John ‘Jack’ Fargo Honey
Elia Powers
When it came to family life, Jack Honey kept to himself, though his
children certainly knew how to get him to come out of his shell.
“We’d sit around the piano, pound drinks and sing at the top of
our lungs,” said Delaine McNamara, Honey’s daughter. “Pretty soon,
he’d be singing old Army tunes.”
McNamara said she had limited communication with her father, but
one conversation stands out in her mind. It was more than 10 years
ago, and she was going through a divorce.
“He said, “Come out with me and we’ll talk,’” McNamara said. “He
invited me into his head, and inside was an entire universe I had
never seen.
“From then on, I was jealous of anyone who had a relationship with
him, because I knew what was possible.”
A 35-year Newport Beach resident, Honey died Feb. 10. He was 83.
Born in Portland, Ore., Honey attended nearby Reed College and
served in the Army in World War II. When his duty ended, he went to
Stanford University to complete his master’s degree and to do
electronics communication research -- a topic that would interest him
throughout his life.
Honey began accepting assignments from the United States
government, traveling throughout Europe to improve communication
devices for various government agencies.
Rick Honey, Jack’s son, said his father told the family little
about his work.
“It was all too secret,” he said. “At one point, they flew him to
Vietnam because they were having problems with their communication
systems. He came to be known in certain circles in Washington, D.C.”
Honey helped develop aerospace communication devices and played a
key role in the development of sideband communications, Rick Honey
said.
The family moved to Southern California in the late 1950s, and
Honey developed communication devices for companies throughout the
region.
In 1969, Honey started his own company, Newport Marine Technology,
which later became Marine Technology Inc. The company, which ceased
operations last year, manufactured electrical interference filters.
If an electrical problem on a vessel interfered with a communication
device, his company would create a filter that would cure the
problem, Rick Honey said.
He joined his father at the company as the chief financial
operator in 1984 after finishing a Navy stint. Rick Honey said those
years were some of the happiest of his life.
“He would bend over backward for me at work, even if I made a
mistake,” Honey said. “We got to know each other man-to-man, and that
was a rewarding experience.”
Jack Honey had three wives, and he outlived two of them.
Even during his marriages, the majority of his time was spent at
work or on the water. He was heavily involved in the boating
industry, serving with the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary and as
a commander of the Balboa Power Squadron. He was the licensed captain
of a 50-ton ocean operator and an avid promoter of cruiser log
racing.
Honey’s children remember him as a man passionate about his
boating -- and his jokes.
“He had a sense of humor to die for when he let it out,” McNamara
said. “He just kept things business-like most of the time.”
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