Obituary: Beth McGinty, 94, of Duxbury and Wellesley

Beth McGinty, 94, of Duxbury and Wellesley, Massachusetts, died peacefully at home with her family on March 23, 2026. Intelligent, witty and kind, Beth’s strength, curiosity, integrity and humor have been a delight to those who knew her. Always invested in others, Beth managed life’s joys and challenges by focusing her extraordinary talent on those she loved, both her large family and the countless children she taught in her long career.

Beth McGinty
Beth McGinty

Beth loved her family first, especially her children, Kathy Griffin and her husband Rob, Ellen Grieco and her husband Bill, and John McGinty and his wife Ingrid, her grandchildren, Ellen Callahan and her husband Jeff and Sarah Ducas and her husband Matt, Matthew and Emily Grieco, and Christy Brantley and her husband Geoff, Caitlin, Shannon and Anna McGinty, and her great grandchildren, Jack and Dorothy Callahan and Griffin, Natalie and Theo Ducas and Knox and Hunter Brantley.

Born in Worcester, Beth grew up and lived primarily in Massachusetts near her much loved Boston and in the heart of New England – the best, maybe the only, place to live. The daughter of Thomas and Hester Dignan, she treasured her beloved brother Thomas Dignan Jr. and his wife Mary Anne, who have survived her, her sisters, the late Joan Fuller, Hester Curtis, Ellen Dignan, and Marian Drury, and her many nieces and nephews.

A graduate of Abbot Academy and Boston University, Beth was a public school teacher for over 50 years, first in Boston, and later in the field of special education in Wellesley, teaching thousands of children to be curious, kind and confident and to love themselves whatever their abilities or challenges. She loved children and understood them in an extraordinary way, entering their world with joy, enthusiasm and no judgment. With her special appeal for young children, she communicated effortlessly, almost magically with them throughout her life. Beth’s many different grandchildren and great grandchildren all loved her as a kindred spirit.

We love her. Beth was charming and uplifting as a field of daffodils on a Spring morning, she had a curious and discerning intellect and a warm and kind heart, and she was a truly extraordinary mother.

The family plans a private burial and celebration of life.