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2002 – General Carl A. (Tooey) Spaatz
Born June 28, 1891 in Boyertown, Pennsylvania, Carl Andrew
Spaatz (originally Spatz - he added an “a” in 1937) graduated
from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, in 1914
and was commissioned in the infantry. After a year at Schofield
barracks, Hawaii, he entered aviation training in San Diego,
California, becoming one of the Army’s first pilots in 1916 and
winning promotion to first lieutenant in June. He advanced to
captain in May 1917 and was ordered to France in command of the
31st Aero Squadron. He organized and directed the aviation
training school at Issoudon and by the end of the war had managed
to get just three weeks’ combat duty, during which he shot down
three German aircraft. In June 1918 he was promoted to temporary
major.
During 1919-1920 he served as assistant air officer for the
Western Department; he reverted to captain in February 1920 and
received promotion to permanent major in July. Spaatz served as
commander of Mather Field, California, in 1920; as commander of
Kelly Field, Texas, in 1920-1921; as air officer, VIII Corps, in
1921; as commander of the 1st Pursuit Group of Selfridge Field,
Michigan, in 1922-1924; in the office of the chief of the Air
Corps in 1925-29; as commander of the 7th Bombardment Group at
Rockwell field, California, and subsequently of Rockwell Field in
1929-1931; and as commander of the 1st Bombardment Wing at March
Field, California, in 1931-1933.
During January 1-7, 1929, Spaatz and Captain Ira C. Eaker, along
with Sgt. Roy Hooe and others, established a flight endurance
record of 150 hours, 40 minutes, in a Fokker aircraft, the
Question Mark, over Los Angeles. After two years as chief of the
training and operations division in the office of the chief of Air
Corps and promotion to lieutenant colonel in September 1935, he
entered the Command and General Staff School, Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas, graduating in 1936. He was executive officer of the 2nd
Wing at Langley Field, Virginia, until 1939 and then again joined
the staff of the chief of the Air Corps. After a tour of
observation in England in 1940 he was promoted to temporary
brigadier general and named to head the material division of the
Air Corps, and in July 1941 he became chief of the air staff under
General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, chief of the (renamed)
Army Air Force.
In January 1941 he was appointed chief of the Air Force Combat
Command. Later in that year he returned to England to begin
planning the American air effort in Europe. In May he became
commander of the Eighth Air Force, and in July he was designated
commander of U.S. Army Air Forces in Europe. In November he went
to North Africa to reorganize the Allied air forces there for
General Dwight D. Eisenhower, becoming commander of the Allied
Northwest African Air Forces (NWAAF) in February 1943. In march he
was promoted to temporary lieutenant general. from March to
December 1943 he was also commander of the Twelfth Air Force, a
unit of the NWAAF, which took part in both the North Africa and
Sicily campaigns. In January 1944 Spaatz was named commander of
the Strategic Air Force in Europe; his command included the Eighth
Air Force under General James H. “Jimmy” Doolittle, based in
England, and the Fifteenth Air Force under General Nathan F.
Twining, based in Italy, and had responsibility for all deep
bombing missions against the German homeland. In March 1945 he was
promoted to temporary general, and in July, war in Europe having
ended, he took command of Strategic Air Force in the Pacific. The
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki took place under his
command.
In March 1946 he succeeded General Arnold as commander in chief of
the Army Air Forces, and he became the first chief of staff of the
independent air force in September 1947. He held that post until
retiring in July 1948 in the rank of general. He served
subsequently as chairman of the Civil Air Patrol and for a time
contributed a column to Newsweek magazine. Spaatz died in
Washington, D.C., on July 14, 1974 and was interred on the grounds
of the U.S. Air Force Academy.
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