UTAHNS WE’VE LOST

Remembering The Utahns We’ve Lost: Ken Kirkman

Jun 14, 2020, 10:39 PM | Updated: Jun 15, 2020, 9:25 am

Karen and Ken Kirkman. (Lindsay Salazar)...

Karen and Ken Kirkman. (Lindsay Salazar)

(Lindsay Salazar)

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – “Due to coronavirus restrictions” is likely a phrase no one expected to write in their loved ones’ obituary this year.

But day after day, Utah families are having to plan limited funeral services or postpone memorials altogether because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We couldn’t have a funeral,” Kortnie Aldous said of laying her father, Ken Kirkman, to rest. “We could only have a graveside service and we could only have 20 people at that graveside service. And we had to social distance and wear masks.”

But Kirkman’s friends and neighbors made it clear they would have been there if they could.

Hundreds of people lined the one-mile stretch between the mortuary and the cemetery.

Hundreds lined the street leading to the cemetery where Ken Kirkman was buried. (Trisha Terry)

“It was so moving,” Aldous said. “They had flags and balloons and we could just feel so much love from them and for my dad. It was really a beautiful sight.”

Beautiful, but not at all how the family ever expected they had to say goodbye to their father and grandfather.

“He was the coolest grandpa,” said Aldous. “He would do anything for his grandkids.”

At 74, Kirkman was more than just a kid at heart. He was one of the kids.

You could even catch him on the popular social media app TikTok dancing and singing along with the teens.

“At Sunday dinners we could never find my dad because he was either downstairs playing pool with the kids or outside in the yard taking them for rides or playing baseball with them,” Aldous said. “He was never with the adults. He was always with the kids.”

Kirkman, who was in good health, even helped coach his grandson’s little league football team.

“He was the grandpa coach,” Aldous said.

Ken Kirkman helped coach his grandson’s football team.

It was late April when Kirkman and his wife Karen started feeling sick. Karen had the first symptoms.

“It was gastrointestinal. It was never a shortness of breath. Never anything respiratory,” Aldous said. “We were really shocked when they tested positive.”

Within a week both Ken and Karen were in the ER.

“They took them straight to the ICU because their oxygen saturation was so low,” Aldous said.

It wasn’t long before Karen started to improve but her husband remained critical.

“In the middle of the night they called me and they say, ‘We’re so sorry but we do need to intubate your dad and put him on a ventilator,’” said Aldous as she described one of the hardest moments of the ordeal. “So I got to talk to him one last time before they intubated him and I just expressed my love to him and I told him he’s been the best dad, the best grandpa, the best person I know and that we loved him and we would be there with him.”

But Aldous couldn’t be there with him. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, no one could visit Ken or Karen in the hospital.

“One of the beautiful parts of this story is that because my mom had the virus, she got to go down to his hospital room,” she said. “They would wheel her down every day and she got to sit with him and hold his hand and talk to him so we feel blessed for that.”

After 12 days in the hospital, Karen Kirkman was released. Aldous took her home from the hospital and then got a call saying all of her father’s organs were shutting down.

“I feel like he was waiting for her. To know that she was home and that she was safe,” said Aldous.

Ken and Karen Kirkman grew up five houses away from each other. They were high school sweethearts and married for more than 50 years. Aldous called her parents “soulmates.”

Karen and Ken Kirkman were married for over 50 years.

It was difficult to watch her parents be apart from each other as her dad passed on.

“The most cruel part of this whole situation is that my mom was home by herself,” Aldous said. “She was still shedding the virus so we couldn’t go over and be with her when he passed.”

But Aldous took comfort knowing her father was not alone.

“The nurses, the doctors were amazing,” she said. “They stayed with him all night. He was never alone. They held his hand and they had an iPad so we could Facetime him and we all got to say goodbye to him.”

More than a month later, Karen Kirkman was still fighting to get back to full health. The family doesn’t know where she or Ken caught the virus.

“They said they needed to run into the store, just for one thing,” Aldous said. “My dad went and grabbed it and my mom stood in line at the self-checkout. She said no one was social-distancing, no one was wearing masks and that was really the only place that they picked it up.”

Losing her father — and knowing she could have lost her mother as well — has made Kortnie Aldous even more cautious of COVID-19 than she was before.

A soldier hands the U.S. flag from Ken Kirkman’s casket to Karen Kirkman. (Trisha Terry)

“I sometimes see older people out without a mask in the grocery store or wherever,” she said. “It breaks my heart. I mean, when you’ve seen somebody who’s been intubated and they can’t respond and they’re on a ventilator fighting for their life, it’s heartbreaking.”

Though his life was cut short, Ken Kirkman left a lifetime of memories behind.

“He was this incredible artist and he would make these fantastic pinatas for the kids,” she said. “Years ago they used to break them open because they were full of candy but in the last three to four years, I think the grandkids started to realize how much time and effort went into creating those pinatas, so they kept them.”

Aldous now has a basement filled with those memories. Memories she and her children will cherish forever.

“He loved people but he really loved his family,” she said.

Ken Kirkman with members of his family. Ken Kirkman with members of his family. Ken Kirkman with members of his family. Ken Kirkman with members of his family.

By May 8, the day Ken Kirkman died, Utah had lost 61 people to COVID-19. Now, the death toll has more than doubled.

While health officials cannot list their names, KSL wants to make sure we remember each one as a name, with a story and a family left behind.

KSL and our partners at KSL.com, KSL Newsradio and the Deseret News are honored to share their stories as we come together as a state to remember the Utahns we’ve lost.

If you’ve lost a loved one to COVID-19 and would like to help us pay tribute to them, email us at COVID@ksl.com.

KSL 5 TV Live

Utahns We’ve Lost

The lawn of Timpanogos Regional Hospital was adorned with flags to honor the lives lost to COVID-19...

Ashley Moser, KSL TV

Hospital ceremony honors survivors, healthcare heroes as U.S. hits one million COVID-19 deaths

The lawn of Timpanogos Regional Hospital was adorned with flags to honor the lives lost to COVID-19, those who survived it, and the caregivers and healthcare workers who cared for the sick.

2 years ago

(KSL TV)...

Matt Gephardt, KSL TV

COVID-19 funeral assistance available to reimburse funeral costs for families 

More Americans lose their lives to COVID-19 with each passing day. There is financial help from the federal government for families who lose loved ones to the virus, but most people are not getting it. 

2 years ago

(KSL TV)...

Daniella Rivera, KSL TV

COVID risk: Do department policies protect Utah law enforcement and the public?

COVID-19 has become the number one cause of line-of-duty deaths among U.S. law enforcement officers. KSL surveyed Utah law enforcement and took a hard look at how department policies across the state impact both police and the public.

2 years ago

Capt. Merrill Bone with the Unified Fire Authority. (UFA)...

Madison Swenson, KSL TV

Unified firefighter dies due to complications with COVID-19

An active-duty firefighter with the Unified Fire Authority has died "due to complications with COVID-19," according to the department.

2 years ago

The Window Rock formation is illuminated on March 17 in Window Rock, Arizona during an event to rem...

Cary J. Schwanitz, KSL TV

Navajo Nation Day Of Prayer Planned To Honor Pandemic Victims

Navajo Nation leaders announced a virtual Day of Prayer scheduled for Friday to honor all of the lives lost to COVID-19.

3 years ago

...

Matt Rascon, KSL TV

Colleagues Remember Physician’s Life, Urge Others To Seek Help For Mental Health

Health care workers and friends gathered at Riverton Hospital Friday to remember Dr. Cesar Briganti, who they say died by suicide after a yearslong struggle with depression that was magnified during the pandemic.

3 years ago

Sponsored Articles

Stack of old laptops with dark background...

PC Laptops

Old Laptop Upgrades You Need to Try Before Throwing it Away

Get the most out of your investment. Try these old laptop upgrades before throwing it out to keep it running fast and efficient.

Happy diverse college or university students are having fun on their graduation day...

BYU MBA at the Marriott School of Business

How to Choose What MBA Program is Right for You: Take this Quiz Before You Apply!

Wondering what MBA program is right for you? Take this quiz before you apply to see if it will help you meet your goals.

Close up of an offset printing machine during production...

Les Olson IT

Top 7 Reasons to Add a Production Printer to Your Business

Learn about the different digital production printers and how they can help your company save time and money.

vintage photo of lighting showroom featuring chandeliers, lamps, wall lights and mirrors...

Lighting Design

History of Lighting Design | Over 25 Years of Providing Utah With the Latest Trends and Styles

Read about the history of Lighting Design, a family-owned and operated business that paved the way for the lighting industry in Utah.

Fiber Optical cables connected to an optic ports and Network cables connected to ethernet ports...

Brian Huston, CE and Anthony Perkins, BICSI

Why Every Business Needs a Structured Cabling System

A structured cabling system benefits businesses by giving you faster processing speeds and making your network more efficient and reliable.

notebook with password notes highlighted...

PC Laptops

How to Create Strong Passwords You Can Actually Remember

Learn how you can create strong passwords that are actually easy to remember! In a short time you can create new ones in seconds.

Remembering The Utahns We’ve Lost: Ken Kirkman