
SANTA BARBARA — Stanley Isaac Clothier was born on April 8, 1921, in Lakeside, Montana, a tiny town along Flathead Lake, not far from Glacier National Park. His life began at the tail end of the “Roaring Twenties,” a time when jazz filled the air, prohibition shaped culture, and the nation stood on the brink of the Great Depression.
But Stan’s beginnings were far removed from the energy of city life. He was raised in a log cabin built by neighbors in a “housing bee,” without electricity or plumbing, warmed by a potbelly stove. One of seven children in a hardworking homesteading family, his early years were shaped by resilience, resourcefulness, and a deep connection to the land. His father, Asa, had himself journeyed west by covered wagon as a child, an echo of the American frontier that still defined Stan’s upbringing.
