In 1975, Tucker married Betty Allen; they had two children and he became stepfather to her two children from a prior marriage.
Illness and death Beginning during his college years at Harvard, Tucker suffered from an autoimmune disease, later diagnosed as
Primary sclerosing cholangitis. It created severe
liver problems which seriously debilitated him and threatened his life (he had nearly died from
gastrointestinal bleeding in 1994, and had steadily worsened since). On Christmas Day 1996, Tucker received a
liver transplant at the
Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minnesota. Tucker began
hospice care in January 2025, and died at a Little Rock hospital from complications of
ulcerative colitis on February 13, 2025, at the age of 81. His funeral was held on February 24, 2025, at Second Presbyterian Church in Little Rock, and was buried at
Mount Holly Cemetery in Little Rock.
Legacy In 2012, Tucker donated the James Guy Tucker Jr. Papers, a collection of manuscripts and materials documenting his personal life and political career, to the
University of Arkansas at Little Rock. The collection went on display and became open to the public in 2017. A star in the
Columba constellation was nicknamed after Tucker in the
International Star Registry. After his death, as a former governor and U.S. representative, Tucker would
lie in state at the Arkansas State Capitol building on February 21, 2025 and state flags were lowered to half staff from February 19 to February 24, 2025. ==See also==