Former F.C. Councilman David Minton Dies at 77 in Denton, Texas

Former Falls Church City Councilman David Minton, who served on the Council from 1990-1994, died at age 77 on July 17 in his home town of Denton, Texas, following a long illness. He suffered from Alzhimer’s disease. Minton was a postal expert who served as staff director and chief counsel of the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee when Congress approved the Post Reorganization Act of 1970, which created the U.S. Postal Service out of the Post Office Department. He later served in the same position in the House of Representatives. Overall his career on the Hill ran from 1962 to 1981.

Minton was executive director of the congressionally chartered Commission on Postal Service, which proposed reforms in 1977. After leaving Congress, Minton practiced law in D.C., representing the Magazine Publishers of American until his retirement in 1994. A resident of Ridge Place in the City of Falls Church, he was elected to the Council in 1990, serving one four-year term. Upon his retirement and end of his term on the City Council, he moved back to the house his family built during his childhood in Denton.

Eli Davidson Minton was born in Dallas, Texas on Nov. 24, 1934. He earned a Bachelor’s degree at North Texas State College and taught in public schools in El Paso. After graduate study at the University of North Carolina, he finished law school at the University of Texas in 1962. Inspired, he said, by President Kennedy’s call to public service, he moved to Washington and was hired by Sen. Ralph Yarborough (D-Tex.). He was involved in local and national Democratic politics from his childhood through his years on Capital Hill. In 1956 he married Doris Woodruff with whom he had four children. The marriage ended in divorce. A second marriage to Patricia Denton also ended in divorce. With his third wife of 32 years, Phyllis Pearson Minton, he traveled abroad frequently and spent many years restoring the family home. A pianist, he loved Romantic compositions, often performing Rachmaninoff.

In addition to his wife, survivors include brother Roy Q. Minton and sister-in-law Barbara Francis Minton of Austin, sister-in-law Linda Pearson Baker of Yuba City, Calif., children Bennett Minton of Arlington, Va., Irene Minton Pham of Santa Ana, Calif., and Roy and Michael Minton of Austin and nine grandchildren.

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