James Edson McCanse

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James Edson (Ed) McCanse, 83, Oregon, died on Friday, March 1, 2013 at Pinecrest Nursing Home, Mt. Morris.

He was born in La Grande, Oregon on July 2, 1929, to parents Edson Rodney (sheep rancher, farmer, miner, pilot, lumberman, businessman) and Lydia Sailor McCanse (teache, rancher wife, bridge player.)  

Little Eddie enjoyed the freedoms and benefited from the responsibilities of ranch living.  

Eddie loved hunting, horses, fishing, machines, and – with his father — flying (trained at 14, licensed at 16).  

During Ed’s junior year at La Grande High School, tiny Lillian Griffin (newly relocated from Texas) caught his attention.  

Ed invited her to the ranch for a trail ride, and “the rest is history.”  

The couple eloped shortly before Ed left for Oregon State University.  

During the years they lived in Corvallis and as Ed earned his agricultural engineering degree, they had three children, Sandra Joanne, James Rodney, and Donald Edson. 

After college, Ed began his career on the ranch (and son Richard Lee was born), but within a few years a gun accident disabled his right hand, forcing a career change. 

Ed stated later in life that the close brush with death and the near loss of his hand was the best thing that ever happened to him.  

Ed returned to the university where he completed the course work for a masters in mechanical engineering. 

After the addition of youngest son Bruce Dean, Ed was hired by John Deere and the family moved to Moline, Ill.   

Ed worked for Deere for five years, gaining an understanding and appreciation for the professional management of engineering processes and design changes, training which proved invaluable.  

In Moline, the family was introduced to the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.  

Ed embraced the teachings of stewardship, personal responsibility, and salvation, and forever after expressed that the church gave his life meaning and justified his survival of the gun accident.  

His appreciation of, love for, and involvement in the church never wavered.  

He eventually became a member of the lay priesthood and served as the pastor of the Rockford congregation for at least one year.  

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