Adam Lloyd Levin, 67
Adam Lloyd Levin, a resident of Hingham for 43 years, died on March 26 after a long illness. He was 67.
Born in Waterbury, Conn., on Oct. 21, 1952, Adam was the son of Stanley and Lois Levin. He attended Governor Dummer Academy and received his B.A. in religious studies and philosophy from Hamilton College. During his college years, he spent one summer on the isolated island of Miquelon, where he learned to speak French and enjoyed hiking on the neighboring island of St. Pierre.
After graduating from college, he took a six-month cross-country bicycle trip from Connecticut to San Diego with a friend.
Back on the East Coast, Adam enrolled at Boston College Law School where he received his J.D. While in law school, he was editor for the Commercial Code Law Journal. After law school, he practiced corporate law, with an emphasis on commercial real estate transactions for large corporations and in particular on negotiating leases for cinema complexes in Boston and surrounding areas.
Adam believed deeply in serving his community. He served on the board of directors for the Hingham Rotary Club for several years and faithfully attended every meeting until he was too sick to leave his house. At the time of his death, he was trustee for the club’s Charitable Trust. He was awarded a Paul Harris Fellowship for his dedication to Hingham Rotary and the Hingham community.
Adam could always be counted on to be walking up and down Main Street during the July 4 parade, selling buttons whose proceeds would benefit the following year’s parade. He walked with great pride even in the hottest weather and often with his beloved daughter, Hannah, by his side. Together they would help compile the Rotary Club’s annual Hingham telephone directory with other Rotary volunteers.
Along with his commitment to Rotary Club, Adam served on the board of directors of Wellspring Multi-Service Center in Hull. He held this position from 2005-2016, when he was no longer well enough to serve. For many years, he participated in the annual Drowned Hogs Swim for Wellspring.
In addition, Adam helped launch the Hingham Symphony Orchestra and served on its board of trustees for a number of years and also as a volunteer with his daughter by his side.
Although Adam was a soft-spoken gentleman, who shied away from the spotlight, when he spoke at meetings people listened; his words were always wise, measured, and thoughtful. Family, friends, and colleagues often turned to him for advice and guidance. He was kind and always greeted people with a smile and a handshake.
Adam loved to travel, especially to the national parks, where he and his wife enjoyed hiking and birdwatching.
He had a wonderful, wry sense of humor, in particular with regard to himself. Despite his continued failing health, he was always saying something funny, yet poignant, to put others at ease.
Throughout a decades-long series of catastrophic health events, Adam never lost his fierce will to live and to share his life with his family and be an active member of his community. He was a fighter to the end, rarely complaining, and left an indelible impression on the many members of the medical community at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital who treated him over the past several years. His medical team looked at him with awe and great respect through all that he had endured in his adult lifetime.
Adam leaves behind his loving and devoted wife of 42 years, Gail Nathanson; his beloved daughter, Hannah Sarah Levin, and her fiancé, Tansu Karaman; his sister, Amy Levin, of Larchmont, N.Y.; and his sister-in-law, Judith Nathanson, and brother-in-law, Neil Onerheim, of Andover.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to:
Wellspring Inc., 814 Nantasket Ave., Hull, MA 02045.