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- Duration: 1:46
- Published: 2011-01-24
- Uploaded: 2011-01-24
- Author: recapdata
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Name | Ed McCully |
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Birth date | 1927 |
Birth place | Wisconsin |
Death date | January 8, 1956 |
Death place | Curaray River, Ecuador |
Nationality | American |
Education | Wheaton College (1945-49) Marquette University Law School (1949-50) School of Missionary Medicine (1951-52) |
Occupation | Missionary |
Religion | Christian (Plymouth Brethren) |
Spouse | Marilou McCully (née Hobolth) (Jun 29, 1951 – Jan 8, 1956) |
Children | Steve McCully (b. 1952) Mike McCully (b. 1954) Matt McCully (b. 1956) |
Parents | T. Edward McCully, Sr. |
In college, McCully was an exceptional student. At 6'2" and 190 lbs., he proved to be very athletic and was a star on both the football and track teams. He also distinguished himself as a gifted orator, and became very popular among his classmates. His self-authored speech about Alexander Hamilton won him the 1949 National Hearst Oratorical Contest in San Francisco, a contest in which over 10,000 students had entered. That same year, McCully was unanimously elected senior class president.
After graduating from Wheaton in 1949, McCully entered Marquette University Law School intent on becoming a lawyer. Just before his second year there, he took a job as a hotel night clerk. Originally intending to spend the long hours studying classwork, he instead began reading more of the Bible. The story of Nehemiah as well as his correspondence with Jim Elliot, who was making preparations to leave for Ecuador at the time, inspired McCully to consider missionary work. Finally, on September 22, 1950, the day before he was to register for his second year of school, he announced he would not be returning.
He then entered the School of Missionary Medicine in Los Angelos (today part of Biola University). He spent a year there studying dentistry, obstetrics, and tropical diseases and their treatments.
In the fall of 1955, McCully, along with Jim Elliot and missionary pilot Nate Saint, began Operation Auca, their plan to reach the previously un-contacted Huaorani Indians. Since the Huaorani had a reputation as a hostile tribe, everything was done to earn their trust. The missionaries began by making gifts drops from Saint's airplane. McCully would often accompany him on these missions.
When the missionaries felt they had built up enough of a rapport with the Huaorani, they decided to land in their territory. By this time, Roger Youderian and Pete Fleming had also joined the effort. Saint was able to land the airplane on a sandbar along the Curaray River. However,after friendly ground contact with three Huaorani, the missionaries were attacked by a party of 6 Huao warriors and 3 women. McCully was speared by a young Huao named Mincaye, and also severely mutilated with a machete after he grabbed and tried to hold back one of his attackers.
Shortly afterwards, a search party was organized to find the men. McCully's body was not found by the search party, but he was presumed to be dead. Some Quechua Indians had later found his body further down stream, and even produced McCully's shoe and wristwatch as evidence.
Marilou eventually returned to Ecuador and lived in Quito for 6 years, running a home for missionary children. She later returned to America and settled in Washington State where she worked as a hospital bookkeeper. She never remarried, and died of cancer on April 24, 2004. His role is described in the 2006 film End of the Spear.
Category:1927 births Category:1956 deaths Category:American Christian missionaries Category:Christian missionaries in Ecuador Category:American Plymouth Brethren Category:People from Milwaukee, Wisconsin Category:Operation Auca Category:Wheaton College (Illinois) alumni Category:Murdered missionaries Category:20th-century Protestant martyrs Category:American people murdered abroad Category:People murdered in Ecuador Category:Marquette University Law School alumni
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