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Polygamous towns on Utah-Arizona border host memorial for 13 in family who died in flood

Community members from Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz., attend a memorial service on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2015 for 12 women and children swept away in a deadly flash flood nearly two weeks earlier on the Utah-Arizona border. One six-year-old boy is still missing. AP Photo/Rick Bowmer

HILDALE, Utah – A young survivor remembers his heart “whacking like a jackhammer” in the moments before a flash flood swept him and his family away nearly two weeks ago.

Joseph Jessop Jr. spoke Saturday during a rare public memorial service hosted by two often-secretive polygamous towns on the Utah-Arizona border.

READ MORE: At least 16 dead in flash floods that hit southern Utah

He said he knows the “heavenly father wanted this to happen,” adding that he’s “grateful for the experience.”

Jessop’s mothers – Josephine Jessop and Naomi Jessop and his aunt, Della Black – perished with 10 of their children in the Sept. 14 flood. That number includes one boy who remains missing.

The neighbouring towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona, hosted the afternoon memorial service at the top of a canyon road in Maxwell Park, attracting a few hundred people, including Utah Gov. Gary Herbert.

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