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<indent>Hello there</indent> <indent>Hello there</indent>
Hello again Hello again

Don Wynn Esplin was born in Cedar City on April 2, 1927, third of five children born to Ann Amelia Chamberlain Esplin and Francis (Frant) Esplin. At the time, Cedar City had a population of just 2,000 people; today, it is a bustling town numbering some 28,000 people. Don's mother, Ann Amelia Chamberlain, was one of 54 children born to Thomas Chamberlain, a well-known rancher in the Southern Utah community of Orderville. Thomas had 6 wives when Polygamous marriages were still legal within the church of Jesus Christ and the Latter-Day Saints.

Don was born with a rare congenital skin disorder, epidermolysis bullosa. The particular type of EB that Don had caused him to be born with skin missing (denuded) on the front of both legs from the knees to the tops of his feet. At the time, no one in his family had been born with this condition.

His skin was fragile and grew in after a few weeks. He remained somewhat smaller of statue than his siblings.

Don was the recipient of numerous awards and was a young PhD at the University of Utah.

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<indent>Hello there</indent> Hello again

Don Wynn Esplin was born in Cedar City on April 2, 1927, third of five children born to Ann Amelia Chamberlain Esplin and Francis (Frant) Esplin. At the time, Cedar City had a population of just 2,000 people; today, it is a bustling town numbering some 28,000 people. Don's mother, Ann Amelia Chamberlain, was one of 54 children born to Thomas Chamberlain, a well-known rancher in the Southern Utah community of Orderville. Thomas had 6 wives when Polygamous marriages were still legal within the church of Jesus Christ and the Latter-Day Saints.

Don was born with a rare congenital skin disorder, epidermolysis bullosa. The particular type of EB that Don had caused him to be born with skin missing (denuded) on the front of both legs from the knees to the tops of his feet. At the time, no one in his family had been born with this condition.

His skin was fragile and grew in after a few weeks. He remained somewhat smaller of statue than his siblings.

Don was the recipient of numerous awards and was a young PhD at the University of Utah.

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