Adm. Howard Harrison Good (c1950) |
Up until the Japanese attack on our forces at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, Good had remained pretty much in the DC area. I found him returning to Seattle aboard the SS President Jackson on Apr. 1 1938 from a trip to Hong Kong. He reported then that he was part of the "Navy Department in Washington, D.C."
Howard Harrison Good was born in Warren, Huntington Co., IN on Aug. 12, 1888. He attended Warren High School and the Naval Academy. He was in command of the heavy cruiser New Orleans* at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 and participated in the Battle of the Coral Sea, in May, 1942 as Captain of the New Orleans. After that battle he rescued many of the crew of the Lexington.
He was in the great Battle of Midway in June, 1942, and then assumed command of Cruiser Division Five, having been promoted to rear admiral in May, 1942. His cruiser division participated in many South Pacific operations, including the Battle of Santa Cruz. Thereafter he served for two years as head of the Base Maintenance Division, in the office of the Chief of Naval Operations. Subsequently he commanded United States naval forces in the Philippines, and was commandant of the Thirteenth Naval District, Seattle, from 1948 to 1950. He retired as a vice admiral in 1950.
He and Margaret were married for 18 years before his death in Aug. 12, 1963. Margaret died on May 13, 1971 at Roanoke Rapids in Halifax Co., NC and buried alongside her husband at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, VA. They are said to have had one son, Edward L. Good. However, the child was born c1919, while Howard and Marie were still married. The only information that I have for Marie is her birth, c1893 in Wisconsin.
Jack
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/04/032/04032.htm