

Jennifer Corrine Jameson was born August 23rd 1950 in Portland Oregon, the second child to Carolyn and Denver Jameson. She lived in Oregon her entire life, growing up in Eugene where her best friend Susan also lived. Later on they moved to the big city of Hillsboro where she attended Poynter Jr. High and later graduated from Hillsboro High School in 1968. She attended Linfield college in McMinville prior to having her first child, David Hughie the following year. She married Brad Froemke and they had two children, Quentin and Cecily in 1977 and 1979 respectively. She passed away on June 2nd 2015 and is survived by her three children David, Quentin, and Cecily, her brother Hunter, grandchildren Dmitry, Solja, Natalie, and Lena, and her good friend Brock.
Jennifer really loved books and going to library and was an avid reader her entire life. She thought the destruction of the Library at Alexandria to be one of the greatest tragedies in history. Even at a young age she realized it would be impossible to read even a small portion of the books in the library but still gave it a good shot. She loved walking and hiking, especially in Forest Park and the Columbia Gorge, and made many trips on the Wildwood Trail and up Multnomah Falls. Other outdoor activities she enjoyed were mushroom hunting (her children were a bit nervous about eating these but they were apparently safe!) and golf. She didn’t have a long drive but made up for it with accuracy and consistency.
She really loved being at the beach where her family owned a trailer close enough to the ocean that you could hear the sound of the waves breaking on the shore. She went there frequently and even lived there for a time and never tired of the atmosphere. She always wished she could live at the coast.
She loved true crime novels and documentaries and TV murder mysteries. No murder was too gruesome for dinnertime conversation. She loved Star Trek and cried when Voyager ended. Her favorite movies were Eat, Pray, Love and Gifted Hands. In later years she discovered meditation and found the writing of Eknath Easwaran the most revealing.
More than anything she loved being with her children and especially her grandchildren. She conveyed absolute gratitude for the life she was gifted while here on Earth.
Arrangements by Finley Sunset Hills Mortuary.
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