click here to return to the Class of 1954 homepage
 

MA writing guidelines

self-written MA format

NOK approval form

funeral attendee form

A-1

B-1

C-1

D-1

E-1

F-1

G-1

H-1

I-1

K-1

L-1

M-1

A-2

B-2

C-2

D-2

E-2

F-2

G-2

H-2

I-2

K-2

L-2

M-2

 

 

Leroy T. Lunn

 

No. 1967013 November 1932 March 31, 2015          

Died: Peoria, IL

Cremated: Inurned at Ladd Cemetery, IL

 

Leroy Thomas ‘Lee’ Lunn was born in Spring Valley, IL to Thomas and Marcella (Chiarella) Lunn on November 13, 1932.

He attended Hall High School (Class of 1950) and was selected to the All-State football team. His accomplishments were recognized in 2012 when he was selected to the Red Devil Sports Hall of Fame as an individual athlete. His 1946 football team was then inducted in 2013.

Lee’s football career moved forward at West Point, where he started three years on the varsity football team. He was elected captain of the Army team of 1953, which was coached by Earl “Red” Blaik and Vince Lombardi. During his senior year, West Point beat Navy for the first time in four years. The Army team of ’53 also won the Lambert Trophy, which annually recognizes college football supremacy in the Northeast.

Lee’s brother, Robert (Bob), also attended West Point (Class of 1950) and played football for Army. Both Lunn brothers wore number 60.

Lee’s high academic standing at West Point allowed him to select in which branch of the military he would serve. Upon graduation, he was commissioned in the U.S. Air Force and married Barbara Bird, his high school sweetheart. After completion of pilot training at Stallings Air Base, NC, where he won the Outstanding Student Officer Academic Award in the Class of 1955, he became an instructor pilot at Vance Air Force Base in Enid, OK. In 1958, he resigned his commission and returned to the Illinois Valley, where he was employed as an engineer by Conco, Inc., in Mendota, IL, and later in Louisville, KY. Lee was responsible for the design and prototype work of a military container used for M1 tank ammunition. The container was later modified for artillery powder bags. He retired from Conco as Vice President of Engineering in 1991.

Lee was active in his hometown community, serving 10 years on the Ladd Community School Board of Education. He was also a member of St. Benedict Church in Ladd and its Holy Name Society, the Ladd Moose Lodge, and the Army Athletic Association. Additionally, he served on the Ladd Planning Committee.

Above all, he enjoyed spending time with his children and grandchildren. His favorite activities included fishing, hunting, woodworking, and cheering for the Green Bay Packers. In the 1954 Howitzer, Lee’s classmates wrote, “Filled with the ready desire to be of help to others, always quick with a keen wit and happy smile, old Brutus quickly earned the reputation of being a terrific all around guy.” These characteristics were apparent in all that he did, from helping his family and neighbors with any home improvement project, to building dollhouses and playhouses for his grandchildren.

Lee’s daughter Lisa wrote the following poem about her father to describe the great man that he was:

He dreamed of knights fighting dragons, searching for the Holy Grail, protecting fair maidens serving both King and Country.

They were Heroes.

He dreamed of brave soldiers risking their lives to defeat the enemy.

They were Heroes.

He grew into a young man. A mischievous and determined youth, he was bound to be the best he could be. He chose his own battlefield—the football field. He did not receive the glory. He was the driving force behind the game. He played the line—he was Brutus.

He chose yet another battlefield—to serve and defend his country in the military. He learned to fly and then taught other men. Many of which gave ultimate sacrifice—their life for their country. To him they were heroes.

There were no other battlefields to be found for the young man. He felt his dream of being a hero was a childhood fantasy as long days at the office and diapers and crying children replaced them.

The man grew older and his children did too. He played the role of Daddy—he was the Mr. Fix It. For you see he could do everything. He knew how to fly a kite, fix a dolly, make the tallest towers, remove the endless slivers from tiny feet, and most of all he could make the biggest catastrophe seem like a tiny ant hill for he always listened with his heart and gave the best advice.

He does not know it but he is the best hero of all, he is my Dad.

— Lisa Grivetti (Lunn)

Lee is survived by his wife, Barbara of Ladd; by his only son, Peter (Mary) of Sterling, VA; by two daughters, Barbara (Jerry) Stank of Spring Valley, IL, and Lisa Grivetti of Peru, IL; by seven grandchildren: Matt Stank, Meghan Lutes, Liz and Tommy Lunn, and Emily, Alexis and Jessica Grivetti; and by four great-grandchildren: Noah Stank, Carson Leroy Lutes, and Ethan and Aiden Swanland.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his sister, Linda Geimer; and his brother, Robert ’50.

Each of us who knew Lee has had our lives enriched because of that relationship. You will never become just a faded memory with us, and as we look into the heavens on a starry evening we know you are there.

— Prepared by Peter J. Lunn ’ 79, Son

 

Published in TAPS, Summer 2016

class of 1954 home «    “grip hands” home «    eulogies «