William (Bill) Luther Gaylord, Jr.

1926- 2022

Photo above: Autumn Morning, St. Helena, California, November 2021. By daughter Pamela.

Photo left below: Salud, May 2021. By daughter-in-law Pamela.

Welcome Family and Friends of Bill Gaylord

Salud! Thank you for joining us at our virtual memorial celebrating the life of Bill Gaylord. There are no plans for a gathering; instead, we invite you here to enjoy our brief summary of some of Bill's many accomplishments. We hope that you will be inspired to post your own comments and stories to share with us as we wish a fond farewell to Bill.

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William Luther Gaylord, Jr., born in St. Helena, California in 1926, and a 67-year resident of Sacramento, California, passed away peacefully on May 13, 2022. Although suffering from Alzheimer’s Dementia, he remained cheerful to the end.

Eulogy for Bill Gaylord

Bill was the son of William and Marion Gaylord, and brother of Edith, and Alice. He attended elementary and high schools in St. Helena and enlisted in the Navy in 1944. While attending Naval training at UC Berkeley he met and married his beloved, Shirley. Bill and Shirley lived in St. Helena, where they started their family. Bill was a loving husband and a caring and fun father, uncle, grandfather and great grandfather. He often wrote commemorative poems which he recited at family gatherings to celebrate accomplishments and the joys of being together.


It was also in St. Helena where Bill began his newspaper career as a photographer and photo engraver at the St. Helena Star. In 1951 Bill joined the Sacramento Bee as a photo engraver and moved the family to Sacramento. In 1976 he retired early to start a shop with his wife Shirley. Gaylord’s Mercantile, located in the newly formed Old Sacramento Historic District, was a perfect venue for Bill to fully develop his longtime passion of collecting and trading advertising antiques of all kinds. Bill wrote several articles published in collector’s journals about advertising memorabilia, and coined the term “advertiques”. Bill was a photographer, writer, graphic designer and self publisher of books and catalogs.


Bill Gaylord was a kind and generous man, who gave his time and money to causes of all kinds. In 1956 he was recognized by the Salvation Army for having donated to flood victims the entirety of his overtime pay at the engraving shop at the Bee, during the great Yuba City flood. He regularly donated blood to the Sacramento Blood Bank. He and Shirley were annual volunteers at the Sacramento Jazz Festival and various Old Sacramento and history related booths at the California State Fair.


Bill was dedicated to preservation of the history of Sacramento. Bill was a founding planner of the Sacramento History Museum, and in a return to his early print shop days at the Star and the Bee, volunteered for several years to operate the press in the print shop at the History Museum. He and Shirley were central planners and contributors for Old Sacramento celebrations, and one of Bill’s favorite duties as the “Governor” of Old Sacramento was parading down the boardwalk dressed as Santa and surrounded by excited children during the Old Sacramento Christmas festivities. Bill also volunteered numerous hours at the archives of the Sacramento History Center, preserving photographic collections. His efforts in all of these areas earned him formal proclamations from the Mayor and City Council of Sacramento as well as more than one key to the City.


Friends were important to Bill, and he had many of them, including those with whom he attended school in St. Helena from Kindergarten to High School. A few years after Shirley died in January 2010, Bill reunited with his high school sweetheart Beverly. Bill sold the family home in Sacramento and moved to Bev’s home in Napa in 2018, returning to his childhood haunts. The two of them enjoyed a sweet reunion of shared memories and companionship.


In 2019, Bill's declining health required more intensive care, and he was welcomed into the home of his son and daughter-in-law in Pittsburg, California for the next fourteen months. It was Bill’s wish to have his son and daughter-in-law provide care and support in the autumn of his life, and the family is grateful for their loving dedication. Bill loved the food provided by his daughter-in-law, especially the daily desserts, usually with a dollop of whipped cream on top, which would elicit an outcry of “Ooh!” from him.


The COVID-19 pandemic made Bill’s eventual move to Friendship Care Home a difficult one. He had to be constantly reminded about why we were all wearing masks. People’s masks interfered with Bill’s practice of reading the lips of those who spoke to him, but he developed a habit of pulling his own mask down slightly to share a greeting peck on the cheek with the ladies.


He is survived by one son, Scott, his wife Pamela, grandson and granddaughter-in-law Zack and Teresa and great grandchild Owen; and by one daughter Pamela, (husband Lowell died in 2020), grandson Josiah, and grandson and grand-daughter-in law Eagle and Samantha. He also leaves four nephews, and one niece, and their partners and children.


Bill, St. Helena, 1947


Shirley, St. Helena, 1947


Photo above by Shirley. Bill was frequently found behind the camera throughout his life. Finding photos with "himself" featured was a treasure hunt.


Photo above by Shirley. Here he is relaxing in the dining area of the newly purchased home in Sacramento 1952. His baby portraits of Scott and Pamela (left to right) adorn the wall.


Photos above by Loretta (Gran'mama'), 1954. Sacramento was a great location for Bill and Shirley to raise their family, but they traveled frequently to visit their parents. Most holidays were celebrated in San Francisco, at Shirley’s family home, and/or St. Helena at Bill’s family home, as well as the Sacramento home.


Photo above by Stan, 1968. L to r: sister Edith, mother Marion, Bill, sister Alice


Photo above by Lowell. The first grandchild arrived: Josiah,

followed closely by Zack and and Eagle.


Photo above by Bill Gaylord. Grandpa Bill delighted in having his grandsons come visit during the California State Fair. In the scrapbook commemorating this 1985 +- event, the picture is captioned:

“Grandparents insisted on a visit to animal barns, horse show and counties building... where we found the train poster that Grandpa and a friend designed and produced.”


Photo below, photographer unknown. Gaylord’s Mercantile 1976 to 1989


Photo below, photographer unknown. Bill, also known as Governor of Old Sacramento, in Santa disguise 1980


Photo below, photographer unknown. Bill and Shirley join Alice and Ken for a trip on the Napa Valley Wine Train in its inaugural year, September, 1989.


Photo below, photographer Jim Henley. Okay, the Rollerblades were for the grandkids Christmas (1990), but they look so good with the top hat.


Photo below by daughter Pamela. The guys gather for Christmas 1997 in Sacramento.



Photo below by Lowell. Bill and daughter Pamela share an interest in small town newspapers. 2002+-.


Photo below by Lowell. Bill on his epic photographic journey of Southern Utah, May 2010.


Photo above by Scott and Pamela. Bill at Bev’s home in Napa 2018.



Photo above by Scott and Pamela. Celebrating 93rd Birthdays, although it is true, as Bev pointed out, that she was the older of the two.


Photo below by Scott and Pamela. Bill had many happy times at his son Scott and daughter-in-law Pamela's home. 2019-2020.


Photo above by daughter-in-law Pamela.

A small dessert on the deck with Scott.


Photo above by Scott. Enjoying a wonderful full English breakfast at Kona Circle.




Photo above by daughter-in-law Pamela.

Dinner at the clubhouse.


Photo above by dusghter-in-law Pamela. In 2020, mid-pandemic, Scott and Pamela located the caring and friendly Friendship Care Home for Bill's ongoing support for daily living.




Photo above by Scott. Daughter-in-law Pamela was a constant and cheerful presence.


Photo above by daughter-in-law Pamela.

Esmeralda was Bill's favorite nurse.

"When the Saints Go Marching In"

Bill was a Dixieland Jazz enthusiast. This song was his St. Helena High School theme song (their mascot was the Saints). Enjoy this foot tapping send off for Bill Gaylord.