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Technician Fifth Grade Edward J. Boruch (US Army)
(1922–1986)


Courtesy of Edward Boruch's children, Marianne and Michael Boruch
Edward J. Boruch was born in Cicero, Illinois, on February 13, 1922, the first son of Polish immigrants who settled in Chicago. He was inducted into the US Army in November 1942. Although poor eyesight prevented him from serving at the front, his impressive exam scores qualified him for the Army Specialized Training Program at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. There, he took courses on French culture and language and met Martha Jeannette Taylor, a clerk at the university. They married in Chicago in August 1944.
Boruch’s growing knowledge of French qualified him for service with the MFAA. He joined the MFAA Branch of the US Group Control Council (USGCC) in Germany in late February 1945, serving as a clerk typist at headquarters alongside Monuments Men Major Mason Hammond and Technician Fourth Grade Charles J. DiRaimondo. His duties included compiling reports from Monuments Men in the field, transcribing notes and memos, and assisting the office’s chief clerk, Monuments Man Technician Fourth Grade James O. Cook. Most notably, Boruch served as the assistant to Monuments Man John Nicholas Brown II, adviser on cultural matters to the commanding general of USGCC. Boruch accompanied Brown on trips to the various collecting points for looted art as well as interzonal conferences regarding restitution policies. He was promoted to the rank of technician fifth grade on September 15, 1945.
Boruch was highly valued by Brown, who urged him to stay on as his assistant. However, Boruch declined in order to rejoin his family in Chicago. He worked as a successful Chicago real estate broker for three decades, including the founding of his own agency, Century Realty Co. He retired in 1984.
Edward Boruch died in Chicago on October 14, 1986.