| Rosary:  4:30 p.m. on 
							Tuesday, March 2, 2021, with visitation from 5:00 
							p.m. -7:00 p.m. at Saint Thomas Aquinas Catholic 
							Church in Mount Pulaski Visitation:
							Tuesday, March 2, 2021, from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. 
							at the church A fire department and EMS walk 
							through is scheduled for 7:00 p.m.  Service:
							Wednesday, March 3, 2021, at 11:00 a.m. at the 
							church 
							Funeral home: 
							Peasley Funeral Home, Lincoln       
							Obituary 
							Steven Michael Coogan, 72, passed 
							away surrounded by his loving family Friday, 
							February 26, 2021, after battling idiopathic 
							pulmonary fibrosis for nine years. 
 The Rosary will be recited at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, 
							March 2, 2021, with visitation from 5:00 p.m. -7:00 
							p.m. at Saint Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church in 
							Mount Pulaski. A fire department and EMS walk 
							through is scheduled for 7:00 p.m.
 
 A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on 
							Wednesday, March 3, 2021, at 11:00 a.m. at Saint 
							Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church. Rev. Thomas Shaw 
							will officiate. Burial will follow at St. Mary’s 
							Cemetery in Lincoln.
 
 CDC guidelines regarding social distancing and face 
							coverings will be observed.
 
 Memorials may be made to St. Jude’s Children 
							Hospital.
 
 Steve was born November 12, 1948, in Lincoln, to 
							John J. and Elizabeth Feldman Coogan. He married 
							Pamela Aper on February 20, 1971. She survives. They 
							have 2 children, Angela Morey (Sherwood, WI) and 
							Sean (Gina) Coogan (Blue Mound); four grandchildren: 
							Ryan and Reece Morey, Patrick Coogan, and Beth 
							Kerns; and 3 great-grandchildren: Ryan, Lilliana, 
							and Andre. Steve is also survived by two sisters, 
							Denise Coogan (CherryHill, NJ) and Deborah (Tony) 
							Soloman (Lincoln).
 
 Steve was preceded in death by his parents, and two 
							sisters, Mary Catherine Darter and Ann Coogan.
 
 Steve attended St. Mary’s Catholic School and 
							graduated from LCHS in 1967. He also attended 
							Lincoln College. Steve was employed by Lincoln 
							Developmental Center in 1967, and then Logan Mason 
							Rehab in 1981, where he retired in 2014.
 
 In 1979, Steve joined the Latham Volunteer Fire 
							Department and was instrumental in establishing the 
							Latham Rescue Squad. Steve was also a Trustee of the 
							Latham Village Board.
 
							Steve had a very strong faith and 
							loved his family dearly. He was a member of the St. 
							Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church and a religious 
							education teacher.
 
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 Steve was a member of the Central Illinois 
							Herpetological Society and Champaign Area Society 
							Herpetoculturist. He also was a member of the 
							Springfield Audubon and Illinois Audubon Societies. 
							Steve loved nature and especially loved sharing his 
							knowledge with children. He was a deep-thinking 
							naturalist. He would sometimes be referred to as a 
							walking encyclopedia.
 
 Steve has gifted all those whose lives he touched a 
							legacy of compassion, empathy, and a willingness to 
							constantly learn and teach. Steve dedicated his life 
							to working with special people. His compassion and 
							empathy toward a portion of our society that is 
							sometimes forgotten defined his character. It was 
							his strength of character that quietly taught us 
							that all life was deserving of dignity and those he 
							cared for were treated as equals. Steve never 
							assumed anything less about each of them and they, 
							in turn, loved him deeply. To provide dignity to the 
							forgotten defined who Steve was, and it is this 
							unselfish trait that will be remembered most.
 
 Never missing an opportunity to talk about his 
							passion for birds or reptiles, Steve inevitably used 
							these opportunities to teach compassion and empathy 
							for the natural world. A quiet walk through the 
							woods would almost always end with a teachable 
							moment. His passion for the natural world and its 
							inhabitants flowed through him, through his 
							children, and then to his grandchildren. Like those 
							that he cared for during his career, the wildlife 
							that he studied and cherished became another vessel 
							in which he could quietly teach us about compassion 
							and empathy.
 
 Steve was a great storyteller. He delighted in 
							telling funny stories and we all delighted in 
							hearing them, no matter how many times before he 
							told the story. His disarming nature made friends of 
							strangers and turned friends into life-long friends. 
							The subtle way in which Steve impacted the lives 
							around him will not be soon forgotten.
 
 The family would like to thank everyone for all the 
							prayers, encouraging words, cards, and food.
 
 Final arrangements are entrusted with Peasley 
							Funeral Home of Lincoln.
 
 Click here to send a note of condolence to the 
							family of Steven M. Coogan
 
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