O'Hare was the son of John J. O'Hare, superintendent of the color department at The Boston Post for 30 years, and his wife, Katherine Whellen O'Hare.[1] His uncle, J. Frank O'Hare, was a trustee of the Boston Elevated Railway.[2] In 1913, O'Hare and his uncle Harry O'Hare saved a man and woman from drowning in Boston Harbor.[3]
Athletics
O'Hare attended The English High School, where he lettered in football, baseball, hockey, and track.[4] While serving as manager of the school's hockey team, he rescued a player who had fallen through the ice on Hammond Pond.[5] He was elected captain of English's 1916–17 hockey team, but resigned due to objections from his parents.[6]
O'Hare was inducted into the Boston University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1959.[10]
Legal career
O'Hare graduated from the Boston University School of Law in 1924 and was admitted to the bar that same year.[2] He worked as a trial attorney for the Boston Elevated Railway and later, the MBTA.[13][4] He was also a trustee of the Lotta Crabtree estate.[14]
Personal life
On September 12, 1925, O'Hare married BU Law classmate, Grace Minton.[13] They had three daughters.[4] He died on November 20, 1981 at a nursing home in Framingham, Massachusetts, after a long illness.[4]
References
^"John J. O'Hare". The New York Times. September 21, 1937.
^ ab"John J. O'Hare Jr Passed State Bar Examinations". The Boston Globe. February 21, 1924.
^"Save Man and Woman". The Boston Globe. August 4, 1913.
^ abcde"John J. O'Hare, 80; Was Trial Lawyer for MBTA". The Boston Globe. November 21, 1981.