Connect with us
[the_ad_placement id="manual-placement"] [the_ad_placement id="obituaries"]

Obituaries

Michael H. Logue: 1951-2025

Published

on

Michael H. Logue

VICKSBURG, Miss. — Michael H. Logue passed away peacefully from complications of a stroke on August 26, 2025, at Vicksburg Convalescent Center, at age 73. He was the son of L. Harold Logue Sr. and Lucille Blackledge Logue.

His wife and soulmate is the former Mildred Rebecca Fields of Vicksburg, affectionately known locally as the former owner of Becca’s Cookies and Becki’s Bling. Their adventures took them cross-country numerous times.

Michael was preceded in death by his parents and his younger brother, Keith (Susan) of Longview, Texas.

He is survived in Vicksburg by his bride, Becki, and his children: Adam Logue (friend Serah Clemons) and Amanda Logue Boone (Jonathan); and his stepson, Dailon Huskey (Jana). His stepdaughter, Hope Huskey Hayes (Ben), resides in Happy Valley, Oregon.

He is also survived by his grandchildren: Ella Kate Boone, Lori Isabella (Lily) Logue and Amelia Jo Boone; his older brother, Louis Harold Jr. (Sonya), all of Vicksburg; baby sister, Mary Logue of Longview, Texas; and many nieces and nephews.

Michael and Becki were members of Triumph Church and recently of Pinelake Church and its Rockers small group in Raymond. They were instrumental in developing and implementing innovative systems for church growth, membership retention and assimilation, and leadership training.

A celebratory visitation will be held at Glenwood Funeral Home in Vicksburg from 4 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, September 4, 2025. Honorary pallbearers will be members of the Vicksburg Battlefield Guide Association, Pinelake Rockers small group, Kelle Barfield, owner of Lorelei Books, Ben Shaw, Keith Matthews and Leon Pantenburg.

His earliest local ancestors established a farm on what would later be named Redbone Road in Warren County, Mississippi Territory, in 1814: the Cherokee Coodys and the Paces.

Born in Vicksburg, Mississippi, he was educated at Grove Street Elementary, St. Francis Xavier Academy and St. Aloysius High School, before graduating in 1969 from H.V. Cooper High School. He proudly boasted that he graduated in the top of the bottom third of his class.

He received a bachelor’s degree in communications from Mississippi State University in 1973 and a master’s degree in mass communications management from Mississippi College in 1984, with additional advanced public affairs training from the University of South Carolina in 1983, where he finished first in his class. He received an associate degree from Hinds Junior College in 1984 after transferring an hour in P.E. back from MSU.

He enjoyed a 42-year career with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in corporate and crisis communications in the lower Mississippi River valley and across the nation. He began his career as a technical photographer and cinematographer with the Waterways Experiment Station before moving up as a technical reports editor there.

In 1976, he was named a public affairs writer-editor for the Corps’ Vicksburg District. He created the district magazine, The Water’s Edge, and the district’s Employee Recreation Organization. In that position, he served as editor and project manager for Of Men and Rivers, the History of the Vicksburg District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The publication received the Award of Merit from the Mississippi Historical Society.

In 1981, he was named deputy public affairs officer, which included duties as media relations coordinator. He became the Voice of the Vicksburg District, interacting with worldwide media during flood, drought and civil works issues. He was a trusted source for media clients.

In 1985, he was named the Corps’ youngest staff public affairs officer, providing command counsel on a wide range of issues and managing the district’s media, public information, corporate information, community relations and emergency operations communications programs.

Working with project managers and public sponsor organizations, he served leadership roles in groundbreakings and dedications for critical, massive projects such as the Tensas-Cocodrie Pumping Plant, Lake Chicot Pumping Plant, five J. Bennett Johnston Waterway locks and dams on the Red River, and the H.K. Thatcher and Felsenthal locks and dams on the Ouachita River.

During his tenure, he created an innovative web-based system that proved 100% effective in defeating disinformation and misinformation. The system was implemented across the Corps. He eventually trained the system to DOD and NATO Information Operations officers.

In 1999, with Becki at his side, he also executed and trained his new process, Strategic E-Communication, for national-level corporations, organizations and municipalities under his company E-Power Public Relations and Communications.

In 2000, he became the owner and operator of Michael Logue Web Design in Vicksburg to provide less costly web design options for small businesses. He serviced about 60 businesses and attractions locally and others from Washington to California.

In 2004, he developed the innovative Management by the Numbers, an electronic system to reduce the cost of operations and constantly improve team performance and morale. The public affairs version was adopted throughout the Corps’ Mississippi Valley Division as a standard.

In August 2005, he was tasked as the public affairs mission manager for the Corps’ FEMA recovery operations in Mississippi for Hurricane Katrina. In January 2007, he assumed the same post for Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in New Orleans as a reemployed annuitant.

After his hurricane service, he spent 10 years using his specialized issue management and strategic planning skills on tough public issues in the Sacramento, Jacksonville and Albuquerque districts, and Corps Headquarters in Washington. His last assignment was in FEMA Recovery Field Office for the Tubbs wildfire recovery in northern California in 2018.

During his tenure, he received a Corps’ Lifetime Achievement Award in his career field, the first given to a living public affairs practitioner and only the second ever awarded at that time. He was named multiple times the Corps’ Michael C. Robinson Public Affairs Practitioner of the Year and Locke L. Mouton Emergency Communicator of the Year.

On his retirement in 2006, he received a Superior Service Award, the military equivalent of the Legion of Merit, for his innovative approaches and his contributions to emergency operations and tough public issues. He was named the 2006 Mississippi College Communications Alumnus of the Year.

Locally, he managed several national award-winning educational programs, including the semester-long local history class, the Mississippi River Course, in local public high schools. He also created and taught a 16-week homeschool civic course, Vicksburg: From the Ice Age to the Space Age.

He was an award-winning screenwriter of six motion picture screenplays, including Blood Trails, a story of the removal of the Choctaw to Oklahoma. He helped develop the themes and suggested art displays for the Corps’ Jesse Brent Lower Mississippi River Interpretive Center in Vicksburg.

In 2007, his transition to communications consultant allowed time for three of his passions: history, gardening and genealogy. A national genealogy consultant, he created a six-week Legends and Legacies class with the Southern Cultural Heritage Center to take 12 local families at a time, six times a year, on a search for their family roots.

He was able to preserve more than 1,000 Warren County-connected family lines, their migration and their stories. He spearheaded the creation of the Historic Vicksburg Advisory Council, about 50 interrelated businesses and organizations focused on growing the local history and tourism industry.

He served on the Mayor’s Commission for the Tercentennial of Fort St. Pierre, the region’s first French presence. He was a member of the Vicksburg Historical Society, the Mississippi Historical Society and the Friends of Vicksburg Campaign and Siege. He was a former board member of the Old Depot Museum and the Vicksburg Riverfront Murals project.

He was also a state-certified storm spotter for the area. Becoming a licensed battlefield guide in 2014, he served five years as president of the Vicksburg Guide Association. He created and managed the Facebook blog, Michael Logue’s Vicksburg Campaign and Siege, since 2015. He was voted Warren County’s best city-battlefield guide by its citizens in 2023.

In 2014, he also achieved the level of Warren County Master Gardener with the Mississippi State Extension Service.

In 2021, he published his 300-page autobiography, Where the Roads of My Life Have Taken Me. In 2023, he published the first comprehensive history of West Central Mississippi and Vicksburg, Echoes from the Bluffs, sold nationally and abroad to high reviews. In 2024, he received the Award of Merit from the Mississippi Historical Society for the book’s innovative approach to telling the history of Vicksburg.

In the community, he served previously on the board of the Optimist Club and as chair and disaster chair of the Vicksburg chapter of the American Red Cross.

In lieu of flowers or other tributes, donations may be made to Vicksburg Storehouse Community Pantry, 718 Bowmar Avenue, Vicksburg, MS 39180.

To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of Michael Harris Logue, please visit Glenwood Funeral Home’s floral store.


Vicksburg Daily News publishes obituaries free of charge. Please submit obituaries to info@vicksburgnews.com.

See a typo? Report it here.
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Vicksburg Daily News