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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened to |
3 | | learn of the death of
Bruce H. Conley of Elburn, who passed |
4 | | away on September 11, 2010; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley was born on April 13, 1950, in |
6 | | Elburn; he was the youngest child of Charles and Winifred |
7 | | McMurray Conley; he spent his early years playing in his |
8 | | neighborhood, "hunting tigers", playing cowboys and Indians, |
9 | | and spending many hours swinging in his grandparents' backyard, |
10 | | where sometimes he could be heard singing "O, My Papa"; his |
11 | | outdoors activities were often limited due to hay fever and |
12 | | allergies, leading him to learn to express himself through |
13 | | music and writing; and
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14 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley attended Elburn Grade School and |
15 | | Kaneland High School, where he excelled in music and graduated |
16 | | with the Class of 1968; he began playing cornet in the fifth |
17 | | grade and took private lessons at Dee Palmer's in DeKalb; he |
18 | | played a Bach trumpet in high school and college, at many |
19 | | family "jam sessions" and, until recently, in tribute to many |
20 | | veterans as they were laid to rest; as a teenager, his music |
21 | | took him another direction and he helped create The Uther Days, |
22 | | a rock band later also known as Denver Green; Bruce played lead |
23 | | guitar, with Dave Johnson, Steve Gliddon, and Bob Hamblen |
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1 | | making up the rest of the band; and
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2 | | WHEREAS, After graduation, Bruce Conley attended North |
3 | | Central College in Naperville, where he majored in music; |
4 | | during his senior year in high school, he began training as an |
5 | | aid at Delnor Hospital in St. Charles; while at Delnor |
6 | | Hospital, he met Kristine McConnaughay, a junior at St. Charles |
7 | | High School, and the pair soon fell in love; after his freshman |
8 | | year at North Central, he transferred to Southern Illinois |
9 | | University in Carbondale, where he began his studies in |
10 | | mortuary science; he subsequently studied psychology at |
11 | | Wisconsin State University and mass communication at Northern |
12 | | Illinois University before entering the Army Reserve in 1971; |
13 | | after returning home, he became an on-air announcer at WKKD-FM |
14 | | in Aurora; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, On October 7, 1972, Bruce and Kris Conley were |
16 | | united in marriage at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church in St. |
17 | | Charles; the couple settled into their home on South Main |
18 | | Street in Elburn; that same year, he decided to return to his |
19 | | mortuary science studies and began attending Worsham College in |
20 | | Chicago, where he graduated in 1973, and joined his parents in |
21 | | the family business; on October 11, 1976, Bruce and Kris were |
22 | | blessed with the birth of their son, Benjamin Hale; on February |
23 | | 1, 1982, Bruce and Kris were once again blessed with the birth |
24 | | of their daughter, Sarah Louise; in 1983, Bruce and his family |
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1 | | moved to their new home on Main Street; and
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2 | | WHEREAS, Throughout his life, Bruce Conley was passionate |
3 | | about helping grieving children; in 1975, he penned |
4 | | "Butterflies, Grandpa & Me", a story and coloring book |
5 | | illustrated by his sister, Karen, and written to help explain |
6 | | death, grief, and the funeral to children; thousands of copies |
7 | | of the book were published and used throughout the years by |
8 | | funeral homes, churches, and hospice programs, along with his |
9 | | later books, "Handling the Holidays" and "Plain Paper Poems", |
10 | | which contained poems written by Bruce and Karen; he also wrote |
11 | | a number of bereavement pamphlets, several of which were |
12 | | translated and used in bereavement groups in South Africa; his |
13 | | publications are still used across the country by those who are |
14 | | dedicated to helping grieving families; his writing and |
15 | | speaking on grief also attracted him to a number of self-help |
16 | | programs that began in the early 1980s across the Fox Valley; |
17 | | and
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18 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley was instrumental in the founding of |
19 | | Compassionate Friends, Survivors of Suicide, the Widowed |
20 | | Persons Service, Fox Valley Hospice, and the DeKalb Hospice, |
21 | | among many other programs; in 1983, he founded Elburn's first |
22 | | counseling center with Dr. Del Hagin of Aurora College, which |
23 | | would grow beyond bereavement to become Conley Outreach |
24 | | Community Services, which was incorporated as a not-for-profit |
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1 | | organization in 1995; in the fall of 1985, Bruce took on the |
2 | | challenge of saving the old Elburn Elementary School as a |
3 | | community center; with the help of many others in his |
4 | | community, he succeeded and founded the Elburn and Countryside |
5 | | Community Center as a not-for-profit organization; Bruce was |
6 | | involved in State and national associations concerned with |
7 | | bereavement care throughout much of the 1990s; in 1995, he led |
8 | | the first conclave between the National Hospice Organization |
9 | | and the National Funeral Directors Association; in 1998, he |
10 | | chaired the Association for Death Education and Counseling |
11 | | national conference held in Chicago; in 2000, his focus |
12 | | returned home to take over the West Towns Network, a tax |
13 | | supported program of 708 Inc., which became a service of Conley |
14 | | Outreach; in 2001, Bruce joined with Dr. Michael Mangis and Dr. |
15 | | Donald Preussler of Wheaton College to create the Center for |
16 | | Rural Psychology, which took over the counseling arm of Conley |
17 | | Outreach to become Heartland Counseling; Bruce's ultimate |
18 | | vision for combined bereavement and community care found |
19 | | dimension in his dream of a barn raising on the grounds of the |
20 | | Ravlin homestead in Kaneville which he acquired in 1997; though |
21 | | the barn never came to be, many of the programs and services he |
22 | | envisioned did evolve at the farm through the tireless efforts |
23 | | of volunteers who created a prayer garden and made use of |
24 | | existing buildings to host various programs and gatherings; in |
25 | | 2005, Bruce and Kris moved from Elburn to make their home at |
26 | | the Conley Outreach Farm in Kaneville; he was also a member of |
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1 | | the Illinois Funeral Directors Association, the National |
2 | | Funeral Directors Association, ADEC, Blackberry Lodge #630 AF & |
3 | | AM in Elburn, and the Community Congregational Church in Elburn |
4 | | and helped various schools to create crisis teams and programs |
5 | | to meet the needs of students; and
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6 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley wrote countless songs and stories |
7 | | that left special memories in the hearts of his children, |
8 | | niece, nephews, and friends; his repertoire included songs of |
9 | | faith, songs for travel and adventure, and even a song for |
10 | | "going to get a Christmas tree"; his most recent song, "My |
11 | | Offering, The Vision", was penned in the last days of his life; |
12 | | Bruce loved children and spent many years developing programs |
13 | | to help and to teach the children of his community and the |
14 | | world at large; he also wrote songs for his nieces and nephews, |
15 | | great-nieces and great-nephews, and his grandchildren, |
16 | | including a Christmas story, "Bethlehem Kids", which included |
17 | | not only his grandchildren but several other children who held |
18 | | a special place in his heart; throughout his battle with |
19 | | cancer, he wrote inspiring journal entries on Caring Bridge |
20 | | that were read by thousands of people across the country who |
21 | | were touched by his God given skills, caring, words, vision, |
22 | | and faith; and
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23 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley was preceded in death by one child in |
24 | | infancy; his parents, Charles and Winifred Conley; his brother, |
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1 | | Wayne; his paternal and maternal grandparents; his |
2 | | father-in-law and mother-in-law, Lloyd and Gladys |
3 | | McConnaughay; and his uncle, George McCloud; and |
4 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley is survived by his devoted and loving |
5 | | wife, Kris; his son, Ben (C.J.) Conley; his daughter, Sarah |
6 | | Conley; his beloved grandchildren, Andy, Em, Matt, and Mikey |
7 | | Conley; his sister, Karen (Les) Howard; his niece, Sheila |
8 | | (Phillip) Albano and their children, Nick and Katherine; his |
9 | | nephew, Bill Howard; his sister-in-law, Karen (Bill) Wootton |
10 | | and their son, Daniel Wootton; his aunts and uncle, Ruth |
11 | | McCloud and Ralph (Ferne) Conley; his extended family of |
12 | | cousins and their families; his many friends; and the countless |
13 | | people who have found comfort and hope in his writings, poems, |
14 | | and songs; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, Bruce Conley will be fondly remembered by all who |
16 | | knew and loved him for his selfless and compassionate nature, |
17 | | his incredible creativity and talent, and his wonderful sense |
18 | | of humor and kindness to all; therefore, be it
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19 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-SIXTH GENERAL |
20 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn, along with |
21 | | his family and friends, the passing of Bruce H. Conley; and be |
22 | | it further
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