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  • Queen Mary icon dies after 40 years of service
    Commodore Everette Hoard stands in uniform, smiling, as photographers gather at an event aboard the Queen Mary.
    The Queen Mary commodor, Everette Hoard, looks on during an announcement about return of Dark Harbor to the Queen Mary in Long Beach, Tuesday, April 30, 2024. Photo by Thomas R. Cordova.

    Topline:

    Everette Hoard, beloved commodore of the Queen Mary in Long Beach, has died. Known for his deep devotion to the historic ship, Hoard helped preserve its legacy through storytelling, research and public engagement.

    From fan to leader: Hoard’s love for the Queen Mary began in childhood and led him to Long Beach in the early 1980s, where he started working aboard the ship and eventually became commodore in 2010.

    Guardian of history: As commodore, he trained guides, led tours, officiated weddings and conducted in-depth research, becoming one of the ship’s most respected and knowledgeable figures.

    Read on ... for more about Hoard.

    Everette Hoard, the Queen Mary’s commodore who worked aboard the iconic Long Beach ship for more than 40 years, has died, according to an announcement from the ship’s management.

    As commodore, Hoard’s duties included writing the tours, mentoring the tour guides and even marrying hundreds of couples aboard the ocean liner permanently moored in Queensway Bay. He was an expert on the ship, even traveling to the Cunard archives at the University of Liverpool to deepen his research.

    “Everette was the living embodiment of the Queen Mary’s spirit,” Steve Caloca, managing director of the Queen Mary, said in a statement. “His love for this ship, its legacy, and every person who stepped aboard was unmatched.”

    Hoard’s first memories of the Queen Mary were as a child, when he would sit on his father’s lap and watch him draw pictures of ships, he told the Long Beach Post in 2023.

    Hoard’s father, who had served in the Navy, “drew [ships] with two smokestacks and sometimes three,” Hoard said. “When it was three stacks it was the Queen Mary. If it was two it would be the Queen Elizabeth.”

    “I was always in love with ships,” Hoard said.

    He moved from Alabama to Long Beach in 1982. A short time later, he landed a job in the toy and hobby store aboard the Queen Mary.

    Commodore Hoard leads a tour group inside the Queen Mary.
    Queen Mary Commodore Everette Hoard gives a tour of the historic ocean liner to the first guests aboard in two and a half years Thursday, Dec. 15, 2022.
    (
    Brandon Richardson.
    /
    Long Beach Post
    )

    He eventually worked his way up to retail director and in 2010 was asked by the managing director to become one of the ship’s officers.

    “It was a dream come true for me,” Hoard said of the promotion.

    The ship’s management has created a webpage honoring Hoard and inviting the public to share a message or a memory.

    A silhouetted profile of Commodore Everette Hoard in uniform, framed by a window.
    Queen Mary Commodore Everette Hoard gives a tour of the historic ocean liner after being closed to the public for over two and a half years. Thursday, Dec. 15, 2022.
    (
    Brandon Richardson
    /
    Long Beach Post
    )

    “We have not only lost a family member — we’ve lost a legend who will live on in our hearts and our souls,” Caloca said.

    His cause of death and age weren’t immediately available.

    Learn more about Hoard in the Long Beach Post's 2023 interview with him.

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