The H600 Project Genealogy DB

William Hoar

Male Abt 1872 - 1904  (32 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William Hoar was born about 1872 (son of (Male) Hoar); died on 12 Apr 1904 in Boonton, Morris Co, New Jersey, USA; was buried in ~(Calvary Cemetery).

    Notes:

    Lived at 100th or 106th street and 3rd Ave, NYC, New York.
    Worked as a diver in Boonton, NJ.

    Published Newspaper Articles about his death.
    The Daily Review (Decatur, Illinois) April 13, 1904.
    Trenton Times (Trenton, New Jersey) April 14, 1904.
    The Post Standard (Syracuse, New York) April 16, 1904 (With his photo)
    and The NY Times:
    http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9B04E4DF1F3AE733A25750C1A9629C946597D6CF
    and The NY Times:
    http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9505E5D7103DE633A25757C1A9629C946597D6CF
    and
    http://fultonhistory.com/Fulton.html
    Utica NY Sunday Journal 1903-1904 - 0929.pdf http://fultonhistory.com/Process%20small/Newspapers/Utica%20NY%20Sunday%20Journal/Utica%20NY%20Sunday%20Journal%201903-1904.pdf/Utica%20NY%20Sunday%20Journal%201903-1904%20-%200929.PDF

    Newspaper Photo:
    http://fultonhistory.com/Fulton.html
    NY Post Standard 1904 - 1610.pdf http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%202/Syracuse%20NY%20Post%20Standard/Syracuse%20NY%20Post%20Standard%201904.pdf/Syracuse%20NY%20Post%20Standard%201904%20-%201610.PDF
    and
    NY Saturday Globe 1904-1906 - 1109.pdf http://fultonhistory.com/Process%20small/Newspapers/Utica%20NY%20Saturday%20Globe/Utica%20NY%20Saturday%20Globe%201904-1906%20pdf/Utica%20NY%20Saturday%20Globe%201904-1906%20-%201109.PDF

    1907 DEATHS..June
    Brooklyn Standard Union
    John M. RICE, the diver who recovered the body of
    "Bill" HOAR from the bottom of the reservoir at
    Boonton, N.J. died on Monday at his home, 455
    Fifty-fifth street, Bay Ridge. The cause of his death
    was neuralgia of the heart. His death recalls the
    efforts which were made to rescue HOAR from his
    perilous position at the Boonton Reservoir.
    While fixing a leak in the reservoir HOAR was
    caught in a valve and was under a terrible pressure
    of water, alive, for more than thirty-six hours. In
    April, 1904, Mr. RICE was appointed a diver in the
    Dock Department, in place of HOAR. Previous to
    this he had been for more than fifteen years a
    machinist and pressman on the New York "World".
    Mr. RICE considered Friday a lucky day. He
    started off by being born on a Friday, and the first
    step of his adventurous career began on a Friday,
    when he went up in a balloon at a country fair up-
    State. It was on a Friday that he made his first
    attempt as a diver. At that time of the Slocum
    disaster he recovererd fifteen bodies. His know-
    ledge of machinery made him the kind of diver so
    often needed in setting aright pieces of machanism
    that go wrong under the water. He leaves a widow
    and three children.

    NY Times article:
    http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9D01EFDB1038E733A25755C1A9629C946597D6CF


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  (Male) Hoar
    Children:
    1. 1. William Hoar was born about 1872; died on 12 Apr 1904 in Boonton, Morris Co, New Jersey, USA; was buried in ~(Calvary Cemetery).
    2. Anne Hoar
    3. Mary Hoar
    4. Josephine Hoar was born about 1881; died on 21 Aug 1939 in Long Island, Queens Co, New York, USA; was buried in ~(Calvary Cemetery).