Spotfund logo
Spotfund logo
Start Fundraising
PricingContact SupportStart Fundraising

Fundraise for

  • Medical Fundraising
  • Emergency Fundraising
  • Memorial Fundraising
  • Education Fundraising
  • Nonprofit Fundraising
  • Animal Fundraising
  • Community Fundraising

Featured topics

  • Easy Fundraising Ideas for Individuals
  • Creative Fundraiser Dinner Ideas
  • Raising Money for Medical Expenses
  • *spotfund for NIL Collective FundraisingHOT

Trending in

  • Medical
  • Memorial
  • Emergency
  • Nonprofit
  • Family
  • Sports
  • Business

Featured topics

  • *spotfund as a Recurring Donation Solution
  • Matching Gift CampaignsPOPULAR
  • Why Recurring Donations Are Important for Nonprofits
  • How it works
  • Common questions
  • Success stories
  • For brands and nonprofits
  • How do I withdraw money?
  • *spotfund blog
  • Reviews from people like you
Beveled Asterisk

JohnBehan

JohnBehan

Fundraising for

Operation: Heal Our Heroes

Fundraising forOperation: Heal Our Heroes
Jason Behan

Jason Behan

Montauk, NY

$3,050raised
12
Donors
0
Comments
41Share Arrow
Shares
Donation protected
👍 0% fee
Donations are tax-deductible

Montauk's favorite son, John L. Behan, who, with broad bipartisan support, was the East End's voice in the State Assembly for the better part of two decades, and who, for three years afterward, headed the state's veterans affairs office before retiring from public service in 1999, died in his sleep of a heart attack at home last Thursday at the age of 76.

Throughout his adult life, Mr. Behan,  whose legs were blown off above the knee by an anti-tank mine while defending his Marine patrol from machine gun fire near Da Nang, Vietnam on May 23, 1966,  was a ceaseless advocate for veterans.

He went back to that country, for whose people he'd fought, two times -- in 1985 and 2006. "Both were healing trips," his wife, Marilyn said.

The chief aim of the New York State delegation Assemblyman Behan led there in '85 -- the first government group the Socialist Republic of Vietnam had welcomed -- was to bring back the remains of American soldiers, she said. The chief aim of the second visit was to hand over a $20,000 check to an organization that was clearing the land of unexploded ordnance and land mines, which long after the war ended in 1975 were claiming many lives.  

After being wounded, Mr. Behan, who suffered severe internal injuries too, underwent eight operations during the course of a year's hospitalization, near the end of which he was told by doctors at the Philadelphia Naval Hospital that he would never walk again, that he would have to use a walker. It was a prediction that he, a three-sport athlete at East Hampton High School, where he led the Student Council, made sure did not come true.

"I can't imagine learning to walk when you've had both legs amputated above the knee," said his former campaign manager, Ron Greenbaum, during a telephone conversation Saturday. "But John did it. He was a man among men, a helluva guy. . . .  The Vietnam Veterans organization in Suffolk County worked their butts off for John when he ran for Perry Duryea's seat -- with Perry's blessings -- in 1978. That was the year Perry ran for Governor. The veterans loved him for his sacrifice and for his continuing involvement with veterans' issues."

Not only did Mr. Behan learn to walk again, using only a cane, but, with his wife's encouragement, he continued to excel athletically, winning gold, silver, and bronze medals in international paralympic competitions, in Lima, Peru in 1973, and in Montreal, Canada in 1976, setting a world record in the precision javelin throw, to a target, in those Games.

That the javelin was his forte presumably would not come as a surprise to those who knew him to be a straight-shooter.

"He was inspiring to all whom he touched," said his former aide, Fred W. Thiele Jr., who later succeeded him in Albany. "Working for John was not just a job -- you became part of his family. His generosity to me sparked my career in government. . . . In the past few days, I have heard so many use these words in speaking of him: "larger than life," "icon," "hero. . . ." We're all the richer for having known him."

Mr. Behan was born on Veterans Day, Nov. 11, in 1944 in Flushing Hospital, the son of Joseph Lester and Marie Hand Behan, who, according to Marilyn Behan ran a seafood restaurant in College Point. It was at that restaurant, she said, "on a Friday fish night," that she first met her future husband and his family, when she was 14 or 15.

Their paths diverged for a while thereafter, when his parents moved to Hampton Bays, and, later, following the drowning death of John's younger brother, Joshua, to Montauk where Lester Behan captained the Peconic Queen partyboat fleet.

They met up again, she said, "after he was wounded," and were married at St. Fidelis Roman Catholic Church in College Point on Oct. 19, 1968.

The seven-time-decorated Marine first ventured into politics in 1971 when he ran with Walter Hackett and Mary Ella Reuterhan for East Hampton Town Board seats -- he as a Justice of the Peace candidate -- on the Independent Voter line.

Even then he attracted broad-based support. Robert Gwathmey, the Amagansett artist who soon after found himself at the center of a nationally-prominent free speech case for having flown the Peace flag, described the 27-year-old former Marine Sergeant as "a strong man, unaffected and energetic, with principles and devotion. He will fight to preserve those very qualities that endear the East End to you and me."

Lee Hayes, a Tuskegee Airman in World War Two, said in endorsing Mr. Behan that year, "John Behan is the kind of man you can look in the eye and know he is straightforward. He'll be a great Town Justice."

Mr. Behan, who was endorsed by The Star, came in second in the three-way election, losing out to that year's top vote-getter, Sheppard Frood, while outpolling the Democratic candidate, Joseph LaGattuta. He was never to lose an election after that.

Twice elected as an East Hampton Town Assessor, in 1976 and '77, he went on to win nine straight terms in the State Assembly before becoming, under Gov. George Pataki, the head of the state's veterans service agency.

In 1976, he was cited in Newsweek Magazine's Bicentennial July 4 issue as "a refreshing, positive-thinking and optimistic leader."

Soon after Ronald Reagan became President, his daughter, Maureen, according to Mr. Greenbaum, said at a fund-raiser at the Nassau Coliseum a few days before the appointment was to be announced that Mr. Behan would be named to head the national Department of Veterans Affairs. At the last minute, the President wound up choosing Bob Nimmo, a World War Two pilot who had served in the California State Legislature, instead.

"John would have been the greatest Veterans Affairs administrator ever," said Mr. Greenbaum, who added that Mr. Behan, during his life in public service and afterward would visit Walter Reed Hospital regularly "to tell the patients that there was life after their terrible wounds. . . . I loved the man, his courage as a human being was amazing, the way he picked himself up. How he survived was a miracle. He was deserving of so much respect and admiration. During his campaigns all I would have to do was make a call and a check would arrive."

Karl Grossman, who has covered Suffolk County politics for almost 60 years, agreed with Mr. Greenbaum that Mr. Behan would have been a great V.A. administrator. "One important thing to note," he added, "was that John Behan led the effort to create a Peconic County on the East End. It was initially Evans Griffing's idea, but John led the next wave. . . . He was a heroic figure in his life and as an independent-minded figure in politics."

"One word describes him," said Ken LaValle, the former longtime State Senator from this district. "Patriot."

Mr. LaValle said further, "I can still see him insisting on pulling himself up onto the Atlantic Boxing Club's ring in Shirley during his first run for the Assembly, so he could speak to the crowd."

In the state legislature, Mr. Behan, who also had opposed the Shoreham nuclear power plant, served on the Assembly's standing committees on veterans affairs, environmental conservation, labor, and rules, as well as on the legislative task force for people with disabilities and with the task force on volunteer firefighters in New York State. He headed the legislature's Republican conference as well.

Mr. Thiele said in emailed statement that he and Mr. Behan  "worked closely for almost three years on bills relating to justice for veterans exposed to Agent Orange, on helping our local police, protecting our fishermen, and as advocated for the formation of Peconic County. His impassioned speech on the floor of the Assembly led to the creation of the first Assembly standing committee on veterans affairs, of which he became the ranking member."

Following the state delegation's trip to Vietnam in 1985, "Mr. Behan," said Mr. Thiele, "was honored to lead, along with Mayor Ed Koch, New York City's 'Welcome Home Parade to Vietnam Veterans' down the famed canyon of heroes."

Concerning his own successful political career, "I have told [Mr. Behan] many times publicly and privately, that I owed him a debt of gratitude I could never repay. . . . My condolences go out to Marilyn and his entire family. We remember the good times. Semper Fi!"

Mr. Greenbaum, who first met Mr. Behan at the Behans' liquor store near Montauk's Docks in 1977, when he and his wife, Fran, went there to buy one of the parakeets Marilyn Behan was breeding at the time, recalled being so impressed by Mr. Behan's presence that he said he should call him should he ever consider running for political office.

Mr. Behan's life was seriously threatened a second time when, in the summer of 2004, he fractured his skull in a nighttime fall from a three-wheeled motorized scooter on his way to get the mail at the foot of the Behans' steep driveway on Fairview Avenue.

"A deer had run in front of him, he turned and lost his balance," said Mr. Greenbaum. "It was the second time he'd been airlifted -- to Stony Brook Hospital in this case. They had to put a halo traction device on him to keep his neck and head stable. They didn't know if he'd survive. He was at Stony Brook for two months, and then in rehab in White Plains. It was a life-and-death battle again. And, again, he came back."

Mr. Behan retired from politics in the late '90's, "retiring to his boat, Semper Fi," Mrs. Behan said. His first job, she thought, had been as a riding teacher for Shank Dickinson at the Deep Hollow Ranch. "He was a cowboy," she said wistfully. "He wore many hats."

Besides his wife, Mr. Behan, who was one of eight sibilings, leaves three children, Jason, of Port Washington, Jack, of Roslyn, and Bridget, of Montauk; a brother, James, of Westhampton Beach; three sisters, Joan Fitzgerald, of Montauk and Florida, Janice Marlov, of Southampton, and Marles Behan, of Aquebogue; five grandchildren, and a nephew, Michael Behan, who is in the Marine Corps.

A wake is to be held for Mr. Behan, who was a member of the St. Therese Of Lisieux Roman Catholic Church in Montauk, at the Yardley and Pino Funeral Home in East Hampton on Sunday from TK to TK. Burial is to be the next day at the Calverton Natinal Cemetery in Wading River at TK.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Operation: Heal Our Heroes post traumatic stress distorder project.

Richard Gallop

Richard Gallop

$500 • Recent donation

Joshua Berkowitz

Joshua Berkowitz

$1,000 • Top donation

Mr&Mrs Daniel Pisani

Mr&Mrs Daniel Pisani

$100 • First donation

Organizer

Jason Behan

Show your support to Jason Behan by donating to this fundraiser benefiting Operation: Heal Our Heroes

Beveled Asterisk

JohnBehan

JohnBehan
Jason Behan

Jason Behan

Montauk, NY

Fundraising for

Operation: Heal Our Heroes

Fundraising forOperation: Heal Our Heroes
Donation protected
👍 0% fee
Donations are tax-deductible

Montauk's favorite son, John L. Behan, who, with broad bipartisan support, was the East End's voice in the State Assembly for the better part of two decades, and who, for three years afterward, headed the state's veterans affairs office before retiring from public service in 1999, died in his sleep of a heart attack at home last Thursday at the age of 76.

Throughout his adult life, Mr. Behan,  whose legs were blown off above the knee by an anti-tank mine while defending his Marine patrol from machine gun fire near Da Nang, Vietnam on May 23, 1966,  was a ceaseless advocate for veterans.

He went back to that country, for whose people he'd fought, two times -- in 1985 and 2006. "Both were healing trips," his wife, Marilyn said.

The chief aim of the New York State delegation Assemblyman Behan led there in '85 -- the first government group the Socialist Republic of Vietnam had welcomed -- was to bring back the remains of American soldiers, she said. The chief aim of the second visit was to hand over a $20,000 check to an organization that was clearing the land of unexploded ordnance and land mines, which long after the war ended in 1975 were claiming many lives.  

After being wounded, Mr. Behan, who suffered severe internal injuries too, underwent eight operations during the course of a year's hospitalization, near the end of which he was told by doctors at the Philadelphia Naval Hospital that he would never walk again, that he would have to use a walker. It was a prediction that he, a three-sport athlete at East Hampton High School, where he led the Student Council, made sure did not come true.

"I can't imagine learning to walk when you've had both legs amputated above the knee," said his former campaign manager, Ron Greenbaum, during a telephone conversation Saturday. "But John did it. He was a man among men, a helluva guy. . . .  The Vietnam Veterans organization in Suffolk County worked their butts off for John when he ran for Perry Duryea's seat -- with Perry's blessings -- in 1978. That was the year Perry ran for Governor. The veterans loved him for his sacrifice and for his continuing involvement with veterans' issues."

Not only did Mr. Behan learn to walk again, using only a cane, but, with his wife's encouragement, he continued to excel athletically, winning gold, silver, and bronze medals in international paralympic competitions, in Lima, Peru in 1973, and in Montreal, Canada in 1976, setting a world record in the precision javelin throw, to a target, in those Games.

That the javelin was his forte presumably would not come as a surprise to those who knew him to be a straight-shooter.

"He was inspiring to all whom he touched," said his former aide, Fred W. Thiele Jr., who later succeeded him in Albany. "Working for John was not just a job -- you became part of his family. His generosity to me sparked my career in government. . . . In the past few days, I have heard so many use these words in speaking of him: "larger than life," "icon," "hero. . . ." We're all the richer for having known him."

Mr. Behan was born on Veterans Day, Nov. 11, in 1944 in Flushing Hospital, the son of Joseph Lester and Marie Hand Behan, who, according to Marilyn Behan ran a seafood restaurant in College Point. It was at that restaurant, she said, "on a Friday fish night," that she first met her future husband and his family, when she was 14 or 15.

Their paths diverged for a while thereafter, when his parents moved to Hampton Bays, and, later, following the drowning death of John's younger brother, Joshua, to Montauk where Lester Behan captained the Peconic Queen partyboat fleet.

They met up again, she said, "after he was wounded," and were married at St. Fidelis Roman Catholic Church in College Point on Oct. 19, 1968.

The seven-time-decorated Marine first ventured into politics in 1971 when he ran with Walter Hackett and Mary Ella Reuterhan for East Hampton Town Board seats -- he as a Justice of the Peace candidate -- on the Independent Voter line.

Even then he attracted broad-based support. Robert Gwathmey, the Amagansett artist who soon after found himself at the center of a nationally-prominent free speech case for having flown the Peace flag, described the 27-year-old former Marine Sergeant as "a strong man, unaffected and energetic, with principles and devotion. He will fight to preserve those very qualities that endear the East End to you and me."

Lee Hayes, a Tuskegee Airman in World War Two, said in endorsing Mr. Behan that year, "John Behan is the kind of man you can look in the eye and know he is straightforward. He'll be a great Town Justice."

Mr. Behan, who was endorsed by The Star, came in second in the three-way election, losing out to that year's top vote-getter, Sheppard Frood, while outpolling the Democratic candidate, Joseph LaGattuta. He was never to lose an election after that.

Twice elected as an East Hampton Town Assessor, in 1976 and '77, he went on to win nine straight terms in the State Assembly before becoming, under Gov. George Pataki, the head of the state's veterans service agency.

In 1976, he was cited in Newsweek Magazine's Bicentennial July 4 issue as "a refreshing, positive-thinking and optimistic leader."

Soon after Ronald Reagan became President, his daughter, Maureen, according to Mr. Greenbaum, said at a fund-raiser at the Nassau Coliseum a few days before the appointment was to be announced that Mr. Behan would be named to head the national Department of Veterans Affairs. At the last minute, the President wound up choosing Bob Nimmo, a World War Two pilot who had served in the California State Legislature, instead.

"John would have been the greatest Veterans Affairs administrator ever," said Mr. Greenbaum, who added that Mr. Behan, during his life in public service and afterward would visit Walter Reed Hospital regularly "to tell the patients that there was life after their terrible wounds. . . . I loved the man, his courage as a human being was amazing, the way he picked himself up. How he survived was a miracle. He was deserving of so much respect and admiration. During his campaigns all I would have to do was make a call and a check would arrive."

Karl Grossman, who has covered Suffolk County politics for almost 60 years, agreed with Mr. Greenbaum that Mr. Behan would have been a great V.A. administrator. "One important thing to note," he added, "was that John Behan led the effort to create a Peconic County on the East End. It was initially Evans Griffing's idea, but John led the next wave. . . . He was a heroic figure in his life and as an independent-minded figure in politics."

"One word describes him," said Ken LaValle, the former longtime State Senator from this district. "Patriot."

Mr. LaValle said further, "I can still see him insisting on pulling himself up onto the Atlantic Boxing Club's ring in Shirley during his first run for the Assembly, so he could speak to the crowd."

In the state legislature, Mr. Behan, who also had opposed the Shoreham nuclear power plant, served on the Assembly's standing committees on veterans affairs, environmental conservation, labor, and rules, as well as on the legislative task force for people with disabilities and with the task force on volunteer firefighters in New York State. He headed the legislature's Republican conference as well.

Mr. Thiele said in emailed statement that he and Mr. Behan  "worked closely for almost three years on bills relating to justice for veterans exposed to Agent Orange, on helping our local police, protecting our fishermen, and as advocated for the formation of Peconic County. His impassioned speech on the floor of the Assembly led to the creation of the first Assembly standing committee on veterans affairs, of which he became the ranking member."

Following the state delegation's trip to Vietnam in 1985, "Mr. Behan," said Mr. Thiele, "was honored to lead, along with Mayor Ed Koch, New York City's 'Welcome Home Parade to Vietnam Veterans' down the famed canyon of heroes."

Concerning his own successful political career, "I have told [Mr. Behan] many times publicly and privately, that I owed him a debt of gratitude I could never repay. . . . My condolences go out to Marilyn and his entire family. We remember the good times. Semper Fi!"

Mr. Greenbaum, who first met Mr. Behan at the Behans' liquor store near Montauk's Docks in 1977, when he and his wife, Fran, went there to buy one of the parakeets Marilyn Behan was breeding at the time, recalled being so impressed by Mr. Behan's presence that he said he should call him should he ever consider running for political office.

Mr. Behan's life was seriously threatened a second time when, in the summer of 2004, he fractured his skull in a nighttime fall from a three-wheeled motorized scooter on his way to get the mail at the foot of the Behans' steep driveway on Fairview Avenue.

"A deer had run in front of him, he turned and lost his balance," said Mr. Greenbaum. "It was the second time he'd been airlifted -- to Stony Brook Hospital in this case. They had to put a halo traction device on him to keep his neck and head stable. They didn't know if he'd survive. He was at Stony Brook for two months, and then in rehab in White Plains. It was a life-and-death battle again. And, again, he came back."

Mr. Behan retired from politics in the late '90's, "retiring to his boat, Semper Fi," Mrs. Behan said. His first job, she thought, had been as a riding teacher for Shank Dickinson at the Deep Hollow Ranch. "He was a cowboy," she said wistfully. "He wore many hats."

Besides his wife, Mr. Behan, who was one of eight sibilings, leaves three children, Jason, of Port Washington, Jack, of Roslyn, and Bridget, of Montauk; a brother, James, of Westhampton Beach; three sisters, Joan Fitzgerald, of Montauk and Florida, Janice Marlov, of Southampton, and Marles Behan, of Aquebogue; five grandchildren, and a nephew, Michael Behan, who is in the Marine Corps.

A wake is to be held for Mr. Behan, who was a member of the St. Therese Of Lisieux Roman Catholic Church in Montauk, at the Yardley and Pino Funeral Home in East Hampton on Sunday from TK to TK. Burial is to be the next day at the Calverton Natinal Cemetery in Wading River at TK.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Operation: Heal Our Heroes post traumatic stress distorder project.

Organizer

Jason Behan

Show your support to Jason Behan by donating to this fundraiser benefiting Operation: Heal Our Heroes

$3,050raised
12Donors
0Comments
41Share ArrowShares
Richard Gallop

Richard Gallop

$500 • Recent donation

Joshua Berkowitz

Joshua Berkowitz

$1,000 • Top donation

Mr&Mrs Daniel Pisani

Mr&Mrs Daniel Pisani

$100 • First donation

★★★★★ Trustpilot Reviews

Ready to start?

Join the thousands like you finding help on *spotfund.

Spotfund Balloons