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John E. Weaver

John E. Weaver

No. 201121 Jun 1930 – 18 Oct 1995

Died: Oxon Hill, MD
Buried: Interred in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, VA


JOHN EDWARD WEAVER, more affectionately known as “Buck” or “Ed,” realized his dream of playing football at West Point all four years, earning Numerals and a Major “A.” But there is more to his story than football.

Buck was born in Kingston, NY, the third of four children of John L. and Valeria Weaver. In his youth, he was active in the Boy Scouts, the Catholic Church, and athletics. By the time he graduated from Kingston High School in 1948, he was a four-year letterman in four sports: football, basketball, baseball, and track. Voted Athlete of the Decade of the ’40s by the Kingston Daily Freeman, he was recruited by all of the major athletic powers at the time. The football tradition at West Point and his love for the Academy, however, made choosing Army an easy decision.

After graduation from high school, the Army Athletic Association sent Buck to Valley Forge Military Academy for post-high school academic and athletic work. In June 1949, he graduated from Valley Forge and entered West Point a month later. After Beast Barracks, he was assigned to Company A-1. While Buck was recruited to play football, his athletic abilities crossed over into basketball and baseball, where he was outstanding every year as a cadet. Perhaps because of the time spent playing sports, he experienced problems in one class and was set back a year. His desire to graduate from the Academy gained him reentry into the Class of 1954, however, and he joined Company M-2. He remained an integral part of that company’s activities, including major reunions.

Ed will always be remembered for his truly outstanding athletic ability, coupled with his intelligence, character, determination, and work ethic. Buck was a star in so many ways. He won letters every year, not only in football, but also in basketball and baseball, and he was a regular starting offensive end on the football team. Given today’s emphasis on specialization, it is difficult to find any athlete who can excel in three major sports at the intercollegiate level while maintaining the high bar set for academics at the Academy. John Edward Weaver achieved that goal.

Following graduation, Ed was commissioned as an Air Force second lieutenant, and his first assignment was to Bolling Field in Washington, DC. There he played football on the inter-service team that won a national championship while he played for them. During this tour he met Sarah Hood, and they were married soon thereafter. At our reunions, Buck often spoke of his beloved Sally and his three children. His family was the highest priority in his life.

In 1957, Buck resigned from the Air Force. While remaining in the Air Force Reserves, he developed a very successful business career in the financial world. He later returned to active duty for about four years and served a tour in Viet Nam. During this period, he also attended the Air War College and earned an MBA from Auburn University. His military honors included a Legion of Merit and a Meritorious Service Medal.

Following his release from active duty, Buck became very active in the political process in Maryland. He held leadership positions in a number of Democratic Party organizations, and he served as an aide to a Maryland State Senator. Later, for 15 years, he served as a special assistant to the Secretary of State of Maryland in Annapolis. At one time, he was also a deputy sheriff in Prince George’s County, MD. He continued to serve in the reserves and retired in 1984 as a colonel with 30 years of service. During his tenure of public service, he played a major role in designing and erecting a Viet Nam Memorial in his home state of Maryland.

Buck remained a very active person during his entire lifetime. His hobbies involved him in activities with Ducks Unlimited, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, the Elks, Fleet Reserve, and the Association of Graduates. Buck loved to drive the BIG red truck as a volunteer for the Fire Department in Oxon Hill. And there was no job too small when help was needed at St. Columba Catholic Church. Each task he assumed was done with quiet determination and always carried to completion.

If any graduate exhibited how a life after graduation from West Point should be lived, Ed did. He lived out the true meaning behind GEN MacArthur’s famous quote: “Upon the fields of friendly strife are sown the seeds that upon other fields, on other days, will bear the fruits of victory.” Buck would view this quotation every time he entered the old gym, and in playing three major sports, the motto was drilled into his memory almost daily.

On 18 Oct 1995, after a long illness, Buck passed away at the hospital at Andrews Air Force Base. He left his beloved wife of 37 years, Sally Weaver of Oxon Hill; three children: John E. Weaver Jr. of Newport, RI; Anne M. Lewis of Bedford, TX; and Paul T. Weaver of Oxon Hill; and nine grandchildren. Sarah “Sally” Hood Weaver went home to the Lord on 18 May 2000.

John Edward Weaver: Rest in peace, thou good and faithful servant.  

Norman A. Mattmuller ’54,
roommate in 1953

Originally published in MAY / JUNE 2006 TAPS

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