
James
E. McGinty
James E. McGinty, 85, Seneca, died suddenly Thursday evening, June
8, 2006, at his home.
He
was born January 13, 1921, on a farm north of Seneca, the son of John
and Catherine McQuaid McGinty. When he was 12 years old, the family
moved into Seneca. He attended Blue Star School and Sts. Peter &
Paul School He entered the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1939 and worked
at Seneca during the construction of the dam at Lake Nemaha. He also
worked at Omaha and Marysville and completed his high school education
while he was with the corps.
He volunteered for the U.S. Army and was inducted
on June 20, 1942. He served with the 716th Antiaircraft Artillery Searchlight
Battery in California, North Carolina, New York, Pearl Harbor, and Saipan.
He was discharged on December 13, 1945, as a first sergeant. Following
his discharge, he worked as an electrician and then joined the U.S.
Postal Service as a rural carrier in 1949. Jim retired in 1976 after
he was injured at work.
On October 14, 1950, he married Helen
A. Heintzelman at Sacred Heart Church in Leavenworth. She survives of
the home.
He was a member of Sts. Peter & Paul
Church, the St. Joseph Society, and the Knights of Columbus. He was
a lifetime member of the Earle W. Taylor Post #21 of the American Legion
and served as the commander twice. He was also the service officer for
the American Legion for more than 40 years. Jim was a member of the
Seneca Memorial Post #7458 of the VFW, the 40 & 8, and Chapter #20
of the DAV at Marysville. He enjoyed hunting and fishing and previously
had raised pheasants. Jim worked on the Seneca Centennial Committee.
He enjoyed visiting with people and coffee at Harsh’s.
Survivors besides his wife are three sons,
Daniel of St. George, KS, Thomas and his wife Waneta, of Spring, TX,
and Steven and his wife Trish, of Casper, WY; and a daughter, Mary Sparling
and her husband Gary, of Seneca; a brother, Leonard McGinty of Wichita;
and five grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by three brothers,
Emmett, John, and Clarence McGinty; and five sisters, Catherine Schoenberger,
Teresa Winkler, Madelyn Winterscheidt, Rita Thompson, and Erma Cox.
Mass of Christian burial will be 10 AM
Monday at Sts. Peter & Paul Church in Seneca. Inurnment will be
in the Sts. Peter & Paul Church cemetery, with military honors by
the
American Legion and VFW. Rosaries will be prayed at the Lauer Funeral
Home at 2 & 7 PM on Sunday.
Memorials may be given for the Nemaha
Valley Community Hospital, the new Seneca City Swimming Pool development,
or the Sts. Peter & Paul Church cemetery, and sent in care of the
family.