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Matthew P. Murphy II

Matthew P. Murphy II

No. 1971617 Mar 1932 – 13 Jun 2004

Died: Germantown, TN
Buried:
Body donated to University of Tennessee Anatomy Bequest Program

 MATTHEW PATRICK MURPHY II, the son of Matthew Patrick and Grace Claire Spurlock Murphy, was born in Houston, TX, on 17 Mar 1932. Sadly, his father passed away on Easter Sunday 1932, and his mother passed away on Easter Sunday 1945. Judson and Amoretta Brance and their daughter Susan became Matthew’s second family. In 1949, “Pat,” as his classmates and friends knew him, graduated from Houston’s San Jacinto High School. He then attended Marion Military Institute in Alabama for one year before entering West Point.

For one year, Pat and I were roommates in Company M-2, and I remember him as a very devout individual. He enjoyed studying the Bible, and after extensive study of many religions, he converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints while a cadet.

Following graduation and his commissioning in the Air Force, Pat married his childhood sweetheart, Dorothy Ann Hall. On 2 Jul 1954, their marriage was sealed for eternity in the Salt Lake City Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Their first of many moves was to Hondo, TX, for primary flight training, and then to Greenville AFB, MS, for basic flight training. Their first child, Kevin Michael, was born in Mississippi. Advanced flight training entailed another move for the family, to Moody AFB, GA. His next assignment was to the 438th Fighter Interceptor Squadron, based at Kinross AFB, MI, where the second addition to their family, Brian Daniel, was born. Following the assignment at Kinross AFB, Pat was stationed briefly at Truax AFB, WI, before beginning work on an advanced degree in aeronautical engineering at Texas A&M. The third addition to the family, Grace Claire, was born during the two years they were in Texas.

Upon completion of graduate school, Pat and his family moved to the Flight Test Center at Edwards AFB, CA, where he was assigned initially to the Stability and Control Section, Aero Engineering, and subsequently as aide to the commanding general. During the three years at Edwards AFB, two more children, Timothy Ian and Richard Douglas, were added to the Murphy family.

In 1963, Pat resigned from the Air Force to attend the University of Texas Medical School at Galveston. In 1967, he graduated and returned to active duty. The family then moved to San Antonio, TX, where he completed his internship at Lackland AFB and the Aerospace Medicine Primary Course (flight surgeon school) at Brooks AFB. Two more children, Allan Dennis and Kathleen Mary, joined the Murphy family during the four-year period of 1963-67.

During 1968 73, Pat served at three different Air Force bases. First, he was the chief flight surgeon at Williams AFB, AZ. He then moved to Travis AFB, CA, where he completed his residency work in radiology. Their third daughter, Mary Ann, was born while the family was stationed at Travis AFB. From Travis, they moved to Mather AFB, CA, where Pat completed his residency and board certification in radiation oncology at Sutter General Hospital. His last assignment was to Wright- Patterson AFB, Ohio, as the chief of radiology in the Air Force Medical Center. The assignment at Wright-Patterson also saw the final addition to Pat and Dorie’s family, with the birth of their son, Patrick Edward.

In 1977, Pat retired after 20 years of active duty with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He joined the medical faculty of the Ohio State University in Columbus, OH, where for five years he was an associate professor of radiation oncology. In 1982, he began work as chief of radiation oncology at Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton, OH. In 1984, he moved to Memphis, TN, where he was chief of radiation oncology at Saint Francis and Saint Joseph’s Hospitals. He retired from medicine in 1992.

Pat is remembered as one who loved medicine, who conducted exhaustive research into every case, and who even gave his home phone number to patients. His dedication to his practice, however, took its toll. After several years of working long hours, quite frequently seven days a week, Pat simply wore out. Realizing that he was going to have a heart attack, he informed his associates that he was quitting. Although he expected to return to his medical practice during the course of the next ten years, he realized he could not recapture his ability to think clearly and work efficiently.

There were four major loves in Pat’s life: Dorie, his family, flying, and medicine, in that order. He often said Dorie was the most marvelous person he had ever met, and the nine children in their family provided them with 18 grandchildren and a great-grandson. To his children, one of his often-used phrases was “I will support you in anything, any way I can, as long as it is legal, moral and ethical.”

In November 2003, Pat knew he had a serious problem that was diagnosed as terminal cancer. He then told his family that he had tried to show them how to live well and he now hoped to show them how to die well. Seven months later, on a quiet Sunday afternoon, four days after his and Dorie’s 50th wedding anniversary, Pat took his place in the Long Gray Line. Pat, you upheld the ideals of Duty, Honor, and Country throughout your life. Those of us who knew you say, “Well done.”   

George B. Calhoun

Originally published in MAY / JUNE 2006 TAPS

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