
Lake Forest friends and neighbors share positive memories of Jim Lovell
Lovell, the famed astronaut who became a national celebrity when he was the commander of the Apollo 13 mission in April 1970 to space that nearly ended in disaster after an explosion. Lovell and his crew were rescued and he became a national figure. Lovell, who Tom Hanks later portrayed in the popular 1995 movie about the flight, died August 7 in Lake Forest. He was 97.
In the days since Lovell's passing, many Lake Forest residents offered their recollections of individual encounters with Lovell. That group included Mike Rummel, the city's mayor from 2005-09.
Rummel said he first met Lovell in 2008 when the retired astronaut was the grand marshal of a popular dog parade of the time, hosted by the Lake Forest Open Lands Association that included bagpipers.
While Lovell walked his beloved golden retriever, Rummel brought a 'mutt', capable of getting fidgety. After the parade started, Rummel was soon cringing as he watched his dog charge over and put his nose between the legs of one bagpiper, who then let out a huge scream. Lovell observed the incident and then used a line closely resembling the iconic phrase now associated with the movie.
'Jim turns to me and said 'we got a problem',' Rummel happily reminisced. 'Just getting the words we got a problem out of Jim was a great time.'
Rummel also recalled how Lovell was a guest for a presentation of the Lt. Dan cover band, which supports disabled veterans, when they played in Lake Forest in 2007. He said it was the first time Lovell had seen actor Gary Sinise (one of the band's organizers) since the release of Apollo 13. Sinise portrayed astronaut Ken Mattingly in the film, where Lovell served as a consultant.
'It was a wonderful moment to realize you have a national hero,' he said.
Rummel added that when the city showed Apollo 13 at a local park, Lovell participated in a question-and-answer session.
Overall, Rummel described Lovell as a 'wonderful guy who cared for the community,' who, despite his celebrity, remained humble.
'You had to call him Jim,' Rummel recollected. 'He didn't want to hear Capt. Lovell, he didn't want to hear national hero. He just wanted to be Jim.'
Former Chicago Tribune writer Mike Conklin, a one-time Lake Forest resident, offered a similar sentiment about Lovell's modesty.
'He was a friendly, outgoing guy,' recalled Conklin, who belonged to the same book club as Lovell. 'He may have tired of the same questions all the time, but he never showed it. He handled it really well. He couldn't go anywhere up here without someone bumping into him and immediately asking him about his ill-fated trip.'
Born in Cleveland and raised in Milwaukee, Lovell joined the U.S. Naval Academy later to earn an aeronautical engineering degree and soon joined NASA, where he would make four space flights, including Apollo 8, man's initial flight to the moon, followed by Apollo 13.
After amassing nearly 8,000 flight hours, including 713 hours in space, Lovell retired from NASA on March 1, 1973. He shifted gears and entered the business world, and in June 1981, the family moved to Lake Forest. The decision to settle in the community was the byproduct of a previous trip for Jim and Marilyn Lovell.
'When deciding where to settle, he and Mom recalled an early memory from years before— traveling between their home in Milwaukee and Chicago, they had stopped in Lake Forest for a quick break,' daughter Susan Lovell said in a statement delivered through a family spokeswoman. 'At the local Walgreens, they grabbed a bite at the soda fountain lunch counter, then took a short drive around the tree-lined streets. They both remembered thinking, 'This would be a nice place to live.'
Column: Remembering astronaut Jim Lovell, one of a rare kindFollowing his retirement as a corporate executive and the release of Apollo 13, which introduced Lovell's name to a new generation, he took on a new challenge by opening a restaurant on Waukegan Road in April 1999. The eatery initially drew many customers with diners intrigued by the décor featuring Lovell's NASA memorabilia.
'It was such a wonderful addition to the town,' remembered Lake Forest/Lake Bluff Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Joanna Rolek. 'It was a place the town was very proud of; it was lovely.'
Rolek lovingly looked back on how he would greet patrons.
'He used to be at the restaurant when he was in town, and he would come around to the tables and say, Welcome aboard,' she said. 'That was his greeting to people at the restaurant.'
Among the people who met Lovell at the restaurant was a young U.S. Naval Reserve officer named Mark Kirk who was running for election to the U.S. Congress. He wanted to get the support of the 'most famous Navy guy in the district.'
Kirk said he met Lovell at the restaurant and they talked for about two hours discussing their respective careers in the U.S. Navy. At the end of the meeting, Kirk learned he had earned Lovell's endorsement.
'Since he was my childhood hero, it made me happy to no end,' Kirk said.
Kirk was elected to the U.S. House in 2000, where he would serve five terms. While in Congress, Kirk became concerned that local veterans could lose access to health care opportunities if the healthcare center in North Chicago were to close.
He said he went personally to U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and said if a Washington insider were to hear that a federal healthcare in North Chicago was about to close, there would be little opposition. Thus, Kirk believed the branding of the medical complex was crucial.
'I said, Mr. Secretary, we need to name it after a national hero. If someone says we are going to close down this institution, they would have to admit they are against Jim Lovell, which sounds like you are against Apollo 13. It was almost anti-American.'
Rumsfeld agreed, and Kirk's strategy paid off, leading to the opening of the James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center, which is a combination of a veteran and active duty Navy hospital.
Kirk said he remained in touch with Lovell when he was in the U.S. House and after his 2010 election to the U.S. Senate, where he served one term.
'I wanted him to be a vociferous proponent of a good space program, and he was,' Kirk said. 'He always wanted to go back to the moon.'
Kirk also noted Lovell was the chairman of his military academy screening committee, allowing local students on their way to a military academy to have an opportunity to meet 'a national hero.'
Back in Lake Forest, Lovell sold the restaurant to his son and daughter-in-law in 2009, and it eventually closed in 2015. However, he remained active in the community, specifically supporting Chicago's Adler Planetarium.
Ginevra Stirling Ranney, who was active in Adler's capital campaign at the time, said she first met Lovell about 20 years ago as the Planetarium was going through a transitional period and facing some financial pressures.
'We made a strategic decision that we wanted to embrace space history and space exploration as re-imagining the Adler,' she recalled.
Ranney said she asked Lovell to participate in the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the Planetarium. He later joined Adler's board of directors and was the co-chairman of a successful capital campaign, where the goal was to raise $35 million, and they far exceeded that by collecting about $54 million.
'He could open every door in Lake Forest. Some people knew him, and some people just knew of him at the time and were delighted and excited to meet a national hero. What I saw him do is turn those people into friends of the Adler,' Ranney said. 'He had such an elegant and authentic way of using his extraordinary role in our national history as a way to connect people to larger ideas and causes.'
The Lovell Family created a legacy fund in 2024 to support the Planetarium, according to a current Adler official.
Lovell was the recipient of many local accolades and awards, including being named the inaugural 'local legend' of the History Center of Lake Forest-Lake Bluff in 2007. Last year he received the Northeast Illinois Council, Scouting America, 'Service to the Nation' Award.
Survivors include four children, Barbara Harrison, James Lovell III, Susan Lovell, and Jeffrey Lovell, along with 11 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Marilyn Lovell died in 2023.
A memorial service at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, is being planned for the future.
In lieu of flowers, the family is asking donations to be directed either to the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation or the Northwestern Memorial Foundation, specifically for the cardiac care unit.
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Lake Forest friends and neighbors share positive memories of Jim Lovell
Jim Lovell will forever be associated with his travels to space, but his impact on Earth – notably in his adopted hometown of Lake Forest – is eliciting many positive memories from his friends and neighbors. Lovell, the famed astronaut who became a national celebrity when he was the commander of the Apollo 13 mission in April 1970 to space that nearly ended in disaster after an explosion. Lovell and his crew were rescued and he became a national figure. Lovell, who Tom Hanks later portrayed in the popular 1995 movie about the flight, died August 7 in Lake Forest. He was 97. In the days since Lovell's passing, many Lake Forest residents offered their recollections of individual encounters with Lovell. That group included Mike Rummel, the city's mayor from 2005-09. Rummel said he first met Lovell in 2008 when the retired astronaut was the grand marshal of a popular dog parade of the time, hosted by the Lake Forest Open Lands Association that included bagpipers. While Lovell walked his beloved golden retriever, Rummel brought a 'mutt', capable of getting fidgety. After the parade started, Rummel was soon cringing as he watched his dog charge over and put his nose between the legs of one bagpiper, who then let out a huge scream. Lovell observed the incident and then used a line closely resembling the iconic phrase now associated with the movie. 'Jim turns to me and said 'we got a problem',' Rummel happily reminisced. 'Just getting the words we got a problem out of Jim was a great time.' Rummel also recalled how Lovell was a guest for a presentation of the Lt. Dan cover band, which supports disabled veterans, when they played in Lake Forest in 2007. He said it was the first time Lovell had seen actor Gary Sinise (one of the band's organizers) since the release of Apollo 13. Sinise portrayed astronaut Ken Mattingly in the film, where Lovell served as a consultant. 'It was a wonderful moment to realize you have a national hero,' he said. Rummel added that when the city showed Apollo 13 at a local park, Lovell participated in a question-and-answer session. Overall, Rummel described Lovell as a 'wonderful guy who cared for the community,' who, despite his celebrity, remained humble. 'You had to call him Jim,' Rummel recollected. 'He didn't want to hear Capt. Lovell, he didn't want to hear national hero. He just wanted to be Jim.' Former Chicago Tribune writer Mike Conklin, a one-time Lake Forest resident, offered a similar sentiment about Lovell's modesty. 'He was a friendly, outgoing guy,' recalled Conklin, who belonged to the same book club as Lovell. 'He may have tired of the same questions all the time, but he never showed it. He handled it really well. He couldn't go anywhere up here without someone bumping into him and immediately asking him about his ill-fated trip.' Born in Cleveland and raised in Milwaukee, Lovell joined the U.S. Naval Academy later to earn an aeronautical engineering degree and soon joined NASA, where he would make four space flights, including Apollo 8, man's initial flight to the moon, followed by Apollo 13. After amassing nearly 8,000 flight hours, including 713 hours in space, Lovell retired from NASA on March 1, 1973. He shifted gears and entered the business world, and in June 1981, the family moved to Lake Forest. The decision to settle in the community was the byproduct of a previous trip for Jim and Marilyn Lovell. 'When deciding where to settle, he and Mom recalled an early memory from years before— traveling between their home in Milwaukee and Chicago, they had stopped in Lake Forest for a quick break,' daughter Susan Lovell said in a statement delivered through a family spokeswoman. 'At the local Walgreens, they grabbed a bite at the soda fountain lunch counter, then took a short drive around the tree-lined streets. They both remembered thinking, 'This would be a nice place to live.' Column: Remembering astronaut Jim Lovell, one of a rare kindFollowing his retirement as a corporate executive and the release of Apollo 13, which introduced Lovell's name to a new generation, he took on a new challenge by opening a restaurant on Waukegan Road in April 1999. The eatery initially drew many customers with diners intrigued by the décor featuring Lovell's NASA memorabilia. 'It was such a wonderful addition to the town,' remembered Lake Forest/Lake Bluff Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Joanna Rolek. 'It was a place the town was very proud of; it was lovely.' Rolek lovingly looked back on how he would greet patrons. 'He used to be at the restaurant when he was in town, and he would come around to the tables and say, Welcome aboard,' she said. 'That was his greeting to people at the restaurant.' Among the people who met Lovell at the restaurant was a young U.S. Naval Reserve officer named Mark Kirk who was running for election to the U.S. Congress. He wanted to get the support of the 'most famous Navy guy in the district.' Kirk said he met Lovell at the restaurant and they talked for about two hours discussing their respective careers in the U.S. Navy. At the end of the meeting, Kirk learned he had earned Lovell's endorsement. 'Since he was my childhood hero, it made me happy to no end,' Kirk said. Kirk was elected to the U.S. House in 2000, where he would serve five terms. While in Congress, Kirk became concerned that local veterans could lose access to health care opportunities if the healthcare center in North Chicago were to close. He said he went personally to U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and said if a Washington insider were to hear that a federal healthcare in North Chicago was about to close, there would be little opposition. Thus, Kirk believed the branding of the medical complex was crucial. 'I said, Mr. Secretary, we need to name it after a national hero. If someone says we are going to close down this institution, they would have to admit they are against Jim Lovell, which sounds like you are against Apollo 13. It was almost anti-American.' Rumsfeld agreed, and Kirk's strategy paid off, leading to the opening of the James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center, which is a combination of a veteran and active duty Navy hospital. Kirk said he remained in touch with Lovell when he was in the U.S. House and after his 2010 election to the U.S. Senate, where he served one term. 'I wanted him to be a vociferous proponent of a good space program, and he was,' Kirk said. 'He always wanted to go back to the moon.' Kirk also noted Lovell was the chairman of his military academy screening committee, allowing local students on their way to a military academy to have an opportunity to meet 'a national hero.' Back in Lake Forest, Lovell sold the restaurant to his son and daughter-in-law in 2009, and it eventually closed in 2015. However, he remained active in the community, specifically supporting Chicago's Adler Planetarium. Ginevra Stirling Ranney, who was active in Adler's capital campaign at the time, said she first met Lovell about 20 years ago as the Planetarium was going through a transitional period and facing some financial pressures. 'We made a strategic decision that we wanted to embrace space history and space exploration as re-imagining the Adler,' she recalled. Ranney said she asked Lovell to participate in the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the Planetarium. He later joined Adler's board of directors and was the co-chairman of a successful capital campaign, where the goal was to raise $35 million, and they far exceeded that by collecting about $54 million. 'He could open every door in Lake Forest. Some people knew him, and some people just knew of him at the time and were delighted and excited to meet a national hero. What I saw him do is turn those people into friends of the Adler,' Ranney said. 'He had such an elegant and authentic way of using his extraordinary role in our national history as a way to connect people to larger ideas and causes.' The Lovell Family created a legacy fund in 2024 to support the Planetarium, according to a current Adler official. Lovell was the recipient of many local accolades and awards, including being named the inaugural 'local legend' of the History Center of Lake Forest-Lake Bluff in 2007. Last year he received the Northeast Illinois Council, Scouting America, 'Service to the Nation' Award. Survivors include four children, Barbara Harrison, James Lovell III, Susan Lovell, and Jeffrey Lovell, along with 11 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Marilyn Lovell died in 2023. A memorial service at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, is being planned for the future. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking donations to be directed either to the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation or the Northwestern Memorial Foundation, specifically for the cardiac care unit.


Chicago Tribune
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It is a long way from Lake Forest to the moon — 240,000 miles, give or take — and Jim Lovell made that trip twice, never setting foot on the moon but seeing things that few people have ever seen and living a life of estimable grace. Lovell, who was 97 years old, died Thursday in that leafy northern suburb where he had lived for decades. It was where, for a time, he operated with his son Jay a terrific restaurant named Lovells and filled it with some of the memorabilia he had accumulated during his long, high-flying and honor-filled career. There were awards aplenty, models of aircraft and spacecraft, a moon rock and a framed 'Apollo 13' movie poster signed by actor Tom Hanks, who portrayed Lovell in a 1995 film based on the mission. Most obituaries contained the many facts of his long life: childhood dreams of being a rocket scientist; losing his father at 5 and growing up in poverty in a one-room Milwaukee apartment with his mom; college at the University of Wisconsin and the U.S. Naval Academy; marrying his high school sweetheart, Marilyn, the day he graduated in 1952, and remaining together for 71 years, until her death in 2023; four children, many grandchildren; picked for the astronaut program and joining two Gemini missions; two Apollo missions that made him one of the first three astronauts to fly to and orbit the moon; ticker tape parades, the cover of Time magazine, becoming president of the National Eagle Scout Association, success in business… Emphasis was understandably given to Hanks, who posted his thoughts on the internet, saying in part, 'There are people who dare, who dream, and who lead others to places we would not go on our own. Jim Lovell, who for a long while had gone farther into space and for longer than any other person of our planet, was that kind of guy. His many voyages around Earth and on to so-very-close to the moon were not made for riches or celebrity, but because such challenges as those are what fuels the course of being alive.' The word 'hero' justifiably peppered the stories and television segments over the weekend. But this was a man who wore that tag lightly. One night, shortly after his restaurant opened in 1999, I asked him what experience he had in the business and he told me proudly that when he was in college, money was so tight that he worked at an off-campus restaurant washing dishes and busing tables. 'That'll teach you a great deal,' he said. Self-effacing, gentlemanly and energetically friendly, Lovell was an astronaut, a member of a very exclusive club. There have been 600-some people who have flown into space. By comparison, there have been more than 900 Nobel Prize winners and more than 3,500 Congressional Medal of Honor recipients. To know him was to like and admire him. Local best-selling author Robert Kurson was compelled to post on the internet, shortly after hearing of Lovell's death: 'Jim's most outstanding quality was his warmth and kindness, how welcoming he was to those who asked to shake his hand, to take his picture, to describe the first Earthrise ever witnessed by humans.' He would know, because he wrote a book, 2018's 'Rocket Men: The Daring Odyssey of Apollo 8 and the Astronauts Who Made Man's First Journey to the Moon' (Random House), that vividly captured that 1968 flight and its crew. That was, Kurson feels, 'the greatest space story of them all,' the story of how Lovell and fellow astronauts Frank Borman and Bill Anders became the first humans ever to leave Earth for another destination and how this mission helped save the country's space program. The three of them are gone now, Borman dying in 2023, Anders last year and Lovell on Thursday. But they come to vivid life in the book. Kurson's internet post was touching, intimate: 'Jim smiled a lot when we talked, but never more than when he spoke about his family… We were on a radio show together and the host asked what impressed me the most about Lovell. I responded by saying that, more than anything, Jim was a regular guy, one of the nicest guys I'd known, a good guy. The host recoiled and scolded me, asking how I could describe such a legend, a man with so many singular and astonishing accomplishments, as a regular guy. But, to me, after watching Jim talk to diners at his son's restaurant even as his own meal got cold, after seeing him sketch trajectories and launch angles in my notebook so I could understand difficult concepts, after hearing him describe the moon to children, I felt like his standing as good guy was as important as going to the moon, and when Jim gave me a little smile after I took that guff from the host, it felt like he might have thought so, too.' I met Lovell a number of times. I liked him plenty. After his restaurant closed in Lake Forest and relocated to Highwood as cozy/casual Jay Lovell's, I would drop in whenever I was up north, hoping to run into the astronaut again. There was no one quite like him. On Sunday, Kurson told me another thing. He said, 'In all the time I knew Jim, he expressed just a single regret — that he'd been forced to give up flying at age 85.'