The H600 Project Genealogy DB

John Hoar

Male 1945 - 1966  (20 years)


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name John Hoar 
    Born 17 Sep 1945  North Arlington, Bergen Co, New Jersey, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 13 Feb 1966  Vietnam Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I23758  A00 Hoar and Horr Families North America
    Last Modified 13 Feb 2016 

    Father Robert Hoar, Sr.,   b. 5 Jul 
    Mother Mae (Unknown),   b. Unknown 
    Family ID F9809  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • [[Pfc. John M. Hoar, U.S.A.
      (Feb. 24, 1966) -- He's home.
      Pfc. John M. Hoar, a slender 20-year-old soldier who marched off to the Vietnam war on Christmas Day 1965, returned home Sunday evening. He became the first (known) Belleville serviceman to give his life in that far-away conflict which no one understands.
      His gray, flag-draped coffin arrived at 9:30 p.m. Sunday aboard a sleek military transport plane which landed at Newark Airport accompanied by Sp. 5 Bob White, a military escort provided by the army for its fallen warriors.
      Pfc. Hoar died of a head wound inflicted by soldiers of the Viet Cong during a savage firefight at Bongson, 265 miles northeast of Saigon on the South China Sea.
      His death, said an army telegram from the Defense Department, ''... was incurred by small arms fire while on a combat operation.''
      "When we came up here," he wrote before the fight, "we had 15 guys in the squad. Now we have nine. One was taken sick, another broke his leg, and three others were wounded."
      Now Pfc. Hoar himself joins the list of America's honored dead who were killed in action.
      He is survived by his grieving parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hoar, Cleveland Street, who sit quietly in their second-floor apartment and remember the days when their son was a laughing young man who had the world before him.
      His young brother, Robert Jr., a husky 15-year-old, tries to maintain a manly composure but tears dampen his eyes as he tells of his brother's background here in Belleville, and of his adventures as a soldierin a distant land whose very name now takes on a nightmarish quality.
      He also leaves a sister, Mrs. John (Mary Beth) Weber of Bloomfield.
      Pfc. Hoar was born on Sept. .17, in Kearny, the first of the two sons and a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoar.
      He attended Queen of Peace School, St. Peter's and finally Belleville High School before leaving at the age of 16 while in his junior year.
      He took a job with Eastern Tool and Manufacturing Co., here, and had been scheduled for the draft sometime in October.
      "But that wasn't good enough for him," said his mother, Mae, "he wanted to serve right away." And with the youthful optimism of all boys, her son managed to have his induction date advanced to Aug. 6.
      After soldiering at nearby Fort Dix, a basic training camp where countless thousands of eager, young soldiers have gone before him, Pfc. Hoar and the rest of Company B, who were part of the 1st Calavary Division (Airborne) left for California.
      Then, on Christmas Day, the company was marched aboard a military transport and sent to Vietnam. There he took part in the fierce fighting near An Khe Now.
      "We went through Hell," he wrote his mother.
      But his thoughts, like most American soldiers, were always on home.
      "Yesterday," he wrote, "we sat down upon a mountain and looked out at the Pacific and thought of home -- even more than usual.
      But Pfc. Hoar will never again be far from home thinking about his loved ones.
      He was killed in action the day after writing his last letter.
      He had been overseas less than two months.
      A Solemn High Mass of Requiem was held yesterday morning at 10 a.m. in St. Peter's Church, attended by friends who mourn his death and parents who grieve for a son lost forever.
      Six Belleville servicemen served as casket-bearers for Pfc. Hoar.
      "We had to turn others down," said Mrs. Mae Hoar, who added that many other friends had offered to serve. All six servicemen were given special leaves.
      A six-man honor guard from Fort Dix shattered the air over his grave with the crack of rifle fire, followed by the sound of Taps which carried far across the crisp February air.
      Pfc. Hoar was home.

      HOAR, JOHN MICHAEL
      BELLEVILLE, NJ
      Date of Birth: Monday, September 17, 1945
      Sex: Male
      Race: Caucasian
      Marital Status: Single
      Branch: Army
      Rank: PFC
      Serial Number: 51568859
      Component: Selective Service
      Pay grade: E3
      MOS (Military Occupational Specialty code): 11B10
      Major Organization: 1st Cavalry Div
      Start of Tour: Sunday, December 26, 1965
      Date of Casualty: Sunday, February 13, 1966
      Age at time of loss: 20
      Casualty type: (A1) Hostile, died
      Reason: Gun, small arms fire (Ground casualty)
      Country: South VietNam
      Province: Unknown/Not Reported

      http://www.northjersey.com/community-news/belleville-to-honor-soldier-killed-in-action-with-street-naming-1.1511108
      Belleville will hold a street dedication ceremony on Saturday, Feb. 13 at 11:30 a.m. at the intersection of Cleveland and Dow streets, in honor of Pfc. John Michael Hoar, who was killed in action in Vietnam on the same date 50 years ago.
      Refreshments will follow at the Belleville Senior Citizens Center at 125 Franklin Ave.
      Hoar is the first known Belleville serviceman killed in the Vietnam War, according to the Belleville Sons Honor Roll website at bellevillesons.com.
      He was born on Sept. 17, 1945 in Kearny, the first of two sons and a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoar. He attended Queen of Peace School, St. Peter's school and then Belleville High School. He was 16 when he left school in his junior year. He then took a job with Eastern Tool and Manufacturing Co. in Belleville.
      He trained at Fort Dix, and was assigned to Company B of the 1st Calvary Division (Airborne).
      "" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" style="border: 0px currentColor; border-image: none; vertical-align: bottom;""" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" style="border: 0px currentColor; border-image: none; vertical-align: bottom; display: none; visibility: hidden;"
      He and fellow soldiers left for Vietnam on Christmas Day in 1965. He died less than two months later, at age 20, from a head wound inflicted by soldiers of the Viet Cong during a savage firefight at Bongson, 265 miles northeast of Saigon on the South China Sea, according to bellevillesons.com.
      States Belleville Sons Honor Roll: His death, said an Army telegram from the Defense Department, ''... was incurred by small arms fire while on a combat operation.''
      "" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" style="border: 0px currentColor; border-image: none; vertical-align: bottom;""" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" style="border: 0px currentColor; border-image: none; vertical-align: bottom; display: none; visibility: hidden;"
      The street naming follows one last September, when the township dedicated High Street to Pfc. Donald Saunders, a Belleville marine who was killed in action in South Vietnam in 1968, also at the age of 20.
      Email: gray@northjersey.com