Daily Times (Primos, PA)

TODAY’S OBITS

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Hanlin, Mary E. Hagerty, Joan Haynal Sr., John F. Morrow, David

COLUMBUS » Annie Glenn, who was thrust into the spotlight in 1962 when her husband became the first American to orbit the Earth, but who shied away from the media attention because of a severe stutter that later moved her to advocate for people with speech disorders, died Tuesday. She was 100.

Glenn died of complicati­ons from COVID-19 at a nursing home near St. Paul, Minnesota, where she had moved in recent years to be near her daughter, said Hank Wilson, a spokesman for the Glenn College of Public Affairs at Ohio State University. NASA later announced her death.

Her husband, John Glenn, died in 2016 after an extraordin­ary life that also included breaking the transconti­nental speed record and serving as a Democratic U.S. senator from Ohio. He and Annie were married for 73 years.

The relationsh­ip was “the stuff of fairy tales and one of the great love stories of all time,” Dale Butland, the senator’s former speechwrit­er and chief of staff, said in a written statement Tuesday.

“During WW II, the Korean war and two flights into outer space, Annie patiently waited for her John to come home,” Butland said. “Since December of 2016, John’s been patiently waiting for his Annie. Today, they’re both where they always wanted to be: together — for all eternity.”

At age 53 in 1973, she enrolled in an intensive program at the Communicat­ions Research Institute at Hollins College, now Hollins University, in Roanoke, Virginia, that gave her the skills to control her stutter and to speak in public.

By the time 77-year-old John Glenn returned to space in 1998 aboard the space shuttle Discovery, she showed she had become comfortabl­e in her public role when she acknowledg­ed she had reservatio­ns about her husband’s newest flight.

“John had announced one year before that he was going to retire as a senator, so I was looking forward to having him as my own because I had given him to our government for 55 years,” she told a NASA interviewe­r.

Her career in advocacy included service on the boards of child abuse and speech and hearing organizati­ons. The American Speech-Language-Hearing Associatio­n’s Annie Glenn Award was created to honor people who overcome a communicat­ion disorder.

“Annie will be remembered for her work to lift others up, including those who shared her struggles with communicat­ive disorders,” U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, an Ohio Democrat, said in a written statement.

Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, called Glenn “our most beloved Ohioan” and ordered flags flown at halfstaff.

NASA released a statement calling her a “stalwart member of the space and military communitie­s.”

“She stood steadfastl­y by her husband as he took to space once again as the oldest person to orbit Earth, even as she continued her own lifelong public service on behalf of children, the elderly, and the disabled,” the statement said.

In 1998, Defense Secretary William Cohen honored Annie Glenn with the Department of Defense Medal for Outstandin­g Public Service, calling her “a hero in her own right” and praising her for being “a strong voice for children, speech and communicat­ions, and the disabled.”

 ?? STR ?? In this Dec. 8, 1983 file photo, Annie Glenn speaks during an interview in Newport, N.H. Glenn, the widow of astronaut and U.S. Sen. John Glenn and a communicat­ion disorders advocate, died Tuesday, May 19, 2020, of COVID-19 complicati­ons at a nursing home near St. Paul, Minn., at age 100.
STR In this Dec. 8, 1983 file photo, Annie Glenn speaks during an interview in Newport, N.H. Glenn, the widow of astronaut and U.S. Sen. John Glenn and a communicat­ion disorders advocate, died Tuesday, May 19, 2020, of COVID-19 complicati­ons at a nursing home near St. Paul, Minn., at age 100.

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