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Marion <I>Spragg</I> McGee Guffey

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Marion Spragg McGee Guffey

Birth
Ridgeway, Harrison County, Missouri, USA
Death
14 Oct 2020 (aged 96)
Burial
Columbia, Boone County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Marion Spragg McGee Guffey, 96, died Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020. She was born Feb. 19, 1924 in the family home in Ridgeway, Missouri, to Lloyd and Lillian Spragg.

Early on, she was schooled in the art of conversation and inquiry by her mother, a school teacher and her father, the publisher of the Ridgeway Journal.

“My father knew everyone in our small county and took me with him when he traveled to Jeff City in the 1930s, after he won a seat in the Missouri Senate,” she recalled at a family gathering.

“To keep the people of Harrison County informed, Daddy set up a radio show. I sat in front of a microphone and read what he wrote. He called the broadcast the ‘Little Marion Show.’”

Marion attended Ridgway High School, where she graduated in 1942 as valedictorian of her class. She then moved to St. Louis and lived with a family friend who got her a job as assistant to an Army General in charge of procuring armaments for the troops. Marion recounted that the General often had her sign his name on orders, saying, “If you think it looks good, Ms. Spragg, go ahead and sign it for me.”

After a year of working there, Marion moved to Columbia to attend MU, where her mother and father had attended. She lived in the Chi Omega house and was later president of that sorority.

In 1946, she married James Albert McGee, a law student who had just been discharged from the Army Air Corps after serving in the European campaign.

She graduated from the MU Trulaske School of Business in 1947. For the next 30 years, she was on the faculty of Stephens College, where she taught personal appearance and modeling.

Former student Lynne Turner, now an artist living in Portland, Oregon, recalls, “She was always cheerful and beautifully dressed. After teaching a class on shaping eyebrows, she singled me out to tell me that I wouldn’t need to shape my eyebrows because mine were already shaped nicely and made me look intelligent. So sad she is gone.”

For Kathy Bye McGilley, also a student at Stephens in the early 1970s, the relationship with Marion became familial. “Marion was more than a teacher to me. She took me under her wing and became a second mother to me.”

During her tenure at Stephens, Marion was asked by TWA, an international airline at the time, to develop an orientation program in appearance and poise for newly hired flight attendants. She eventually was tapped to head the college’s personnel department and was recognized as employee of the year while in that role.

In 1974, her husband, James, died. Eight years later she married Donal Guffey, who had known Marion and James since the two men attended Law School together. They were married for 34 years until his death in 2016.

Marion stayed engaged with life after retirement, working as a volunteer at Ellis Fischel Cancer Center and was very active in personal employer management, which recently honored her membership of 75 years.

In 2017, the National President of Chi Omega honored her for 75 years of membership in its sisterhood and in 2018 she was recognized as a 50 year member of the Missouri United Methodist Church.

All her life, Marion cherished her friends. She loved communion with new and old acquaintances and talking on the phone with her dear friends, Mary Lou Spradling, Elizabeth Hensley and Marciele Maledy. She was a Mizzou football ticket holder for 50 years, until recently. A final thrill came when she watched the Tigers upset LSU on Oct. 10 with her longtime friend Rosie Berry.

Her daughter-in-law, Cynthia, said, “Marion was amazing in so many ways. Wherever we went in town, she would know the people behind the counter, in the doctor’s office or just shopping. She cared enough to inquire about them and their families in the most genuine way, and then, she gave her full attention to each person and truly listened to their stories. I will miss her deeply.”

Marion is survived by her sons, James Michael McGee of Columbia and Christopher Spragg McGee of Rocheport; daughters-in-law Cynthia McGee and Lynn McHaffey; a brother, Hal Spragg of Kingman, Arizona; and nieces and nephews and grandnieces and grandnephews. And Callie the cat.

A private graveside service is planned at Memorial Park Cemetery. Those wishing to make a donation in her name may do so to the charity of their choice.

Online condolences may be shared at memorialfuneralhomeandcemetery.com.
Marion Spragg McGee Guffey, 96, died Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020. She was born Feb. 19, 1924 in the family home in Ridgeway, Missouri, to Lloyd and Lillian Spragg.

Early on, she was schooled in the art of conversation and inquiry by her mother, a school teacher and her father, the publisher of the Ridgeway Journal.

“My father knew everyone in our small county and took me with him when he traveled to Jeff City in the 1930s, after he won a seat in the Missouri Senate,” she recalled at a family gathering.

“To keep the people of Harrison County informed, Daddy set up a radio show. I sat in front of a microphone and read what he wrote. He called the broadcast the ‘Little Marion Show.’”

Marion attended Ridgway High School, where she graduated in 1942 as valedictorian of her class. She then moved to St. Louis and lived with a family friend who got her a job as assistant to an Army General in charge of procuring armaments for the troops. Marion recounted that the General often had her sign his name on orders, saying, “If you think it looks good, Ms. Spragg, go ahead and sign it for me.”

After a year of working there, Marion moved to Columbia to attend MU, where her mother and father had attended. She lived in the Chi Omega house and was later president of that sorority.

In 1946, she married James Albert McGee, a law student who had just been discharged from the Army Air Corps after serving in the European campaign.

She graduated from the MU Trulaske School of Business in 1947. For the next 30 years, she was on the faculty of Stephens College, where she taught personal appearance and modeling.

Former student Lynne Turner, now an artist living in Portland, Oregon, recalls, “She was always cheerful and beautifully dressed. After teaching a class on shaping eyebrows, she singled me out to tell me that I wouldn’t need to shape my eyebrows because mine were already shaped nicely and made me look intelligent. So sad she is gone.”

For Kathy Bye McGilley, also a student at Stephens in the early 1970s, the relationship with Marion became familial. “Marion was more than a teacher to me. She took me under her wing and became a second mother to me.”

During her tenure at Stephens, Marion was asked by TWA, an international airline at the time, to develop an orientation program in appearance and poise for newly hired flight attendants. She eventually was tapped to head the college’s personnel department and was recognized as employee of the year while in that role.

In 1974, her husband, James, died. Eight years later she married Donal Guffey, who had known Marion and James since the two men attended Law School together. They were married for 34 years until his death in 2016.

Marion stayed engaged with life after retirement, working as a volunteer at Ellis Fischel Cancer Center and was very active in personal employer management, which recently honored her membership of 75 years.

In 2017, the National President of Chi Omega honored her for 75 years of membership in its sisterhood and in 2018 she was recognized as a 50 year member of the Missouri United Methodist Church.

All her life, Marion cherished her friends. She loved communion with new and old acquaintances and talking on the phone with her dear friends, Mary Lou Spradling, Elizabeth Hensley and Marciele Maledy. She was a Mizzou football ticket holder for 50 years, until recently. A final thrill came when she watched the Tigers upset LSU on Oct. 10 with her longtime friend Rosie Berry.

Her daughter-in-law, Cynthia, said, “Marion was amazing in so many ways. Wherever we went in town, she would know the people behind the counter, in the doctor’s office or just shopping. She cared enough to inquire about them and their families in the most genuine way, and then, she gave her full attention to each person and truly listened to their stories. I will miss her deeply.”

Marion is survived by her sons, James Michael McGee of Columbia and Christopher Spragg McGee of Rocheport; daughters-in-law Cynthia McGee and Lynn McHaffey; a brother, Hal Spragg of Kingman, Arizona; and nieces and nephews and grandnieces and grandnephews. And Callie the cat.

A private graveside service is planned at Memorial Park Cemetery. Those wishing to make a donation in her name may do so to the charity of their choice.

Online condolences may be shared at memorialfuneralhomeandcemetery.com.


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