Recent Obituaries: June Foreman
June Foreman, former resident of Sullivan, passed away June 20, 2026 at a care center in Luverne, Alabama. She was 96 years old. Born Francis June Bell in the cold pre-dawn of Christmas at the start of the Great Depression in 1929, she grew up on a red dirt road where water came from a well, and light from oil lamps. Her father, Johnny, ran a small farm and worked timber while her mother, Beatrice, wrangled chickens and made biscuits in a cast iron pan. As the middle child, June worked the mule-plowed fields, picked cotton, and tended livestock as readily as her older brother James and younger brother Jerry.
She graduated from Dozier, Alabama High and went on to business school in Montgomery. There, on a blind date, she met a young military man from Chicago. After some courtship, Dale Foreman asked her to marry him as he boarded a bus back to the base. After that, they were rarely apart unless the Air Force demanded it. In the Carolinas, their first baby passed away in just days. Then in South Dakota, they had a girl, Chris. When the military took Dale to Morocco, June boarded a small military ship to cross the ocean and join him, landing in the tumult of Casablanca. She gave birth to her son, Robert, in north Africa. Back in the U. S., Tom was born in Illinois.
June loved her family and took on all manner of challenges in their care: ice skating, hiking and camping in the Black Hills, waiting out blizzards, suffering heatwaves, and watching tornadoes on the Great Plains. She endured-and even enjoyed- endless rounds of kids sports, music lessons, plays, pageants, and magic shows (performed by her son, Tom). Religion played a large role in her life and she was eternally faithful. She organized the non-denominational Neighborhood Womens' Bible Coffees while living in Sullivan and was active in the Methodist Church, helping at church socials, Bible School, and summer camp. Time and again, she oversaw the endless logistics of moving the family from place to place as her husband Dale's military and civilian jobs dictated it. Dale's job with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources brought him to Sullivan as the first superintendant at Eagle and Wolf Creek State Parks on Lake Shelbyville.
She and Dale retired to her homeland in southern Alabama where she spent the final fifty years of her life in a house Dale built on the farm field she once worked. There they hosted friends for Fourth of July fireworks, cared for her aging mother, and watched her grandkids grow as they heard her stories, and wonderful laugh, felt her kind touch, and witnessed her goodness which will surely ripple through their lives, too.
June is survived by her daughter Chris and husband Pete Johnston, son Robert Foreman, son Tom Foreman and wife Linda, six grandchildren, and thirteen great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband Dale, her parents, her brothers, and her daughter-in-law Beth. Her funeral will be held on June 27, 2026 at 10:30 AM at Liberty Congregational Church on Lester Bell Road, Dozier, Alabama, which is the church that she and Dale built and led upon their retirement. Visitation will be the night before in Andalusia, Alabama at the Foreman Brown-Service Funeral Home.
