Duane E. Couey Explained

Duane E. Couey
Birth Name:Duane Emerson Couey[1]
Birth Date:September 13, 1924
Birth Place:Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US
Death Place:Independence, Missouri, US
Spouse:Edith Griswold
Margaret Rushing
Children:Four
 Two (by Edith)
  Patricia Henshaw
  Ralph Couey
 Two(adopted)
  Freda Clenden
  Cathy Davis
Parents:Ralph Couey
Hazel Lindsey
Portals:CoC
Position Or Quorum1:Presiding Patriarchs/Evangelist
Community of Christ
Called By1:Wallace B. Smith
Predecessor1:Reed M. Holmes
Successor1:Paul W. Booth
End Reason1:Honorably released
Position Or Quorum2:Counselor in the First Presidency
Called By2:Wallace B. Smith
Predecessor2:F. Henry Edwards
Successor2:Alan D. Tyree
End Reason2:Called as Presiding Patriarchs/Evangelist
Position Or Quorum3:Council of Twelve Apostles
Called By3:W. Wallace Smith
Predecessor3:Edmund J. Gleazer
Successor3:Earl T. Higdon
End Reason3:Called as counselor in the First Presidency

Duane Emerson Couey (September 13, 1924  - March 26, 2004) was an American leader in the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS Church). He was a member of the church's Council of Twelve Apostles and First Presidency and also served a term as the church's Presiding Patriarch.

Couey was born and raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was in the United States Navy during World War II, serving as a Petty Officer First Class Radioman aboard the destroyer escort Earl K Olson. After the war, he briefly worked as a manager in a plastics plant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin before becoming a missionary for the RLDS Church, becoming a full-time RLDS Church minister in 1954. He was president of the Los Angeles, California Stake from 1958 to 1960.

On 2 April 1960, Couey was selected by RLDS Church president W. Wallace Smith to become an apostle of the church and a member of the Council of Twelve Apostles.[2] At this time, he moved to Independence, Missouri, where the headquarters of the RLDS Church were located. He served in the Council of Twelve Apostles until 1966, when Smith selected him to replace the retiring F. Henry Edwards as one of Smith's counselors in the First Presidency of the church.[3]

When W. Wallace Smith retired and was succeeded by his son Wallace B. Smith in 1978, Wallace B. Smith selected Couey and Howard S. Sheehy, Jr. to be his counselors in the new First Presidency.[4] In 1982, he was released in the First Presidency and succeeded by Alan D. Tyree.[5] At this time, Smith appointed Couey to succeed Reed M. Homes as the Presiding Patriarch of the RLDS Church.[5] In April 1992, he was released from this calling and retired from full-time ecclesiastical service.[6] He was succeeded in this position by Paul W. Booth.

Couey was also a theologian, administrator and mentor to many of the younger church appointees. He married Edith Griswold of Madison, Wisconsin in 1947, and had two children, Patricia Louise, born in Milwaukee in 1952, and Ralph Floyd, born in 1955 in Paris, Tennessee. Patricia was an expert in the field of learning disabilities. Ralph is an intelligence analyst with the U.S. Department of Justice. Edith died of cancer in 1982. Duane remarried Margaret Rushing of Paris, Tennessee, in 1987. She too died from cancer, in 2003. He died in 2004 in Independence, Missouri, aged 79.

References

Notes and References

  1. U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007
  2. [Doctrine and Covenants]
  3. http://www.centerplace.org/library/study/dc/rdc-148.htm Doctrine and Covenants 148:2
  4. http://www.centerplace.org/library/study/dc/rdc-153.htm Doctrine and Covenants 153:2
  5. http://www.centerplace.org/library/study/dc/rdc-155.htm Doctrine and Covenants 155:2–3
  6. http://www.centerplace.org/library/study/dc/rdc-158.htm Doctrine and Covenants 158:2