
1906 - 1993 (86 years)
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| Name |
John Hoar |
| Prefix |
Brig. Gen. |
| Suffix |
Jr. |
| Birth |
10 Aug 1906 |
Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA |
| Gender |
Male |
| Census |
1930 |
| Death |
19 Jun 1993 |
Decator, , Georgia, USA |
| Burial |
, Arlington Co, Virginia, USA (Arlington National Cemetery) |
| Person ID |
I36618 |
A00 Hoar and Horr Families North America |
| Last Modified |
25 Mar 2013 |
| Father |
John Hoar, Sr., b. 28 Apr 1880, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA d. 9 Jun 1957, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA (Age 77 years) |
| Mother |
Blanche Murphy, b. 29 Apr 1875, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA d. 2 Mar 1969, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA (Age 93 years) |
| Marriage |
26 Feb 1906 |
Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA |
| Family ID |
F13804 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Family |
Henrietta Leblanc, b. 1 Jun 1903, Nova Scotia, Canada d. 6 Mar 2002, Decator, , Georgia, USA (Age 98 years) |
| Marriage |
9 Oct 1933 |
Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA |
| Children |
| | 1. Jeanne Hoar, b. Abt 1939, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA d. 13 Feb 2012 (Age 73 years) |
| | 2. John Hoar, 3rd, b. Abt 1942, d.  |
|
| Family ID |
F1394 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Last Modified |
22 Mar 2009 |
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| Notes |
- Cemetery:
http://public.mapper.army.mil/ANC/ANCWeb/PublicWMV/ancWeb.html
[[Obituary:
Boston Globe Newspaper Jun 24, 1993
Retired Army Brig. Gen. John B. Hoar Jr. died Saturday in his home in Atlanta, apparently of a heart attack. He was 86.
Born and raised in Boston, Gen. Hoar was a Boston firefighter before joining the Army at the outset of World War II.
In the early days of the war, he commanded a military police detachment that safeguarded overseas radio installations on the South Shore.
After the fighting began in North Africa, he organized and supervised a prisoner of war camp for Italian and German detainees in North Africa. He returned to this country with a group of POWs and organized prisoner of war camps throughout New England.
After a brief tour of duty as director of security and intelligence at Fort Devens, he served as a military police adviser to the Chinese Nationalist Army.
As a major during the Korean War, he oversaw the detainment of prisoners of war.
He was promoted to brigadier general as a member of the Massachusetts National Guard and was president of MacArthur Military Academy in Mount Freedom, N.J., until his retirement in 1975.
He leaves his wife, Hattie; a daughter, Jeanne Boger of Atlanta; a son, John B. 3d of Manchester, N.H.; a brother, Charles F. of West Roxbury; and a sister, Evelyn Day, of Weymouth.
A funeral Mass was held Tuesday in Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Atlanta. Burial will be Monday in Arlington National Cemetery, Washington.
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