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Bureau of Aeronautics

The Bureau of Aeronautics (BuAer) was the U.S. Navy's material-support organization for naval aviation from 1921 to 1959. The bureau had "cognizance" (i.e., responsibility) for the design, procurement, and support of naval aircraft and related systems. Aerial weapons, however, were under the cognizance of the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance (BuOrd).

Origins edit

The USN's first attempt for naval aviation began in 1908 when it conducted observations of the Wright Brothers aircraft at Fort Myer.[1]

First tests and Naval Aviation Corps edit

The first test of an aircraft from naval vessel was in 1910 when a Curtiss Model D flown by Eugene Burton Ely took off from the USS Birmingham (CL-2) and again on USS Pennsylvania (ACR-4) in early 1911. These test was enough for the USN to establish naval aviation units in the summer of 1911.[1] The purchase of the first naval aircraft in May 1911[2] and passage of naval appropriations act in August 1916 lead to the establishment of the Naval Reserve Flying Corps, which would train and deploy air corps for World War I.[1]

Formal Organization of Naval Aviation edit

 
A Curtiss R3C at the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia in 1926

Congress established BuAer in 1921 in order to create a single organizational home for naval aviation. Prior to 1921, cognizance for aviation had been divided among various Navy bureaus and other organizations. The first Chief of BuAer was Rear Admiral William A. Moffett (1869–1933), a Medal of Honor recipient and battleship commander who had long supported the development of naval aviation. He served as bureau chief from 1921 until his death in 1933, in the crash of the airship USS Akron (ZRS-4). Working closely with RADM Moffett, CAPT Henry C. Mustin (1874–1923) served as BuAer's first Assistant Chief helping lead naval aviation to the forefront of American military strength.

A talented administrator, Moffett ensured the continued independence of naval aviation during the 1920s, when Army Brig. Gen. Billy Mitchell and others sought to merge all U.S. military aviation into a single, independent air force. Upon Moffett's death, he was succeeded as Chief of the Bureau by Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, a future Fleet Admiral and Chief of Naval Operations during World War II. Other important bureau chiefs included Rear Admiral John S. McCain Sr., the grandfather of U.S. Senator John S. McCain III (R-Ariz.).

During the 1930s, BuAer presided over rapid technological change in naval aircraft. The bureau's policy was to limit its own production, in order to support the civilian aircraft industry. BuAer used the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as a facility for building small numbers of prototype aircraft.

World War II and the postwar period edit

World War II brought immense changes as well. BuAer was forced to expand rapidly in order to comply with the nation's defense needs. By the war's end, the bureau had developed an administrative structure that oversaw thousands of personnel, and the procurement and maintenance of tens of thousands of aircraft. In 1943, the Navy established the position of Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Air, or DCNO(Air), a move which relieved some of BuAer's responsibility for Fleet operations. RADM McCain, now promoted to vice admiral, was the first to fill the position.[citation needed]

BuAer downsized after the war, but continued its focus on aeronautical research and development. But as naval technology became increasingly complex, it became clear that the Navy's material organization was insufficient. In particular, the Navy needed better integration of aerial weapons with naval aircraft. There was also the question of "pilotless aircraft" (the ancestors of the late 20th century's Unmanned Aerial Vehicles); BuAer considered these to be aircraft, while BuOrd saw them as guided missiles.[citation needed]

To fix the problem, in 1959 the Navy merged BuAer and BuOrd to create the Bureau of Naval Weapons (BuWeps). This was only a temporary solution, however, and in 1966 the Navy undertook a wholesale revision of its material organization. The bureau system, which had existed since the 1840s, was replaced with the "Systems Commands" (SYSCOMs). BuWeps was replaced with the current Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR).[citation needed]

Bureau chiefs edit

Rear Admiral William A. Moffett (1921-07-26) (1933-04-04)July 26, 1921 – April 4, 1933
Rear Admiral Ernest J. King (1933-05-03) (1936-06-12)May 3, 1933 – June 12, 1936
Rear Admiral Arthur B. Cook (1936-06-12) (1939-06-01)June 12, 1936 – June 1, 1939
Rear Admiral John H. Towers (1939-06-01) (1942-10-06)June 1, 1939 – October 6, 1942
Rear Admiral John S. McCain Sr. (1942-10-09) (1943-08-07)October 9, 1942 – August 7, 1943
Rear Admiral DeWitt C. Ramsey (1943-08-07) (1945-06-01)August 7, 1943 – June 1, 1945
Rear Admiral Harold B. Sallada (1945-06-01) (1947-05-01)June 1, 1945 – May 1, 1947
Rear Admiral Alfred M. Pride (1947-05-01) (1951-05-01)May 1, 1947 – May 1, 1951
Rear Admiral Thomas S. Combs (1951-05-01) (1953-06-30)May 1, 1951 – June 30, 1953
Rear Admiral Apollo Soucek (1953-06-30) (1955-03-04)June 30, 1953 – March 4, 1955
Rear Admiral James S. Russell (1955-03-04) (1957-07-15)March 4, 1955 – July 15, 1957
Rear Admiral Robert E. Dixon (1957-07-15) (1959-12-01)July 15, 1957 – December 1, 1959

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c https://www.history.navy.mil/content/dam/nhhc/research/histories/naval-aviation/pdf/History%20(1).pdf[bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 February 2018. Retrieved 12 January 2019.

External links edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Naval History and Heritage Command.

bureau, aeronautics, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, availabl. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bureau of Aeronautics BuAer was the U S Navy s material support organization for naval aviation from 1921 to 1959 The bureau had cognizance i e responsibility for the design procurement and support of naval aircraft and related systems Aerial weapons however were under the cognizance of the Navy s Bureau of Ordnance BuOrd Contents 1 Origins 2 First tests and Naval Aviation Corps 3 Formal Organization of Naval Aviation 4 World War II and the postwar period 5 Bureau chiefs 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOrigins editThe USN s first attempt for naval aviation began in 1908 when it conducted observations of the Wright Brothers aircraft at Fort Myer 1 First tests and Naval Aviation Corps editThe first test of an aircraft from naval vessel was in 1910 when a Curtiss Model D flown by Eugene Burton Ely took off from the USS Birmingham CL 2 and again on USS Pennsylvania ACR 4 in early 1911 These test was enough for the USN to establish naval aviation units in the summer of 1911 1 The purchase of the first naval aircraft in May 1911 2 and passage of naval appropriations act in August 1916 lead to the establishment of the Naval Reserve Flying Corps which would train and deploy air corps for World War I 1 Formal Organization of Naval Aviation edit nbsp A Curtiss R3C at the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia in 1926Congress established BuAer in 1921 in order to create a single organizational home for naval aviation Prior to 1921 cognizance for aviation had been divided among various Navy bureaus and other organizations The first Chief of BuAer was Rear Admiral William A Moffett 1869 1933 a Medal of Honor recipient and battleship commander who had long supported the development of naval aviation He served as bureau chief from 1921 until his death in 1933 in the crash of the airship USS Akron ZRS 4 Working closely with RADM Moffett CAPT Henry C Mustin 1874 1923 served as BuAer s first Assistant Chief helping lead naval aviation to the forefront of American military strength A talented administrator Moffett ensured the continued independence of naval aviation during the 1920s when Army Brig Gen Billy Mitchell and others sought to merge all U S military aviation into a single independent air force Upon Moffett s death he was succeeded as Chief of the Bureau by Rear Admiral Ernest J King a future Fleet Admiral and Chief of Naval Operations during World War II Other important bureau chiefs included Rear Admiral John S McCain Sr the grandfather of U S Senator John S McCain III R Ariz During the 1930s BuAer presided over rapid technological change in naval aircraft The bureau s policy was to limit its own production in order to support the civilian aircraft industry BuAer used the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia Pennsylvania as a facility for building small numbers of prototype aircraft World War II and the postwar period editWorld War II brought immense changes as well BuAer was forced to expand rapidly in order to comply with the nation s defense needs By the war s end the bureau had developed an administrative structure that oversaw thousands of personnel and the procurement and maintenance of tens of thousands of aircraft In 1943 the Navy established the position of Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Air or DCNO Air a move which relieved some of BuAer s responsibility for Fleet operations RADM McCain now promoted to vice admiral was the first to fill the position citation needed BuAer downsized after the war but continued its focus on aeronautical research and development But as naval technology became increasingly complex it became clear that the Navy s material organization was insufficient In particular the Navy needed better integration of aerial weapons with naval aircraft There was also the question of pilotless aircraft the ancestors of the late 20th century s Unmanned Aerial Vehicles BuAer considered these to be aircraft while BuOrd saw them as guided missiles citation needed To fix the problem in 1959 the Navy merged BuAer and BuOrd to create the Bureau of Naval Weapons BuWeps This was only a temporary solution however and in 1966 the Navy undertook a wholesale revision of its material organization The bureau system which had existed since the 1840s was replaced with the Systems Commands SYSCOMs BuWeps was replaced with the current Naval Air Systems Command NAVAIR citation needed Bureau chiefs editRear Admiral William A Moffett 1921 07 26 1933 04 04 July 26 1921 April 4 1933Rear Admiral Ernest J King 1933 05 03 1936 06 12 May 3 1933 June 12 1936Rear Admiral Arthur B Cook 1936 06 12 1939 06 01 June 12 1936 June 1 1939Rear Admiral John H Towers 1939 06 01 1942 10 06 June 1 1939 October 6 1942Rear Admiral John S McCain Sr 1942 10 09 1943 08 07 October 9 1942 August 7 1943Rear Admiral DeWitt C Ramsey 1943 08 07 1945 06 01 August 7 1943 June 1 1945Rear Admiral Harold B Sallada 1945 06 01 1947 05 01 June 1 1945 May 1 1947Rear Admiral Alfred M Pride 1947 05 01 1951 05 01 May 1 1947 May 1 1951Rear Admiral Thomas S Combs 1951 05 01 1953 06 30 May 1 1951 June 30 1953Rear Admiral Apollo Soucek 1953 06 30 1955 03 04 June 30 1953 March 4 1955Rear Admiral James S Russell 1955 03 04 1957 07 15 March 4 1955 July 15 1957Rear Admiral Robert E Dixon 1957 07 15 1959 12 01 July 15 1957 December 1 1959See also editNaval Aviation Photographic UnitReferences edit a b c https www history navy mil content dam nhhc research histories naval aviation pdf History 20 1 pdf bare URL PDF United States Naval and U S Marine Corps airplanes aviation Navy aircraft photos Archived from the original on 10 February 2018 Retrieved 12 January 2019 External links editNaval Aviation History Office Branch Naval Historical Center Washington D C Excerpts from the book United States Naval Aviation 1910 1995 published by the Naval Historical Center nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bureau of Aeronautics amp oldid 1194849551, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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