Meagan was born on February 24, 1987, to Joe and Debbie Letteri in Jackson, Mississippi, and spent her early childhood in Louisville, Mississippi. She later attended Ridgeland High School in Ridgeland, Mississippi, where she met her high school sweetheart, Gunnar Boykin.
Meagan was exceptionally intelligent and worked hard at everything she did, especially academics. She excelled in the classroom and taught swim lessons after school for extra money, though she enjoyed it so much she likely would have done it for free. She spent much of her free time reading and painting, rarely doing anything without Gunnar nearby.
After graduating from Ridgeland High School in 2005, Meagan attended the University of Mississippi, where she met many of her lifelong friends. She was highly involved in campus organizations at Ole Miss, including Omicron Delta Kappa, a national leadership honor society, where she served as Membership Selection Chair. During her sophomore year, she served as a student representative on the Chancellor’s Standing Committee for Instructional Technology and spent three years as an Ole Miss Ambassador. Meagan was especially proud of her time as a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority, where she served in several leadership roles, including Vice President of Finance, Assistant Treasurer, and Madison County Hometown Head.
Meagan Letteri became Meagan Boykin on June 20, 2009, when she and Gunnar were married in Ridgeland, Mississippi, shortly after she earned her first degree from Ole Miss: a Bachelor of Arts, cum laude, in Biochemistry with a minor in Biology.
The following fall, she entered the University of Mississippi School of Pharmacy and earned her second degree in May 2010, a Bachelor of Science in Pharmaceutical Sciences, cum laude. She was also accepted as a member of the prestigious Rho Chi Society.
Meagan and Gunnar welcomed their firstborn child, a daughter named Julie Scott, in February 2012 while living in Jackson, Mississippi, as Meagan worked toward earning her Doctor of Pharmacy degree — a goal she achieved in 2013 while maintaining a 3.69 GPA.
Meagan and Gunnar later moved to Conway, Arkansas, where she worked at PharMerica’s North Little Rock location for the next ten years, serving five of those years as the location’s Pharmacy Director.
While living in Conway, she and Gunnar welcomed three more children into their family: Max in 2015, Shea in 2019, and Libby in 2024.
Meagan enjoyed life and excelled in many areas, but the role she embraced most fully was being a mother. She was a dedicated and hardworking professional, yet parenting seemed to come naturally to her. She made it look effortless.
Whether it was an afternoon bike ride, backyard water fun in the summer, walking the creek bed looking for frogs in the spring, year round gardening, a random “Mommy and Max Day,” or the nearly nightly movie snuggles on the sofa, Meagan was in her element. Her children were her entire world — her purpose and the thing she looked forward to more than anything else.
Meagan leaves behind many who loved her dearly: her husband of 16 years, Gunnar; daughters Julie Scott and Libby; sons Max and Shea; her brother, Nathan Letteri (Hailea); her mother, Debbie Holbrook (Gene); her uncle, John Letteri; and her grandmother, Melva Letteri. She is also survived by 11 nieces and nephews, most of whom affectionately referred to her as “Cookie” and countless numbers of friends.
Meagan was preceded in death by her father, Dr. Joseph Daniel Letteri; her brother, Joseph Scott Letteri; her grandparents, Elizabeth “Libby” Webb Farish and David Edwin Farish, and Daniel Letteri; and her uncle, James David Farish.
Pallbearers will be Nathan Letteri, Ben Boykin, Dee N. Boykin, Wade Holeman, Sam Richard, G. D. Boykin III, Ryan Krajceck, and Scott Holbrook.
Though Meagan’s accomplishments in academics, career, and leadership were many, the legacy she was most proud of is the family she built and the love she poured into them every single day. Her presence was steady, joyful, and deeply felt by everyone who knew her. While her absence leaves an immeasurable void, the example she set as a wife, mother, daughter, sister, and friend will continue to guide and shape the lives of those who loved her most.