Cincinnati.Com
NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Currently:
25°F
Cloudy
Weather | Traffic
The Enquirer
HOME
NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
REDS
BENGALS
LOCAL GUIDE
MULTIMEDIA
ARCHIVES
SEARCH
 
 TODAY'S ENQUIRER 
 Front Page 
-- Local News 
 Sports 
 Business 
 Editorials 
 Tempo 
 Home Style 
 Travel 
 Health 
 Technology 
 Weather 
 Back Issues 
 Search 
 Subscribe 

 SPORTS 
 Bearcats 
 Bengals 
 High School 
 Reds 
 Xavier 

 VIEWPOINTS 
 Jim Borgman 
 Columnists 
 Readers' views 

 ENTERTAINMENT 
 Movies 
 Dining 
 Horoscopes 
 Lottery Results 
 Local Events 
 Video Games 

 CINCINNATI.COM 
 Giveaways 
 Maps/Directions 
 Send an E-Postcard 
 Coupons 
 Visitor's Guide 

 CLASSIFIEDS 
 Jobs 
 Cars 
 Homes 
 Obituaries 
 General 
 Place an ad 

 HELP 
 Feedback 
 Subscribe 
 Search 
 Newsroom Directory 




 
Wednesday, August 4, 2004

Rev. James A. Sutton, 82, was foster parent to 148


Forte also founding Baptist churches

By Rebecca Goodman
Enquirer staff writer

The Rev. James A. Sutton, associate pastor at McKelvey Road Baptist Church in West Chester Township who was foster parent to 148 children, died July 13 of cancer at Hospice of Cincinnati. He was 82.

He had lived in Westwood before moving into his daughter's home in Goshen seven months ago.

A Southern Baptist pastor for more than 50 years, the Rev. Mr. Sutton's forte was founding churches or stepping in to rebuild an existing congregation in need.

He founded the Faith Baptist Church in Mount Healthy in 1956 and was founding pastor of Pisgah Heights Baptist Church (now called Liberty Heights Church) in West Chester Township in 1961.

He also served as pastor at New Bethel Baptist Church in Norwood, First Baptist Church of Silverton, Delhi Hills Baptist Church, and New Life Baptist Church and Northern Hills Baptist Church, which merged to become McKelvey Road Baptist Church.

He and his wife, Barbara R. Zimmerman Sutton, who died in 1999, provided a home for 148 children over a 15-year period in the 1960s and 1970s.

"It was interesting," his daughter Faith Finkes of West Chester Township said. "I came home from school one time and we had four bassinets in the dining room."

Some of the children were there for hours, others for much longer, but "each child became a member of the family as if they had been born into it. We took them on vacation - just did everything with them," she said.

The Rev. Mr. Sutton graduated from Williamsburg (Ky.) High School in 1939 and preached his first sermon at age 19 at the Main Street Baptist Church in Williamsburg.

He majored in history and religion at Cumberland College, graduating in 1941. The following year he attended Eastern State Teachers College (now Eastern Kentucky University) and taught in the Whitley County, Ky. schools for four years before moving to Cincinnati in 1948.

That year he went to work as a guard on the gate at the Hilton Davis Chemical Co. in Cincinnati while studying chemistry at the University of Cincinnati.

He moved up to foreman and laboratory supervisor before becoming general plant manager in Greenville, S.C., in 1975. He returned to Cincinnati in 1981 and retired from Hilton Davis a few years later.

In addition to his daughter, survivors include another daughter, Donna Amrein of Goshen; two sons, James Jr. of Lexington and Darrell of Cheviot; a sister, Frances Bailey of Ann Arbor, Mich.; 11 grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren.

Services were held. Burial was at Crown Hill Memorial Park in Colerain Township.

Memorials: Hospice of Cincinnati, P.O. Box 710784, Cincinnati, OH 45271-0784.




SUMMER LEVY VOTES
8 school levies fail
County election sites
'No!' Norwood majority roars about 14-mill levy
Monroe increase fails
Mt. Healthy OKs levy

TOP STORIES
Festival seating likely to return
Mayor Luken may be angling for run at statewide office
Freedom Center taps emotions
Last exhibit intended to get people talking
Young workers lack coverage

IN THE TRISTATE
Spending up at Cincinnati schools
Ex-felons' voting rights misstated
Lakota puts levy on ballot this fall
Local news briefs
Mercury lurks: Think twice about eating fish caught in Ohio streams
Lead-laden parcel won't delay planned Warren County subdivision
Neighbors briefs
Wording leaves details to courts
Columbus Zoo and Aquarium euthanizes 39-year-old gorilla with inoperable cancer
Panel to debate opening park gate
Public safety briefs
Lawsuit: Bad grades killed jobs
Too fast, two crashes, two die
Residents praise new park's trail

ENQUIRER COLUMNISTS
Grad awarded $1K scholarship

LIVES REMEMBERED
Rev. James A. Sutton, 82, was foster parent to 148
Janet M. Trigg taught nursing care for cancer

KENTUCKY STORIES
Bush bypasses Bunning on post
Woman, 72, claims sex abuse in 1930s
Silver Grove first up
Florence advised: Un-Mall
18 N.Ky. schools fall short
NRA gives endorsement to Geoff Davis
Bunning addresses business group
Louisville GOP leader faces criticism on poll watchers
Human Rights Commission has acting director
Bunning pressed on stem cells



 

Latest Headline News
Updated Every 30 Minutes
AP TOP HEADLINE NEWS

Iraqi Official: 150,000 Civilians Dead

Sen. Allen Concedes Defeat in Virginia

Bush, Pelosi Hold White House Talks

Massive Recall of Acetaminophen Underway

Mubarak Warns Against Hanging Saddam

Bolton Unlikely to Win Senate Approval

AP: Startling Findings in Tillman Probe

Ed Bradley of '60 Minutes' Dies at 65

U.S. Rises in Auto Reliability Ratings

49ers Look to Relocate New Stadium



Cincinnati.Com
Search our site by keyword:  
Search also: News | Jobs | Homes | Cars | Classifieds | Obits | Coupons | Events | Dining
Movies/DVDs | Video Games | Hotels | Golf | Visitor's Guide | Maps/Directions | Yellow Pages

  CINCINNATI.COM  |  NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help


Search | Questions/help | News tips | Letters to the editors | Subscribe
Newspaper advertising | Web advertising | Place a classified | Circulation

Copyright 1995-2007. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service updated 12/19/2002.