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Lienkaemper Funeral Chapel-Ontario

Joe Scottie Payne

December 28th, 1935 - September 12th, 2025

December 28th, 1935 - September 12th, 2025

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Joe Scottie Payne, a longtime Vale resident, passed away on Sept 12,

2025, of natural causes; he was 89.

 

Scottie was born on December 28, 1935, in the tiny town of Mullen,

Nebraska, the youngest of four children. The family moved to Vale in 1938,

after Scottie’s father purchased land to take advantage of the opportunities

provided by the Owyhee Dam project. The family cleared the land of

sagebrush and began farming. Scottie’s mother traded her upright piano to a

neighbor for a cow to have milk for Scottie, and that was the start of the

dairy.

 

When Scottie was in high school, his father purchased a registered

Guernsey cow from a dairyman in Nyssa. That cow was the beginning of

Scottie’s lifelong work with Guernseys and the herd that he built at Vale

View Farm.

 

In school, Scottie was a talented athlete and musician. He could walk

on his hands. He ran the mile at Vale High School in 4:28 in 1954 on a

cinder track. This was before the four-minute mile had been broken and

before modern training and tracks made of synthetic materials existed. The

high school record that he set lasted for many years. He loved to play the

clarinet, and had college scholarships waiting for him when he graduated

from high school but decided to take over the farm from his parents. He

joined the National Guard where he served in the machine gun platoon, and

rose to the rank of Recruit Training Sergeant where he trained new recruits.

In 1959, Scottie married Mary Long. She lived on a farm a mile away

and they had ridden the school bus together when they were kids. But when

Mary saw Scottie looking sharp in his National Guard uniform at a 4-H

tractor driving competition, well that really got her attention. Mary was

always skeptical of Scottie’s reputation as a runner, “I don’t think he ran as

fast as everybody says. I caught him, didn’t I?” They were married for 63

years and had four children, Jeff, Julie, Kathy and Chris.

 

For 55 years, Scottie and Mary ran Vale View Farm. They won

dozens of prizes for their cows at the Malheur County Fair, the Payette

County Fair, the Idaho State Fair, and the National Guernsey Show. Scottie

sold one of his top cows to a buyer in Kentucky and, in 2011, she was the

Grand Champion at the National Guernsey Show in Louisville. Over the

years they added Jerseys to the herd, and even allowed in a few Holsteins.

Besides the herd of cows, the farm was home to a few horses, a few rabbits,

and more than a few dogs and cats.Scottie had been involved in 4-H when he was in school, and he

supported the program in many ways over the years. He opened the farm to

dairy judging competitions, and coached hundreds of 4-H members on the

finer points of showmanship, fair preparation, and feeding and grooming of

dairy cows. He served as a judge at many county fairs throughout the

northwest and as the dairy judge at the Oregon State Fair.

During the years when the dairy industry was a major economic

engine in Malheur County, he was tapped to serve on numerous boards

including Darigold Inc., Dairymen’s Creamery Coop, Malheur County Fair,

American Guernsey Association, Dairy Herd Improvement Association, and

the Oregon Dairy Council. As a board member on the Oregon Dairy

Products Commission in the 1970s and 80s, he was instrumental in the

development of a highly successful milk marketing campaign built on the

slogan, “Everybody Needs Milk.” In 2010, the Oregon Dairy Farmers

Association gave him the Distinguished Service Award, and in 2012, the

College of Agricultural Sciences at Oregon State University inducted him

into the Diamond Pioneer Agricultural Career Achievement Registry in

honor of his contributions to agriculture.

 

In 1954, Scottie was among the people who built the Malheur Butte

Baptist Church and he remained a member for many years. The church

family, particularly Stan and Sharon Hawkins, provided support and

fellowship that he greatly appreciated.

 

Scottie is survived by his four children, Jeff Payne (John LaVeille),

Julie Payne, Kathy (Jay) Beckman, Chris (Darci) Payne; his seven

grandchildren: Ayrton (Sydney) Tobin, Anne (Corey) Peters, Haylie

(Colson) Barkley, McKenna (Brian) Gradin, Boston (Alexis) Payne, Brock

(Isobel) Payne, Brogan Payne; and his four great-grandchildren: Warren

Payne, Mildred Payne, Loretta Peters, and Ruth Peters. He was preceded in

death by his parents, two brothers and a sister, and his wife, Mary.

 

Scottie’s family would like to express our deep gratitude and

appreciation to the staff at Wellsprings Assisted Living, and Heart and

Home Hospice for the love, care, support and respect you showed to Dad

and to us while he was in your care. You are wonderful!

 

Per Scottie’s wishes, a formal service will not be held. Memorials

may be made to the charity of your choice.

We Entrusted Joe Payne's Care To

Lienkaemper Funeral Chapel-Ontario

For over 100 years, the Lienkaemper Funeral Chapel has served the Ontario, Oregon, community with professional, compassionate care. Our story begins in 1907 when the Peterson family, who owned a furniture store in Ontario, helped with funeral arrangements and sold caskets from the store’s basement. Over the years, the business has grown and had a number of owners, partnerships and names. Among them was our current namesake, the Lienkaemper family, who purchased the family funeral home with the mission of helping families in the Ontario community. ...

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(541) 226-3134

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