Hugh W. Hardy
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Hugh W. Hardy | |
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c. 1924 - April 3, 2003 | |
Place of death | Houston, Texas |
Allegiance | USMC |
Years of service | 1942-1982 |
Rank | Major General |
Commands | Camp Pendleton |
Awards | Legion of Merit |
Other work | Geoscientist |
Major General Hugh W. Hardy (c.1924-2003) was a United States Marine Corps Reserves major general and a geoscientist. Hardy served with the Marine Corps Reserves for 40 years. In his civilian career as a geoscientist, he had a 34-year career with Exxon which included pioneering research in well-logging and 3D seismic exploration.
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[edit] Marine Corps career
Hardy enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserves on December 2, 1942. He attend officer training at Georgia School of Technology (1943-1944) and recruit training at Parris Island, South Carolina (1945). He was commissioned a reserve second lieutenant upon completion of Platoon Commander's School. He was released to inactive duty in 1945 and returned to Oklahoma to complete his college education. He was subsequently employed by Humble Oil/Exxon.
With the onset of the Korean War, Hardy was called to active duty in August of 1950 with Company B, 14th Infantry Battalion, USMCR in Galveston, Texas. In September 1950, he reported to Quantico, Virginia to attend the 1st Special Basic Course. He served with the 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejeune from January 1951 to March 1952. He was released back to inactive duty in 1952.
He served in Marine reserve units in Wichita Falls, Texas; Houston, Texas; London, England; Camp Pendleton, California; Quantico, Virginia; Camp Lejeune, North Carolina; and in the Mediterranean with the 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Division, attached to the U.S. Navy's 6th fleet. He had command responsibilities and progressed in rank from 2nd lieutenant to brigadier general. In 1974, he was promoted to the rank of major general.
In 1980, he returned to active duty as Commanding General, Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, California (the largest Marine Corps base, with over 40,000 personnel) becoming the first Reserve general to command an active Marine Corps facility.
Hardy retired from the Marine Corps on December 1, 1982.
[edit] Promotion record
Hardy's Marine Corps promotions are as follows:
- First Lieutenant — November 10, 1948
- Captain — June 25, 1952
- Major — July 12, 1956
- Lieutenant Colonel — July 1, 1964
- Colonel — May 1, 1969
- Brigadier General — May 1973
- Major General — May 1, 1974
[edit] Decorations
Major General Hardy has been awarded the Legion of Merit, Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Ribbon, Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, Organized Marine Corps Reserve Medal with four bronze stars, American Defense Service Medal, Victory Medal (World War II), Navy Occupation Service Medal with European Clasp, National Defense Service Medal, Military Outstanding Volunteer Service Medal, Armed Forces Reserve Medal and the Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon.
[edit] Geoscientist
Hardy graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1947 with bachelor of science degree in geological engineering. Upon graduation, he went to work for Humble Oil (later Exxon) on an offshore seismic crew. In his 34-year career with Exxon, Hardy worked at Humble Oil, Esso Production Research (EPR), Esso Exploration, Exxon Company International, corporate Public Affairs, and Exxon Company USA. His work encompasses a vast breadth of geoscience, administrative, and management areas, including seismic interpretation, seismic data processing, geophysical research, well-logging, computing coordination, emergency preparedness, government relations, and chief scientist. His research work at while at EPR included pioneering work on in well-logging formation/velocity/porosity relationships and in the 3D seismic exploration method.
After retirement from Exxon, he joined GeoQuest in 1981. In 1986, he resigned his position as president of GeoQuest's Services Division. He then established a private petroleum exploration consulting firm, Interpretation Consultants, Inc.
[edit] References
- Official Biography for Hugh W. Hardy, General Officer Biographies, United States Marine Corps. Accessed December 27, 2005
- Hugh Hardy Biography, Society of Exploration Geophysicists. Accessed December 27, 2005
- This article incorporates text/images published by the United States Marine Corps, which is in the public domain.