Diane Temme-Stinton: Answering Mom’s Call to Come Home
as published in the Lincoln Journal Star on June 10, 2021
By Randy Bretz
Picture yourself in the UK and Europe, focused on your career in teaching and performing classical music, married to a European and following your dream. Then imagine receiving a call from your mother asking you to return to Lincoln to help run the family business. Oh, and that business has nothing to do with music . . . it’s a high-tech metal manufacturing company. Seem improbable? Well, that’s exactly what happened to Dr. Diane Temme-Stinton, a Lincoln native who boomeranged back home.
Dr. Temme-Stinton (I think she prefers to be called Diane) received a degree in German from UNL, a Masters in International Studies from Bangor University in North Wales, United Kingdom, and her Ph.D. in Renaissance Music from Bangor as well. It helps to know her father has German heritage and her mother is Japanese. Her love for music was fostered by the appreciation both parents have for music, participating in a small string group at Lincoln Lutheran and the Lincoln Youth Symphony.
And, a bit about that family business. It’s known as TMCO, or Total Manufacturing Company. (https://www.tmcoinc.com/) Dad Rolland Temme started the business in a shack about the size of two-car garage nearly 50 years ago. Along the way he built a one stop, concept-to-completion metal manufacturing company. Today TMCO is a high-tech incredibly busy company making a wide variety of things from the cab of a combine to high pressure natural gas shipping containers to the iconic dome of the gazebo at Lincoln’s Sunken Gardens. If you drive along 6th street just north of Park Middle School, you’ll find TMCO, it’s hard to miss.
So, back to Diane. There she was in England, doing what she loved, performing and teaching violin, piano and French Horn. Now and then she’d buzz over to Europe to perform. She was also pulling a part-time gig as a barista in a coffee shop in Birmingham, UK. That’s where she met Stuart Stinton, the fellow who came in every day, wearing a headset, and ordered the same thing. Something about him fascinated Diane. There’s a whole lot more to that story, so when you encounter Diane at The Mill buying coffee or elsewhere around town, ask her. Eventually they married and when that fateful call came from mom, he said he’d follow Diane anywhere. That was in 2016, and since they’ve returned they’ve been blessed with a daughter and some exciting challenges in life.
“We packed up, moved to Lincoln and I showed up at the plant. They didn’t know I was coming, I had no job description, I just showed up.” Since returning, Diane has helped grow the wellness program at TMCO, providing input to the overall operation, meanwhile she runs around the buildings waving and talking with everyone. She’s plugged into a number of organizations in Lincoln including Rotary 14, the Chamber of Commerce, Prosper Lincoln and to foster her love of music, she’s helped establish the Crossroads Music Festival.
We asked what it was like moving back to Lincoln, British husband and all. “I was very surprised at the international diversity of the population,” she noted. “My Dad has always hired a number of immigrants and refugees and it’s a thrill to be able to help them support their families.” Diane also commented on what a dramatic change the Pinnacle Bank Arena has made in the city. She noted that it’s injected energy in the city and helped give us a bright future.