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View a eulogy for John H Stevenson, USMA '56, who passed away on July 18, 1999.

John H Stevenson

West Point, 1956

Be Thou At Peace

Posted by John P. Stevenson on July 21, 1999:

John Hughes Stevenson was born was born in Brooklyn, New York on March
4, 1934, the son of Maj. Gen. Charles Goldsmith Stevenson (USMA 1924)
and Mair Gwendolyn. He had an older sister Geraldine Mair Stevenson (Mrs.
Richard A. Hoek). The family lived in Brooklyn until World War II when
they moved to Virginia. After World War II, the family moved to Sayville,
Long Island, New York. John attended the public schools there and graduated
from Sayville High School in 1951.

During the summer of 1951, he joined the NY National Guard, focusing on
the National Guard appointment process for West Point. John turned down a
scholarship to Colgate University and attended Bradens Preparatory School in
Cornwall-on-Hudson to study for the competitive examination for the
National Guard appointment. He achieved that goal and entered West Point
with the Class of 1956.

John suffered a knee injury during plebe summer which prevented him from
fulfilling his athletic dreams. He did however toil on the B squad football
team and earned his monogram.

John married Diane Connor on August 10 1956, Four children Susan Marie,
John Michael, Patricia Marie, and Melinda Marie were born of this union.
After attending officer basic and airborne school, John reported to Germany
and served initially with the 10th Division and then the 7th Regiment of the
3rd Infantry Division. During this period John, as a 1st Lieutenant, was
assigned as the Regimental S-2 for the Regimental training test. He was
commended by the regimental commander for his work during the test and his
one year as the S-2. During this period he attended the USAREUR
Intelligence School in Oberammergau, Germany.

After his return to the United States in January 1961, John was offered the
opportunity to join Honeywell Space Systems to work on inertial components
for the Polaris missile system. John resigned his commission in May 1961 and
immediately joined Honeywell. He spent the next eight years with the
Honeywell space team. When the NASA space program began, the Polaris
missile guidance system was selected to be upgraded with higher accurate
components for use in the Apollo program.

In 1965, Honeywell selected John to spend a year at the Draper Laboratory at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His task during this period was to
insure that the design for the upgraded inertial components could be produced
by industry to meet the needs of the space program

After the year at MIT, John returned to Florida to assist Honeywell in setting
up the production lines for the Apollo program components. During that year
at MIT, his major task was to rewrite the engineering processes so that they
could be manufactured while still maintaining the required accuracy for
manned flight.

In 1968, John married Karen Parker Manz and two children were born of this
union, Megan Charly Lynn and John Philip Stevenson. Karen's daughters
Kelly Simelavich and Kerri-Ellen Brown also joined the family.

In 1969, John was offered the opportunity to join Control Data Corporation,
the super computer manufacturer, in a sales position in Dallas, Texas. He
spent 4 months at the corporate headquarters in Minneapolis for training on
CDC systems and then returned to Dallas.

Two years later, John returned to Honeywell in their commercial computer
division. He joined the sales force in Dallas and then was transferred to the
Metropolitan New York area. He was a 100 percent club member of the
Honeywell sales force.

In 1976 he joined a small company in suburban Philadelphia, Delta Data
Systems. He rose from a salesman to a regional Sales Manager to the
National Sales manager over the next twelve years. He first was stationed in
New York, then California where he was responsible for sales in the western
third of the country. He returned from California to the Washington area to
take up the sales and service responsibilities for the Intelligence community.
During this period he was responsible for the establishment of a sales and
service operation in Heodelburg Germany in support of US Forces in Europe.
This entailed frequent visits to Europe.

John acquired Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in 1987 which
ultimately cause him to become disabled in 1990. He moved with his wife to
Florida in 1991, Here he spent his time working on his computer and the
internet. He was an original member of the volunteer graduate internet
community, West-Point.org. He was the moderator of the USMA 1956
electronic mail service on that community which linked almost one half of the
surviving class.

John died on July 18, 1999 in Tarpon Springs, Florida and was interred at the
West Point collorbum in the Old Cadet Chapel on July 29, 1999. Part of his
remains will be scattered in Wales. He is survived by his wife, mother, sister,
eight children and five grandchildren. Rest in Peace.

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