The memorial service for Jack was held late Friday afternoon in High Point, NC. Attended by about 75 caring people, it was most gratifying to see and hear the impression he made as a man on so many, way beyond the personality/character that we radio folks knew him for. Jack's 3 daughters are wonderfully decent women. And if the measure of any of us is the progeny we leave behind, he was a heluva guy. Jack's older brother spoke beautifully of him. Many who more recently worked with Jack at Oldies 93 in Greensboro made it quite clear that his dedication and professionalism and true belief in (what's left of) the business was as real as we all hoped it would be.
And that commitment was verified by Bob Weiss, one of the orginal owners of WIXY in Cleveland, who hired Jack over 40 years ago when he was a 20 year-old.
Clearly, Jack's health had been noticably failing the past few months, and one of his closest relatives, in the midst of the tributes, let us all know that "when he couldn't get back into radio, God came and took him at the right time... he died of a broken heart."
I only met Jack personally once, but he was always willing and gracious with his time when called upon. I asked him to talk to us on WBT a few years back right after George Harrison died. He said yes, of course, and proceeded to stay with us for a full hour, taking calls and telling his great up-close-and-personal story of introducing the Beatles in Cleveland and the accompanying mahem of the moment.
Let there be no doubt that Jack Armstrong's radio legacy lives on not just through the left-behind airchecks and YouTube stuff, but through all of us still hanging in there who he inspired those many years ago via Cleveland, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, LA and beyond....
Brad Krantz
WZTK, Greensboro/Raleigh-Durham