If this site was useful to you, we'd be happy for a small donation. Be sure to enter "MLA donation" in the Comments box.

Stuckey, Walter E. (1909-2005): Difference between revisions

From MLA Biograph Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 2005 Mar 28 p. 7
''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 2005 Mar 28 p. 7
Birth date: 1909 Dec 7
text of obituary:
<center><font size="+2">'''Longtime Ohio pastor dies'''</font></center>
<span style="font-variant:small-caps">'''By Susan Miller Balzer'''</span>
STRYKER, Ohio &#8212; Walter Stuckey, 95, a lifelong pastor who served Lockport Mennonite Church for 30 years, died march 10.
[[Image:Stuckey_walter_2005.jpg|200px|right]]His funeral was held during Sunday morning worship March 13 at Lockport &#8212; a fitting setting to remember a pastor who participated in nearly 5,000 worship services and led more than 650 funerals and 300 weddings.
Born Dec. 7, 1909, Stuckey grew up in an Amish-Mennonite church that met alternately as one congregation in three meetinghouses:  Central, West Clinton, and Lockport.  He was chosen by lot to become pastor and ordained Nov. 6, 1938.  Lockport became a separate congregation in 1944.  For the next 30 years, the stories of Lockport church and Stuckey became one.
In addition to pastoring, he was ordained as a bishop in 1951 and later served as an overseer for Ohio Conference.  He served on the Ohio mission board and helped plant churches in Cleveland and southeast Ohio.  Two rural churches, Pine Grove at Stryker and Salem at Waldron, Mich., grew as Lockport's daughter congregations during Stuckey's ministry.  He also conducted evangelistic meetings in other communities.
Stuckey loved to read and teach the Bible.  He taught released-time Bible classes in area schools and introduced vacation Bible school at Lockport in 1947.  He got to know children when they thanked him for the pieces of gum he sent them with their birthday cards.  During his greeting card ministry, he mailed as many as 750 cards per year.
Stuckey supported himself as a farmer.
At age 81, he began writing his memoirs, which were published serially as "The Days of My Years" in the church newsletter, ''Lockport Life.''  He submitted his 158th and final chapter last May after being hospitalized for congestive heart failure.  His meoirs serve not only as an autobiography but also as a commentary on 20th centruy life in northwest Ohio.  His story can be read on the Lockport Web site, www.bright.net/


''Mennonite Weekly Reivew'' obituary: 2005 Apr 4 p. 11
''Mennonite Weekly Reivew'' obituary: 2005 Apr 4 p. 11
Birth date: 1909


[[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]]
[[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]]

Revision as of 09:42, 3 February 2011

Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 2005 Mar 28 p. 7

Birth date: 1909 Dec 7

text of obituary:

Longtime Ohio pastor dies

By Susan Miller Balzer

STRYKER, Ohio — Walter Stuckey, 95, a lifelong pastor who served Lockport Mennonite Church for 30 years, died march 10.

His funeral was held during Sunday morning worship March 13 at Lockport — a fitting setting to remember a pastor who participated in nearly 5,000 worship services and led more than 650 funerals and 300 weddings.

Born Dec. 7, 1909, Stuckey grew up in an Amish-Mennonite church that met alternately as one congregation in three meetinghouses: Central, West Clinton, and Lockport. He was chosen by lot to become pastor and ordained Nov. 6, 1938. Lockport became a separate congregation in 1944. For the next 30 years, the stories of Lockport church and Stuckey became one.

In addition to pastoring, he was ordained as a bishop in 1951 and later served as an overseer for Ohio Conference. He served on the Ohio mission board and helped plant churches in Cleveland and southeast Ohio. Two rural churches, Pine Grove at Stryker and Salem at Waldron, Mich., grew as Lockport's daughter congregations during Stuckey's ministry. He also conducted evangelistic meetings in other communities.

Stuckey loved to read and teach the Bible. He taught released-time Bible classes in area schools and introduced vacation Bible school at Lockport in 1947. He got to know children when they thanked him for the pieces of gum he sent them with their birthday cards. During his greeting card ministry, he mailed as many as 750 cards per year.

Stuckey supported himself as a farmer.

At age 81, he began writing his memoirs, which were published serially as "The Days of My Years" in the church newsletter, Lockport Life. He submitted his 158th and final chapter last May after being hospitalized for congestive heart failure. His meoirs serve not only as an autobiography but also as a commentary on 20th centruy life in northwest Ohio. His story can be read on the Lockport Web site, www.bright.net/




Mennonite Weekly Reivew obituary: 2005 Apr 4 p. 11