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John William Minnick Jr.

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John William Minnick Jr.

Birth
Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio, USA
Death
1 Jan 2009 (aged 80)
Clarkdale, Yavapai County, Arizona, USA
Burial
Cottonwood, Yavapai County, Arizona, USA GPS-Latitude: 34.746375, Longitude: -111.9710194
Plot
Section:All Souls Cemetery LAWN CRYPT Plot:57 Row:2 Space:1
Memorial ID
View Source
John W. Minnick, Jr.

Born in Toledo, Ohio on Mar. 7, 1928
Departed on Jan. 1, 2009 and resided in Clarkdale, AZ.

John William Minnick, Jr. formerly of Sedona, died peacefully in his sleep, on January 1, 2009, after a long illness. Family was by his side. He was 80 years old.

After 59 years of marriage, John leaves behind his wife, Maryann, three sons; John M. (Lindsey) of Flagstaff, Jeffrey F. (ArLean) of Sedona, and James W. of Denver, Colo., seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

For the past 11 years, he resided in Clarkdale with his wife.

John was born in Toledo, Ohio on March 7, 1928. He served in the Naval Reserves for eight years during the Korean War and WW 2.

John moved his family from Pasadena, California to Sedona in 1975. He owned and operated the La Vista Hotel in Uptown Sedona, when he began the Sedona Inn Keepers Association, whose concept, in part, has evolved into the current Sedona Lodging Council. In 1978, John Minnick became the third owner of Pink Jeep Tours. For ten years, he and his wife, along with their sons as tour guides, operated Sedona's first jeep touring business and turned it into the renown tourist experience it now is, helping to put Sedona on the map, worldwide. John was a businessman, who owned and operated several Sedona businesses before retiring in 1995.

In 1987, John trademarked the icon phrase "Spirit of Sedona", when his passion for Sedona reminded its residence that "We are Sedona's future". This ear-marked the beginning of the Spirit of Sedona Awards, which recognized upstanding Sedona residents for their valued contributions of time, energy, talent and finances to the town they loved. Recipients included Cecil Lochart-Smith, Judge Petit and his wife, Georgia, Laura Purdyman, Sedona Schnebly, and Joe Beeler.

In 2006, John philanthropically donated the "Spirit of Sedona" phrase to the Sedona Community Foundation, who has carried on the tradition of recognizing valued residents and their accomplishments. He was honored for his donation in a ceremony in 2006 and was himself, presented with the award in recognition of his contributions to the Sedona he loved.

John will be missed by all those who knew and loved him and he will be remembered as part of the "family" of uptown merchants that co-existed long before Sedona's incorporation.

Interment is being handled by Westcott Funeral Home. A private raveside service will take place on January 23. A memorial service in John's honor will take place on March 7 from 2-4 p.m. at the Christ Center Wesleyan Church on Brewer Road, Sedona. All are welcome.
John W. Minnick, Jr.

Born in Toledo, Ohio on Mar. 7, 1928
Departed on Jan. 1, 2009 and resided in Clarkdale, AZ.

John William Minnick, Jr. formerly of Sedona, died peacefully in his sleep, on January 1, 2009, after a long illness. Family was by his side. He was 80 years old.

After 59 years of marriage, John leaves behind his wife, Maryann, three sons; John M. (Lindsey) of Flagstaff, Jeffrey F. (ArLean) of Sedona, and James W. of Denver, Colo., seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

For the past 11 years, he resided in Clarkdale with his wife.

John was born in Toledo, Ohio on March 7, 1928. He served in the Naval Reserves for eight years during the Korean War and WW 2.

John moved his family from Pasadena, California to Sedona in 1975. He owned and operated the La Vista Hotel in Uptown Sedona, when he began the Sedona Inn Keepers Association, whose concept, in part, has evolved into the current Sedona Lodging Council. In 1978, John Minnick became the third owner of Pink Jeep Tours. For ten years, he and his wife, along with their sons as tour guides, operated Sedona's first jeep touring business and turned it into the renown tourist experience it now is, helping to put Sedona on the map, worldwide. John was a businessman, who owned and operated several Sedona businesses before retiring in 1995.

In 1987, John trademarked the icon phrase "Spirit of Sedona", when his passion for Sedona reminded its residence that "We are Sedona's future". This ear-marked the beginning of the Spirit of Sedona Awards, which recognized upstanding Sedona residents for their valued contributions of time, energy, talent and finances to the town they loved. Recipients included Cecil Lochart-Smith, Judge Petit and his wife, Georgia, Laura Purdyman, Sedona Schnebly, and Joe Beeler.

In 2006, John philanthropically donated the "Spirit of Sedona" phrase to the Sedona Community Foundation, who has carried on the tradition of recognizing valued residents and their accomplishments. He was honored for his donation in a ceremony in 2006 and was himself, presented with the award in recognition of his contributions to the Sedona he loved.

John will be missed by all those who knew and loved him and he will be remembered as part of the "family" of uptown merchants that co-existed long before Sedona's incorporation.

Interment is being handled by Westcott Funeral Home. A private raveside service will take place on January 23. A memorial service in John's honor will take place on March 7 from 2-4 p.m. at the Christ Center Wesleyan Church on Brewer Road, Sedona. All are welcome.


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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Trisha
  • Added: Sep 7, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/41691345/john_william-minnick: accessed ), memorial page for John William Minnick Jr. (7 Mar 1928–1 Jan 2009), Find a Grave Memorial ID 41691345, citing All Souls Cemetery, Cottonwood, Yavapai County, Arizona, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave (contributor 8).