University Community Remembers âAwe-Inspiringâ Student who Succumbed to Coronavirus
The University of New Haven community came together to celebrate the life of Joshua Goodart â21, a cybersecurity and networks major, who died of complications from COVID-19 earlier this month. The University will award his degree posthumously at Spring Commencement.
February 19, 2021
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
Members of the University community placed candles next to the Charger Statue to honor Goodartâs memory.
Anthony Nigro â21 has fond memories of meeting Joshua Goodart â21 in a chemistry class as first-year students. Goodart became one of his closest friends, a group Nigro dubbed âthe guys.â
Goodart, 22, a cybersecurity and networks major, died earlier this month of complications from COVID-19. Nigro was one of several of Goodartâs friends who spoke to the University community as part of a physically distanced , which was also streamed online. Nigro described Goodart as a âbrotherâ and a âtruly remarkable person.â
âHe always stood up for us, always had our backs,â said Nigro. âHe was everything you could want in a friend and more, a treasured addition to the guys. The guys are going to miss you, buddy.â
A resident of Oxford, Conn., Goodart became sick over Winter Break and was eventually hospitalized. He had not yet returned to campus for the spring semester.
Campus chaplain Marty OâConnor led the University community in a prayer, and several students shared tributes to Goodart, including a poem dedicated to him. Goodartâs friend and roommate, Noah Castro â21, has especially fond memories of Goodart playing the song âGreensleevesâ on the guitar. He said the song will always remind him of Goodart, and he played a recording of it at the ceremony. He also shared the pain of losing his friend.
âMy heart sank,â he said. âI was so upset I couldnât do anything the day that I found out he had died. But then I looked back on all the great times we had together. He always knew how to crack a smile, and he was so much fun to be around. He was so hard working, and he was awe inspiring.â
Noah Castro â21, Joshua Goodartâs friend, played a recording of âGreensleevesâ at the ceremony.
âJoshâs memory will always live onâ
Speaking next to a wreath of white roses and a photo of Goodart, classmates shared funny stories about him, describing him as a âteddy bearâ who probably would have been wearing flip flops that day, despite the winter weather.
Liberty Page â91 M.S., Goodartâs faculty adviser, recalled the last time she spoke to Goodart. She remembers he was looking forward to his internship and to applying for cybersecurity jobs, and she described him as an enthusiastic and hardworking student.
âI told him how proud I was of him,â she said. âIâm glad I got the chance to tell him. He was a gentleman. He was kind, a great guy, a good friend, very well-liked. I loved his smile. He was always happy. His smile lit up the room.â
Joshua Goodart â21. (Courtesy of GoFundMe)
Goodart had told Prof. Page that he wanted to stay in Connecticut, his home state, upon graduating in May. He aspired to work in network administration.
The University will award Goodartâs degree posthumously during Spring Commencement and, if an in-person Commencement is possible, invite his parents to be special guests.
At the vigil, members of the University community placed candles next to the Charger Statue to honor Goodartâs memory.
âWe are all united not only in our desires to give tribute to Josh, but in our need as Chargers to do so,â said Amanda Pappas â21, president of the Class of 2021. âWe can use our candles to signify that Joshâs memory will always live on and live so bright. I implore you to hold your friends a little closer.â