1914 - 2001 (~ 87 years)
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Name |
John Logan Hagan |
Birth |
ca. 1914 |
Dungannon, SCOTT, Virginia |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
1 Apr 2001 |
Cariari City, COSTA RICA [1] |
Person ID |
I16611 |
King/Roy |
Last Modified |
12 Aug 2016 |
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Sources |
- [S5] Obituary.
John L. Hagan
Foreign Service Officer
John Logan Hagan, 87, a Foreign Service officer who in the late 1960s served as consul general and first secretary in Bangkok, died of chronic renal failure and bladder cancer April 1 at his home in Cariari City, Costa Rica, where he lived since his retirement in 1973.
Mr. Hagan was a native of Dungannon, Va. He graduated from the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service.
His first assignment after joining the Foreign Service in 1944 was in Costa Rica. He later served in Lisbon, Rio de Janeiro, Dublin and Antofagasta, Chile, performing consular, political and economic duties.
In 1967, he coordinated a successful operation by the U.S. military to provide relief to starving livestock in northern Alberta as consul general in Calgary.
He participated in a number of State Department delegations to international conferences and negotiations, including the Laos peace negotiations. He also was a State Department representative to the World Health Organization.
Survivors include his wife of 52 years, Maria Teresa Hagan of Costa Rica; six children, Patricia Gamache of Toppenish, Wash., Monica Yeonas of Vienna, Jacqueline Hagan of Houston, John L. Hagan Jr. of Washington, Tara Clyne of Oakton and Maria Teresa Hagan of Monterey, Calif.; a sister; nine grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.
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