


2008 NFF GOLD MEDAL RECIPIENT
John Glenn
Former U.S. Senator / Astronaut
A true American icon, John H. Glenn, Jr., has defined
himself as a leader in every step of his life. The holder
of countless titles, including soldier, pilot, pioneering
NASA astronaut, corporate executive, and U.S.
Senator, his accomplishments place him in rarefied
company, becoming the 53rd recipient of the National
Football Foundation's Gold Medal, the organization's
highest honor.
The son of a plumber, Glenn grew up in New
Concord, Ohio before attending nearby Muskingum
College where he excelled as a football student-
athlete. As a junior, he made a decision that would
define the rest of his life by enrolling in a Civilian Pilot
Training program. He earned his pilot's license in the
spring of 1941, and following the attack on Pearl
Harbor, he entered the Naval Aviation Cadet Program
in March of 1942. Commissioned in the Marine Corps
in 1943, Glenn would go on to fly 149 combat
missions during World War II and the Korean War,
claiming the Distinguished Flying Cross on six
occasions and rising to the rank of Colonel.
Following Korea, Glenn attended the Test Pilot School
at the Naval Air Test Center, and in 1957 he set a
transcontinental speed record from Los Angeles to
New York, crossing the continent in 3 hours and 23
minutes as part of "Project Bullet." His
accomplishments led to his selection as a Project
Mercury Astronaut, and on February 20, 1962, he flew
on Mercury-6, becoming the first American to orbit the
Earth at a breathtaking 17,500 miles per hour. With
the Cold War in full force, Glenn's accomplishments
made him one of the national heroes of the space
race, providing him a launching pad for his political
career.
After several unsuccessful forays on the campaign
trail, interspersed with a career as a board member
and president of Royal Crown Cola and overseeing
four Holiday Inn franchises, Glenn won election in
1974 to his first term to the U.S. Senate as a
Democrat from Ohio. He would win three more terms
during his 24-year Senate career before his retirement
in 1999. The chairman of the Governmental Affairs
Committee in the U.S. Senate, he became known as
an advocate of a streamlined federal government. He
also severed on the Armed Services committee where
he established himself as the expert in Congress on
the issue of nuclear proliferation, advocating for the
prevention of the assembling of nuclear weapons by
foreign nations. On the short list of leaders in the
Democratic Party, he received consideration for the
vice presidential nomination three times and ran in
the Democratic primaries as a presidential candidate
in 1984. Nearly 40 years after his Mercury-6 flight,
Glenn returned to space by joining the crew of the
Space Shuttle Discovery on October 29, 1998 and
becoming the oldest person ever in space at the age
of 77.
A highly decorated military hero, Glenn's other awards
include the United Nations Service Medal, the NASA
Distinguished Service Medal, the Congressional
Space Medal of Honor, and the NCAA Theodore
Roosevelt Award. In March 1999, NASA renamed its
Cleveland center the "John H. Glenn Research Center
at Lewis Field" in his honor. Glenn and his wife
founded the John and Annie Glenn Institute for Public
Service and Public Policy at Ohio State University to
inspire citizenship and leadership.