Former Mount Greenwood resident John Fallon dies
By Maureen O’Donnell Sun-Times Media January 12, 2012 10:04PM
John Fallon
Updated: February 14, 2012 10:32AM
John Fallon managed to finish the Chicago Marathon after battling lymphoma, lupus and Crohn’s disease.
A fighter to the end, he received his final wish — to make it to the end of 2011 in order to spend one last Christmas with his family.
“He cooked a turkey dinner for us,” his sister, Erin Murphy, said. “He decorated the whole house, inside and out.”
Mr. Fallon, 42, died Wednesday at Rush University Medical Center.
He had been former Cook County Assessor Jim Houlihan’s secret weapon for negotiating, lobbying and cajoling members of the county board and staffers at Chicago City Hall.
With his good humor, intense blue eyes and the baked cookies, cupcakes, scones and Irish soda bread he made by hand, Mr. Fallon was a formidable legislative assistant in that he charmed people instead of steamrolling them, Houlihan said.
Mr. Fallon grew up in the Mount Greenwood community near 103rd Street and Kedzie Avenue, attending St. John Fisher School and becoming an Eagle Scout. He graduated from Marist High School, where he was on the wrestling team. He was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity at Northern Illinois University.
Mr. Fallon landed a job at the assessor’s office, where his late father, Jack, had worked when Thomas Hynes was assessor.
When he was about 31, Mr. Fallon was so stirred by a performance of the Shannon Rovers bagpipe band that he began taking lessons and learned all the traditional Irish airs, said his teacher, Bill McTighe, a piper with the group that leads the city’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade.
In 2004, Mr. Fallon was diagnosed with lymphoma. He fought it three times. During those battles, he found out he also had lupus and Crohn’s disease.
Still, he finished the Chicago Marathon in 2008. He tried again in 2010 but had to drop out around Mile 6.
“No matter how sick John was, he was there to play,” said Brian Giblin, band manager for the Shannon Rovers. “We would all look to him for inspiration. He would just keep going.”
“Any day that he felt good,” his sister said, “he was out running or doing something. Never once did he say ‘Why me?’ Not ever. ‘In a way,’ he said, ‘It’s a blessing.’ He said, ‘You appreciate everything so much more.’ ”
Mr. Fallon was active with the Young Irish Fellowship Club. He did the Polar Plunge in Chicago — fully clothed, while playing the bagpipes — for the Special Olympics, Houlihan said. He had a sailboat, “Nowhere Quick,” and an Old Town neighborhood apartment filled with political buttons and Irish memorabilia.
More than 600 attended a fundraiser for Mr. Fallon in April at the Irish American Heritage Center.
“The hall was filled with people who were there who had been motivated (by John),’’ Houlihan said. “Support groups, pipers, friends from the office. John taught us a great deal about how to live with class and how to face death with pride.”
In addition to his sister, Mr. Fallon is survived by his mother, Carolyn, a niece and two nephews. Visitation will be from 2 to 9 p.m. Friday at Blake Lamb Funeral Home, 4727 W. 103rd St., Oak Lawn. A funeral Mass will be said at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at St. John Fisher Church, 10234 Washtenaw Ave. Burial is to follow at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.
Just as he wished, Mr. Fallon will be buried in his Shannon Rovers kilt.
















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