Harold "Hal" Greenwood, the former president and CEO of Midwest Federal Savings and Loan and a central figure in the savings and loan crisis of the mid-1980s, has died at age 89.
Greenwood found a kind of redemption later in life when, after a prison term, he moved to Grand Marais, Minn., where he earned respect as a civic leader active in local business and politics.
He died of heart and kidney failure at North Shore Health in Grand Marais on Nov. 19, family members said.
In that North Shore community, he served as chairman of the Cook County Revolving Loan Fund, a promoter of affordable housing and lender of last resort for businesses in the area; founded and led the Cook County School Education Foundation and founded the Cook County Chamber of Commerce.
Greenwood was also longtime chairman of the Planning and Zoning and Public Utilities commissions for the city of Grand Marais.
Jim Boyd, executive director of the Cook County Chamber of Commerce, said Greenwood was a larger-than-life, well-respected civic leader.
"Around here he was considered a good person who contributed a heck of a lot to the community," Boyd said. "He had his finger in a lot of pies, a lot of do-good pies, including economic development and housing."
Greenwood was active in both civic affairs and politics in the region. He ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Grand Marais in 2002. Just as earlier in life he had been a friend and supporter of Vice President Hubert Humphrey, later in life he was close to political figures such as state Sen. Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook (now an independent), and state Rep. Rob Ecklund, DFL-International Falls.