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Alfred Hoch Obituary

HOCH, Alfred D. 75, of Lincoln, passed away peacefully Thursday, November 25, after a long illness. Born January 31, 1935, in Philadelphia, son of Alfred and Frieda (Huerfeld) Hoch. Proud graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Class of 1957, with a bachelor's of science degree in Mechanical Engineering. Al had national top-secret security clearance at the Draper Laboratory in Cambridge, where he worked on inertial navigation systems. Among other projects, Al worked on the Apollo project and aided in the design of the navigation system for the Polaris ballistic missile. He founded Quarterman Publications, a boutique publishing company that has provided generations of advanced collectors and curators with access to high-quality reprints of scarce definitive reference works in various collecting fields such as Colonial coins, medals, stamps, Civil War tokens, American political badges and ribbons, and early coins from various countries. Al was himself a dedicated and lifelong collector of coins, tokens, and ephemera and became an acknowledged authority on vintage posters and antique paper Americana in his later years. His immense knowledge and intellect earned the respect and admiration from collectors all over the world and he enjoyed this passion to the very end. Al recently received a lifetime achievement award from the American Numismatic Society for his scholarly contributions in the field of numismatics. He was also awarded the first George F. Kolbe medal for lifetime achievement, a distinction for excellence in numismatics awarded by the Numismatic Bibliomania Society. Al will be remembered as a gentle man with a quirky sense of humor, for his generosity to all those who knew him, for his love of chocolate, and above all for his selfless devotion to his children, which he considered his proudest achievement in life. Al is survived by three sons: Alan Hoch of Groton, David Hoch of Belmont, Jonathan Hoch and his wife Carey of Lincoln, and his daughter Carole Lee and her husband John de Jong of Weston. He also leaves seven grandchildren: Nick, Lily, and Emily Hoch of Groton, Jack and Sam de Jong of Weston, and Daniel and Matthew Hoch of Lincoln. Memorial service will be held in the springtime.

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Published by Boston Globe from Dec. 4 to Dec. 5, 2010.

Memories and Condolences
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3 Entries

I asked Al for this photo during my last visit in 2008. I found it among his stuff and he was nice enough to give it to me without any problem.

Georg Verhoeven

December 9, 2010

Elisabeth Verhoeven

December 7, 2010

I was very sad, when I heard you passed away, Alfred. There was a feeling in the last weeks,that I should call you to hear from you, how you are, what you are thinking about and all those normal things people wants to know when they like each other. I didn't call and now it's too late. What remains is the memory: I remember my holidays with you in Lincoln. I had such a good time, it was full of light and colours,warmth and humour. I see us buying you some joggingshoes and you did your first round in the stadion, it was great. With you I had my first oyster - you told me her taste would be like a fresh seawind and it was! You always were so interessed in my belongings and although we met only a few times, there was a great nearness. I'm glad that you did it so peacefully. Have a good time now above us all. Your not gone, your in our minds and in our hearts. Thank you for all! And, dear family Hoch, all the best wishes for you, I'm thinking of you all, with love, Elisabeth

Julie Ellis-Behnke

December 6, 2010

Rutledge and I send our heartfelt thoughts and prayers to all of you. The tribute to your father is warmly personal and beautiful. He would be so pleased. We feel honored to have known him. Love, Julie

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