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                    John McCullough 
					
			
            
            [October 
			31, 2012]  
            		
            		
            		LINCOLN --
			John T. McCullough, fondly referred to as "the Judge," 81, of 
			Lincoln, died Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, at his home. 
							(Below is a copy of 
							the obituary from the funeral home.) 
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							Lincoln-Justice John T. McCullough; fondly referred 
							to as “The Judge”, 81, of Lincoln, IL, passed away 
							at his home on Tuesday, October 30, 2012. 
					
							Born June 15, 1931 in Streator, IL, he was the son 
							of Mark and Margaret Manes McCullough, the youngest 
							of four children. His family moved to Lincoln when 
							he was 10 years old, where he remained in the town 
							he loved. 
					
							The Judge was educated at Lincoln College and the 
							University of Illinois College of Law (J.D., 1955) 
							and served in the U.S. Army (1955-57). Following 
							four years in private practice, he was elected 
							county judge in 1962 and through transition became 
							resident Circuit Judge; he was elected Chief Judge 
							of the 11th Judicial Circuit in 1974 and served in 
							that position until his election to the Fourth 
							District Appellate Court in 1984, where he served 
							for the past 28 years. In addition to his regular 
							judicial duties, he served 22 years on the Workers' 
							Compensation Commission for the Appellate Court, and 
							was elected by his peers as the Presiding Justice of 
							the Commission for each of those years. Serving on 
							this Commission allowed him to work with judges from 
							every district in the State, something he enjoyed 
							immensely. The law was his passion. He was recently 
							notified that he had been awarded the Distinguished 
							Service Award by the Illinois Judges Association. 
							Justice McCullough was the longest serving judge in 
							Illinois history, serving 50 years on the bench. 
					
							The Judge demanded absolute respect for the judicial 
							system in the court room. Out of the court room, he 
							was always willing to lend a hand but was reluctant 
							to accept one. He took his work seriously but always 
							had time to hear or tell a good joke. If he let you 
							into his life, you were a friend; but he never let 
							you know everything. He was exceedingly loyal to his 
							profession, friends, and family; enjoyed a good game 
							of golf and the companionship of the 19th hole. 
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							A private man, he enjoyed being in the public and 
							meeting strangers from all walks of life. He 
							recognized the true treasures at charity auctions or 
							bazaars, bought them, and then proudly displayed 
							them in his office. A very generous man, he spent 
							little on himself, but would give money or even the 
							coat off his back to anyone in need (which he did in 
							the mid 1960s, when he gave his coat to an Airman 
							hitchhiking along Rte 66). Despite doctors saving 
							his life following an accident as a young man (an 
							accident that gave him his trademark flat nose), he 
							shied away from the medical profession and 
							hospitals. The Judge lived on his own terms.  
					
							Justice McCullough is survived by his five 
							daughters, Shawn McCullough (Randa Paver) of 
							Alexandria, VA; Bridget McCullough (Steve Weaver) of 
							Mt. Airy, MD; Molly McCullough Davidson of Cobden, 
							IL; Annie (Al) Webster of Charlotte, NC; Katie 
							McCullough of Madison, WI, his sister, Nancy 
							McCullough of Holt, MI; his sister-in-law, Connie 
							McCullough of Lincoln; and six grandchildren; Maggie 
							(Scott), Joe, Anna, Emma, Hannah and John. He valued 
							the friendship of those with whom he shared his 
							everyday life: colleagues and friends from the 
							Illinois Judicial System; Alley-Bi, Character's, 
							Wendy's, Elks, KofC, The American Legion, The 
							Recreation Center, all in Lincoln; Double H and 
							Final Four in Sherman, IL; Weebles in Springfield, 
							IL; the snowbirds and locals from Ft Myers, FL and 
							everyone else that cannot be defined by a location. 
					
							He is preceded in death by his parents and two 
							brothers; Joe, Pittsburg, PA; and Bing, Lincoln.  
					
							The rosary will be said at 10:30 am, Nov 24, 2012; 
							followed by a memorial service at 11:00 am, both to 
							held at Holy Family Catholic Church, 316 S Logan St, 
							Lincoln, IL 62656. Continuing on Nov 24, from 2:00 – 
							5:00 pm, A Celebration of the Judge's Life will be 
							held at the Elks, 1020 1525th St, Lincoln, IL 62656. 
							Everyone is invited. Interment will be private. In 
							lieu of flowers memorials may be made to Carroll 
							Catholic School, 111 Fourth St., Lincoln, IL 62656 
							or Elks Charitable Trust 914 (formerly known as the 
							Crippled Children's Fund), Box 875, Lincoln, IL 
							62656.  
					
							Services are being handled by 
							Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home in Lincoln. 
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