bas-relief figures of the Angel Moroni. Each mounting is freestanding, allowing both sides to be viewed. And each page will be identified with two signatures of authenticity. Now, two hundred and ninety people will one day possess a cherished heirloom they can share with their descendants.”

It is the money from the sale of these precious pages that Helen Schlie will use to fund her remarkable missionary scheme.

“Walter and I worked on this idea for thirty years,” she says, adding, “Knowing how hard it is for teenagers to earn money for missions, we came up with a solution that I’m at last able to carry out. I intend to fund small ice-cream businesses to be run by sixteen to eighteen-year-olds anywhere in the world. In every case, a twelve to fifteen-year-old can accompany the older young man. They will own the business and do all the work, the marketing, selling, whatever is necessary.”

Helen continues, “The profits will be theirs to be saved for missionary service. The young men will commit to learning foreign languages before turning nineteen. There will be incentive competitions and plenty of guidance available. It is hoped that this endeavor will touch many lives for good.”

Helen’s creative genius doesn’t stop there. She is an accomplished jeweler and makes optic fiber LDS jewelry containing hidden Book of Mormon messages in every language in which the book is written. The sale of these items will also go toward funding the missionary venture. 

Helen Spencer Schlie has one daughter, four grandchildren, and twelve great-grandchildren. But her family of friends extends far beyond immediate relations. Whether she’s taking time chatting to art enthusiasts from every corner of earth, serving as an ordinance worker and organist in the Arizona Temple, or helping the missionaries, both present and future—her light shines forth, creating a welcome that is far removed from the chill of ice-cream.

For more information about Helen Spencer Schlie, please visit her website (designed by Janet Morrow) at www.schliegallery.com

Article by LDS Author, Anne Bradshaw
www.annebradshaw.com

 

Click here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.


© 2002Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

 

 

About the Author:


Article by LDS author, Anne Bradshaw
www.annebradshaw.com

What do you think?
Share your thoughts, comments, and impressions about this article.
Related Resources:

Missionary Journal Archive

Format for Print
Click Here