Funeral Details

Jonathan V. Higgins, PhD

May 16, 1958 - July 24, 2022

SERVICE INFORMATION

Date and Time

Sunday, July 31, 2022 at 2:00 PM

Service

Chicago Jewish Funerals
Skokie Chapel
8851 Skokie Boulevard
Skokie, Illinois 60077
Get Directions

Clergy

Rabbi Scott Looper
Temple Beth Or in Montgomery, AL

Interment - Private

Shiva

Besson-Higgins Residence
1300 Isabella Street
Evanston, Illinois 60201
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Sunday 4PM-8PM
Minyan 7PM

Memorial Contributions

Checks may be mailed to:
Jonathan Higgins Internship in
Environmental Conservation Fund
Grinnell College
733 Broad Street,
Grinnell, Iowa, 50112-1690
Donations can be made online at:
alumni.grinnell.edu/give
(select ‘Other’ under ‘Fund to Support’
and specify Jonathan Higgins).





OBITUARY

Jonathan Vernon Higgins, Ph.D.
Jonathan Higgins, a lifelong Evanston resident whose work as a freshwater ecologist allowed him to travel the world, died on July 24 at the age of 64, after a long battle with cancer.
Known for his kindness and generosity, a no-nonsense style, and for speaking truth to power, Jonathan was an accomplished athlete, musician, gardener, fly fisherman, and outdoorsman. He particularly loved the Northwoods of the Midwest and the rivers and streams of the American West.
Jonathan was a starting fullback on the 1975 Evanston Township High School Hall of Fame soccer team, where he also pole vaulted his freshman and sophomore years. He went on to become Rookie of the Year, co-Captain, and a three-time all-conference soccer player at Grinnell College, from where he graduated in 1980 with a BA in biology and initiated his research interest in freshwater ecology. Jonathan received an MS and a PhD in population ecology and evolutionary biology from the University of Illinois-Chicago, graduating with Phi Kappa Phi honors membership. He started his career in freshwater ecology as a contractor with the EPA, where he managed the contract staff in sampling and analyzing water quality and biota of the Great Lakes, and then with the Nature Conservancy, where he worked for over 27 years until his death.
Jonathan was respected as a global expert in freshwater conservation ecology. His work incorporated freshwater biodiversity into The Nature Conservancy’s efforts, which had previously focused on terrestrial conservation. Specifically, his work concerned the development of regional analyses that depict freshwater ecosystem diversity spatially, along with ways to assess the conditions and threats to those ecosystems at multiple scales. At The Nature Conservancy, he developed methods, tools, and regional analyses for conservation planning in North, Central, and South America, Africa, India, Asia, and Australia, where he traveled and engaged with local and regional staff and academic experts. He also led efforts to monitor and measure the impact of conservation efforts within TNC. He developed the science capacity for The Great Lakes Program, the first regional conservation program within TNC, and was one of a small group that started the global program for freshwater conservation within TNC. Jonathan was widely published and cited, and active in cooperative research endeavors with partners around the world. His efforts while at The Nature Conservancy have greatly advanced freshwater conservation globally.
Jonathan was passionate about his work, and always eager to share his knowledge. He mentored young professionals with enthusiasm. In 2020, he created an internship scholarship program at Grinnell College to support students pursuing careers in conservation and the environment.
Jonathan enjoyed a four-decades-long music career, playing piano and keyboards in college bands – including his beloved Space Potatoes – and numerous post-college soul, R&B, jazz, and rock and roll bands in the Chicago area between 1980 and 2010.
Jonathan is survived by his wife Susan Besson, sister Robin Karney (nee Higgins), brother-in-law Peter Karney, nephews Benjamin and Daniel Karney, step-children Chloe Besson and William Besson, and numerous cousins and dear friends. He will be missed by them all. He was preceded in death by James V. and C. Phyllis Higgins. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Grinnell College Jonathan Higgins '80 Internship in Environmental Conservation Fund. Donations can be made online at alumni.grinnell.edu/give (select ‘Other’ under ‘Fund to Support,’ and specify Jonathan Higgins; checks may be mailed to Grinnell College 733 Broad St., Grinnell, Iowa, 50112-1690.
Memorial service Sunday, July 31, 2PM at Chicago Jewish Funerals, 8851 Skokie Blvd. (at Niles Center Road) Skokie. To attend the funeral live stream, please visit our website.
Arrangements by Chicago Jewish Funerals - Skokie Chapel, 847.229.8822, www.cjfinfo.com


GUEST BOOK

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Dear Susan and Robin,
I am so sad to hear of Jonathan’s passing. As Robin knows, our mothers were best friends and us kids grew up together. I’ll always remember Jon for his friendship, caring nature and wonderful sense of humor. I’m sorry for your loss which is leaving a hole for many of us already. My brother Bill and I will be at the service Sunday.
With loving thoughts, Glen Roberts

Glen Roberts
July 27, 2022
To the family,

Jonathan Higgins was the most interesting, courageous and wonderful man one could ever meet.
He met all his challenges head on and continued to have a great sense of humor under all circumstances.
He was truly a wonderful "mensch". My heartfelt condolences to the whole family.
Iris K. Aronson

Iris Aronson
July 28, 2022
Dear CUZ Susan,
Johnathan was your true north; it doesn't get any better than that. You two made a very exciting life together. We will miss his powerful loving personality that he shared with everybody. He was more of a brother than a cuz. Susan, we pray that you are blessed with love and kindness from all the family and friends in your circle.
All our love Mike & Janine

Janine and Mike Desper
July 30, 2022
Dear Susan,
I met you only once, at a gathering of former and current TNC freshwater people in NYC several years ago and was utterly delighted to see how happy Jonathan was alongside you. We worked together to launch and carry out TNC's Freshwater Initiative, among that program's core, and shared many lively and heartfelt discussions and debates (this is Jonathan we're talking about), hours on rafts and nights on river beaches, and years of hard work. I don't think he ever could quite understand why I knew so little Yiddish, but he always wanted to teach me more, something I did not expect from someone named 'Higgins,' but then, he was always full of surprises. His music, in particular. That was amazing... I will miss him greatly.
David

David Braun
July 31, 2022
Hig was one of the greatest guys I’ve know and one of the best friends a person could have. I’ll miss his (blatant) honesty, integrity, kindness and passion he had for the world around him. Hig was one of a kind, and I’m a better man for having him as a friend.

Chris Jorgensen
July 31, 2022
I started working at the US EPA Great Lakes National Program Office in 1991, the same year Jonathan started as the manager on the analytical services contract. We shared the same birth year and a musical connection. We even played music together on the R/V Lake Guardian. These are fond memories, and I’m glad we kept in touch over all the years between.

Our condolences to Susan, the family, and everyone else who is affected by this loss.

Let there be no doubt, Jonathan was a great man, and we are proud to have known him.

Dave Anderson and Linda Smith
Salt Lake City, Utah


Dave Anderson
July 31, 2022
It is an honor and a great pleasure to have known Jonathan and played music with him. I was on my way to band practice last Sunday when I got the news, it was only fitting to go on and play the rest of the afternoon. He is loved and fondly remembered by all of us. Not Fade Away,

Mark Huston
July 31, 2022
I heard about Jon’s passing while in Canada fishing with Grinnell classmates Bill Leone and Doug Spitz. Jon had gone there with them in the late ‘80s and the three thereafter turned up at a Grinnell reunion late one Friday night in early June . I last talked to Jon this spring, encouraging him to join us on the trip to Canada, hoping it would give a little lift to his decline, but he said he was already too weak to think of activities. I’m grateful to have gotten to enjoy his friendship when I lived in Edgewater & Rogers Park in the ‘80s, and to be an infrequent stopover here in Madison on his research projects. May he live on in our fond memories.

John DeBacher
August 10, 2022