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Dateline: April 13,
2006
Howardwick
fireman succumbs to injuries
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Howardwick
volunteer fireman James McMorries died Sunday morning in Amarillo at the
age of 62.
Funeral services were held
Wednesday, April 12, at Paramount Terrace Christian Church in Amarillo
with uniformed members of the Howardwick and Clarendon volunteer fire
departments in attendance with Johnny Blalack and Regi Fowler officiating.
Burial was at 4 p.m. at the Masonic Cemetery in Seymour with
arrangements by Boxwell Brothers Funeral Directors.
Mayor Pro-tem Marvin Elam called
McMorries’ death a shock and ordered his city’s
flag to half-mast for three days.
“James was tough;
and we thought if anybody could pull through, it would be him,” Elam
said. “But when you’re that far, you’re pretty well in God’s hands
already.”
McMorries sustained
numerous injuries while battling the I-40 fire on March 12. The vehicle he
was driving overturned, sending him and two other volunteer firemen to the
hospital.
While Jeff Cook, age
45, and Joseph Garcia, age 25, have since returned home and are making
steady recoveries, McMorries suffered the most serious injuries and faced
the most difficult and uncertain recovery.
Previous reports
listed a broken back, broken ribs, and collapsed lungs as well as trauma
to his head and spinal cord among his injuries. As recently as early last
week he was said to be making some progress, but last weekend he was taken
off life support and transferred to hospice care.
“I haven’t known
James very long,” Elam said, “but he was a likeable guy, a really good
guy, and a very fine man.”
Elam credited
McMorries with helping to reinvigorate the Howardwick Fire Department,
which was down to just a handful of members and incapable of defending its
own community when the New Year’s Day fire broke out.
“A lot of younger
guys didn’t know how to drive the older trucks, and he did,” Elam
said. “He bought supplies – tires and radio equipment – out of his
own pocket.”
Elam said the death
of McMorries has been a hard loss for all the guys on the fire department
and for the community.
James Wilson
McMorries, Jr., was born April 4, 1944, in Seymour, Texas, and lived in
Amarillo before making his home in Howardwick about a year ago.
He graduated from Amarillo High in 1962. He was a member of the Clarendon Country Club, Howardwick
Volunteer Fire Dept., National Association of Independent Fee Appraisers,
Amarillo Association of Realtors, and the Khiva Shrine. He was a Master
Mason and member of San Jacinto Lodge #1330, Palo Duro Lodge #1239,
Amarillo Lodge #731, and Clarendon Lodge #700.
James married Tanis
Price on May 3, 1997, in Amarillo. James owned and operated McMorries
Appraisal Co. James was a loving son, husband, father, and Papaw and will
be dearly missed by family and friends.
James had a great
sense of humor and a little stubborn streak to go along. He helped
everyone he could even if he didn’t know them.
James was preceded in
death by his mother, Helen McMorries.
He is survived by his
wife, Tanis, of Howardwick; his father and step-mother, James and Linda
McMorries, of Jacksboro; three daughters, Annette Montano and husband Paul
of Amarillo, Robin Schroeder and husband Jim of Mesa, Ariz., Brenda
Harshman of Colorado Springs, Colo.; one step-daughter, Megan Bowes of
Amarillo; one step-son, Kelly McWhorter and wife Dai of Amarillo; three
sisters, Jo Helen Irwin and husband Terry of New Orleans, La., Judy
Blalack and husband Johnny of Hobbs, New Mexico, Janet Williams and
husband Johnny of Amarillo; three step-sisters, Brandy Gardner of Vernon,
Sharmy Brownlee of Paducah, and Torry Stover of Mckinney; and eight
grandchildren, Orie and Brett Dunn, A.J. and Allton Montano, Connor and
Keenan Montoya, Connor McWhorter and Coble Bowes.
The family requests
memorials be sent to the Volunteer Firefighters Fund at Amarillo National
Bank, PO Box 1, Amarillo, TX 79105, in care of Jeff Cook and Joseph
Garcia.
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