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Eugene Parks Wilkinson

Eugene Parks "Dennis" Wilkinson (August 10, 1918 – July 11, 2013) was a United States Navy officer. He was selected for three historic command assignments. The first, in 1954, was as the first commanding officer of USS Nautilus, the world's first nuclear-powered submarine. The second was as the first commanding officer of USS Long Beach, America's first nuclear surface ship. The third was in 1980 when he was chosen as the first President and CEO of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO) from which he retired in 1984.

Eugene Parks Wilkinson
Vice Admiral Eugene Parks Wilkinson
Nickname(s)Dennis
Born(1918-08-10)August 10, 1918
Long Beach, California
DiedJuly 11, 2013(2013-07-11) (aged 94)
Del Mar, California
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1940–1974
RankVice Admiral
Commands heldUSS Volador
USS Sea Robin
USS Wahoo
USS Nautilus
USS Long Beach
Submarine Force U.S. Atlantic Fleet
Battles/warsWorld War II
Korean War
AwardsDistinguished Service Medal
Silver Star
Legion of Merit
Joint Service Commendation Medal
Navy Unit Commendation
Order of the Sacred Treasure, 2nd Class (Japan)
Navy Meritorious Civilian Service Award
Golden Fleece Award
Henry DeWolf Smyth Nuclear Statesman Award
RelationsWife, Janice; Daughter, Marian Lynn; Sons, Dennis, Stephen, and Rodney
Other workInstitute of Nuclear Power Operations

Biography and military career

Early life

Wilkinson, born in August 1918 in Long Beach, California, the son of Dennis William and Daisy Parks Wilkinson. He attended Holtville, California, High School and San Diego State College. He graduated from the latter in 1938 with a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in chemistry. He taught chemistry there for a year. He also filled in and taught a course in mathematics. During this year he attended the University of Southern California. The next year he had a teaching fellowship in chemistry at USC. During those two years he completed all of the course work for a doctorate, but never did a thesis or received any graduate degree. Commissioned as an ensign in the U.S. Naval Reserve on 12 December 1940, he was transferred to the regular U.S. Navy on 28 August 1946.

Early career

Wilkinson's commissioned service began in the heavy cruiser USS Louisville, in which he had duty in the engineering department until December 1941.

World War II

Wilkinson was detached in San Francisco, with orders to the Submarine School, New London, Connecticut, for instruction in submarines. After completing the course in March 1942, he served in the engineering department of the submarine USS R-10 in April and May, after which he was ordered to the submarine USS Blackfish. After the commissioning of that boat in July, he served on board for one year, making four war patrols. He had commissary, engineering; and electrical duties. During his time in the crew the submarine participated in the North African operation (Algeria-Morocco landings).

From June 1943 to October 1944 Wilkinson was in the crew of the submarine USS Darter which participated in four war patrols, including the Truk attack and the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Wilkinson was awarded the Silver Star for his service aboard Darter. Officially detached from Darter in November 1944, following her loss the previous month, he returned to the United States. From January to March 1945 he was an instructor at the Submarine School, New London, Connecticut. He next served as executive officer and navigator of the submarine USS Menhaden from March to October 1945 and had similar duty on board the submarine USS Raton.

Post World War II

Upon his transfer from the Naval Reserve to the U.S. Navy, he was ordered to the General Line School, Newport, Rhode Island, where he completed the assigned course in May 1947. From June 1947 until April 1948, Wilkinson was executive officer and navigator of USS Cusk.

Joining then-Captain Hyman G. Rickover at Oak Ridge National Laboratory after passing one of the first of Rickover's many such interviews, the mathematically-gifted Wilkinson "ultimately developed the nuclear physics equations and formulas for the team...and for the final reactor design" of the prototype reactor for USS Nautilus.[1]

From April 1948 to April 1950, he completed assignments at the Oak Ridge; the Argonne National Laboratory in Chicago as an associate engineer, and at the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, area, as chief of the operations branch and Bureau of Ships representative. In May 1950 he assumed command of the submarine USS Volador in which he participated in action in the Korean area from 12 August to 2 November 1951. In February 1952 Wilkinson had temporary duty for one month as commanding officer of the submarine USS Sea Robin due to an injury to the assigned CO. From January to May 1952 he fitted out the submarine USS Wahoo and on her commissioning on 10 May of that year became her first commanding officer. He was detached from Wahoo in June 1953.

USS Nautilus

Wilkinson then carried out a series of temporary assignments by way of preparation for becoming prospective commanding officer of USS Nautilus, the world's first nuclear-powered submarine. He took command of the ship upon her commissioning on 30 September 1954 and held that billet until relieved in June 1957. During his three-year tour aboard Nautilus, he presided over pre-commissioning and post-commissioning trials of the submarine. These trials established the capabilities of the nuclear-powered submarine and were used in the development of early nuclear-powered submarine tactics. Nautilus successfully attacked surface ships without being detected and evaded most pursuers.

At 1100 on January 17, 1955, after getting underway, Commander Wilkinson signaled "Underway on Nuclear Power."[2] This historic message ushered in the nuclear age for the United States Navy, as well as the world. Wilkinson was the first commanding officer in a nuclear fleet that would eventually cover most of the aircraft carriers, several cruisers, and the entire submarine fleet for the United States Navy.

Later career and Admiralty

After spending the following academic year as a student at the Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island, Wilkinson served as Commander Submarine Division 102, a subunit of Submarine Squadron 10 at New London, Connecticut, for a year and had brief temporary duty as commanding officer of Nautilus.

In September 1959 he became the initial commanding officer of the guided missile cruiser USS Long Beach, the U.S. Navy's first nuclear-powered surface ship. After completion of that command and selection for promotion to rear admiral, he reported on 1 November 1963 as Director of the Submarine Warfare Division (OP-31), in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Navy Department, Washington, D.C. Upon assignment to that billet he was promoted to the rank of rear admiral, six years below zone and the first non–Naval Academy graduate selected admiral after World War II. While in this role, he oversaw the development of the Navy's SubSafe program in response to the loss of USS Thresher in April 1963. He also initiated the Nuclear Propulsion Examining Board (NPEB) in the Atlantic and Pacific fleet, in which operational Navy line officers took over nuclear submarine inspection responsibilities from civilians at Naval Reactors, as well as the associated Operational Reactor Safeguards Examination (ORSE).[3]

On 23 November 1966, he assumed duties as Chief of Staff for the U.S. Forces in Japan. After earning the Distinguished Service Medal for his service in Japan, Admiral Wilkinson assumed command of Submarine Flotilla 2 on 6 June 1969. He was promoted to vice admiral upon becoming Commander of the Atlantic Fleet Submarine Force on 12 February 1970. He had additional duty as Submarine Operations Advisor for Polaris Operations, Atlantic Command and Supreme Allied Command Atlantic, Commander Submarines Allied Command, and Commander Submarine Force Western Atlantic. His final billet on active duty, from 1972 to 1974, was as Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Submarine Warfare), OP-02, on the staff of the Chief of Naval Operations.

He retired with the rank of Vice Admiral, having commanded the Submarine Force U.S. Atlantic Fleet (COMSUBLANT) from 1970 to 1972 as its first nuclear-trained officer, and served as Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Submarine Warfare from 1972 until his retirement in 1974.

He died on July 11, 2013.[4] A biography on his life was published in 2017 by the American Nuclear Society.[5]

Honors and awards

During his noteworthy naval career, Admiral Wilkinson earned:[6]

After retiring from the Navy Admiral Wilkinson received the following awards:

See also

Remarks by VADM Eugene P. "Dennis" Wilkinson, USN (ret.) 2011-06-13 at the Wayback Machine First Commanding Officer of USS NAUTILUS (SSN 571) 50th Anniversary of NAUTILUS' First Underway on Nuclear Power Submarine Force Museum Monday, January 17, 2005
Wilkinson, Eugene P., Stillwell, Paul, (interviewer). The Reminiscences of Vice Admiral Eugen P. Wilkinson U.S. Navy (Retired). Annapolis: U.S. Naval Institute, 2006. OCLC OCLC 73501313
Stillwell, Paul, ed. Submarine Stories: Recollections from the Diesel Boats. 2007.

References

  1. ^ Winters, Ann (2017-03-28). "Underway on Nuclear Power" -- The Man Behind the Words: Eugene P. "Dennis" Wilkinson, Vice Admiral USN. The American Nuclear Society.
  2. ^ . www.ussnautilus.org. Archived from the original on 2011-06-13.
  3. ^ Winters, Ann (2017-03-28). Underway on Nuclear Power! The Man Behind the Words: Eugene P. "Dennis" Wilkinson, Vice Admiral USN (Kindle Locations 6065-6066). The American Nuclear Society. Kindle Edition.
  4. ^ http://www.navytimes.com/article/20130715/NEWS04/307150022/First-CO-command-nuclear-sub-dies[dead link]
  5. ^ Winters, Ann. "Underway on Nuclear Power" -- The Man Behind the Words: Eugene P. "Dennis" Wilkinson, Vice Admiral USN. The American Nuclear Society.
  6. ^ "VADM Eugene P. "Dennis" Wilkinson (retired)". United States Navy Submarine Force Museum. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
  7. ^ L'Harmattan web site (in French)
  8. ^ News Release Nuclear Energy Institute "Wilkinson Receives Nuclear Statesman Award for Shaping Commercial Nuclear Program That Promotes Excellence" ... "... during his tenure as the first president of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO)
  9. ^ "Walter H. Zinn Award recipients". Honors and Awards, Recipients. American Nuclear Society. Retrieved February 14, 2011.

  This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Navy.

eugene, parks, wilkinson, eugene, parks, dennis, wilkinson, august, 1918, july, 2013, united, states, navy, officer, selected, three, historic, command, assignments, first, 1954, first, commanding, officer, nautilus, world, first, nuclear, powered, submarine, . Eugene Parks Dennis Wilkinson August 10 1918 July 11 2013 was a United States Navy officer He was selected for three historic command assignments The first in 1954 was as the first commanding officer of USS Nautilus the world s first nuclear powered submarine The second was as the first commanding officer of USS Long Beach America s first nuclear surface ship The third was in 1980 when he was chosen as the first President and CEO of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations INPO from which he retired in 1984 Eugene Parks WilkinsonVice Admiral Eugene Parks WilkinsonNickname s DennisBorn 1918 08 10 August 10 1918Long Beach CaliforniaDiedJuly 11 2013 2013 07 11 aged 94 Del Mar CaliforniaAllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1940 1974RankVice AdmiralCommands heldUSS VoladorUSS Sea RobinUSS WahooUSS NautilusUSS Long BeachSubmarine Force U S Atlantic FleetBattles warsWorld War IIKorean WarAwardsDistinguished Service MedalSilver StarLegion of MeritJoint Service Commendation MedalNavy Unit CommendationOrder of the Sacred Treasure 2nd Class Japan Navy Meritorious Civilian Service AwardGolden Fleece AwardHenry DeWolf Smyth Nuclear Statesman AwardRelationsWife Janice Daughter Marian Lynn Sons Dennis Stephen and RodneyOther workInstitute of Nuclear Power Operations Contents 1 Biography and military career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early career 1 3 World War II 1 4 Post World War II 1 5 USS Nautilus 1 6 Later career and Admiralty 2 Honors and awards 3 See also 4 ReferencesBiography and military career EditEarly life Edit Wilkinson born in August 1918 in Long Beach California the son of Dennis William and Daisy Parks Wilkinson He attended Holtville California High School and San Diego State College He graduated from the latter in 1938 with a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in chemistry He taught chemistry there for a year He also filled in and taught a course in mathematics During this year he attended the University of Southern California The next year he had a teaching fellowship in chemistry at USC During those two years he completed all of the course work for a doctorate but never did a thesis or received any graduate degree Commissioned as an ensign in the U S Naval Reserve on 12 December 1940 he was transferred to the regular U S Navy on 28 August 1946 Early career Edit Wilkinson s commissioned service began in the heavy cruiser USS Louisville in which he had duty in the engineering department until December 1941 World War II Edit Wilkinson was detached in San Francisco with orders to the Submarine School New London Connecticut for instruction in submarines After completing the course in March 1942 he served in the engineering department of the submarine USS R 10 in April and May after which he was ordered to the submarine USS Blackfish After the commissioning of that boat in July he served on board for one year making four war patrols He had commissary engineering and electrical duties During his time in the crew the submarine participated in the North African operation Algeria Morocco landings From June 1943 to October 1944 Wilkinson was in the crew of the submarine USS Darter which participated in four war patrols including the Truk attack and the Battle of Leyte Gulf Wilkinson was awarded the Silver Star for his service aboard Darter Officially detached from Darter in November 1944 following her loss the previous month he returned to the United States From January to March 1945 he was an instructor at the Submarine School New London Connecticut He next served as executive officer and navigator of the submarine USS Menhaden from March to October 1945 and had similar duty on board the submarine USS Raton Post World War II Edit Upon his transfer from the Naval Reserve to the U S Navy he was ordered to the General Line School Newport Rhode Island where he completed the assigned course in May 1947 From June 1947 until April 1948 Wilkinson was executive officer and navigator of USS Cusk Joining then Captain Hyman G Rickover at Oak Ridge National Laboratory after passing one of the first of Rickover s many such interviews the mathematically gifted Wilkinson ultimately developed the nuclear physics equations and formulas for the team and for the final reactor design of the prototype reactor for USS Nautilus 1 From April 1948 to April 1950 he completed assignments at the Oak Ridge the Argonne National Laboratory in Chicago as an associate engineer and at the U S Atomic Energy Commission in the Pittsburgh Pennsylvania area as chief of the operations branch and Bureau of Ships representative In May 1950 he assumed command of the submarine USS Volador in which he participated in action in the Korean area from 12 August to 2 November 1951 In February 1952 Wilkinson had temporary duty for one month as commanding officer of the submarine USS Sea Robin due to an injury to the assigned CO From January to May 1952 he fitted out the submarine USS Wahoo and on her commissioning on 10 May of that year became her first commanding officer He was detached from Wahoo in June 1953 USS Nautilus Edit Wilkinson then carried out a series of temporary assignments by way of preparation for becoming prospective commanding officer of USS Nautilus the world s first nuclear powered submarine He took command of the ship upon her commissioning on 30 September 1954 and held that billet until relieved in June 1957 During his three year tour aboard Nautilus he presided over pre commissioning and post commissioning trials of the submarine These trials established the capabilities of the nuclear powered submarine and were used in the development of early nuclear powered submarine tactics Nautilus successfully attacked surface ships without being detected and evaded most pursuers At 1100 on January 17 1955 after getting underway Commander Wilkinson signaled Underway on Nuclear Power 2 This historic message ushered in the nuclear age for the United States Navy as well as the world Wilkinson was the first commanding officer in a nuclear fleet that would eventually cover most of the aircraft carriers several cruisers and the entire submarine fleet for the United States Navy Later career and Admiralty Edit After spending the following academic year as a student at the Naval War College Newport Rhode Island Wilkinson served as Commander Submarine Division 102 a subunit of Submarine Squadron 10 at New London Connecticut for a year and had brief temporary duty as commanding officer of Nautilus In September 1959 he became the initial commanding officer of the guided missile cruiser USS Long Beach the U S Navy s first nuclear powered surface ship After completion of that command and selection for promotion to rear admiral he reported on 1 November 1963 as Director of the Submarine Warfare Division OP 31 in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations Navy Department Washington D C Upon assignment to that billet he was promoted to the rank of rear admiral six years below zone and the first non Naval Academy graduate selected admiral after World War II While in this role he oversaw the development of the Navy s SubSafe program in response to the loss of USS Thresher in April 1963 He also initiated the Nuclear Propulsion Examining Board NPEB in the Atlantic and Pacific fleet in which operational Navy line officers took over nuclear submarine inspection responsibilities from civilians at Naval Reactors as well as the associated Operational Reactor Safeguards Examination ORSE 3 On 23 November 1966 he assumed duties as Chief of Staff for the U S Forces in Japan After earning the Distinguished Service Medal for his service in Japan Admiral Wilkinson assumed command of Submarine Flotilla 2 on 6 June 1969 He was promoted to vice admiral upon becoming Commander of the Atlantic Fleet Submarine Force on 12 February 1970 He had additional duty as Submarine Operations Advisor for Polaris Operations Atlantic Command and Supreme Allied Command Atlantic Commander Submarines Allied Command and Commander Submarine Force Western Atlantic His final billet on active duty from 1972 to 1974 was as Deputy Chief of Naval Operations Submarine Warfare OP 02 on the staff of the Chief of Naval Operations He retired with the rank of Vice Admiral having commanded the Submarine Force U S Atlantic Fleet COMSUBLANT from 1970 to 1972 as its first nuclear trained officer and served as Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Submarine Warfare from 1972 until his retirement in 1974 He died on July 11 2013 4 A biography on his life was published in 2017 by the American Nuclear Society 5 Honors and awards EditDuring his noteworthy naval career Admiral Wilkinson earned 6 Navy Distinguished Service Medal with two gold stars 3 awards 1969 1972 1974 Silver Star 1944 Legion of Merit 1953 Joint Service Commendation Medal 1964 Navy Unit Commendation 1944 American Defense Service Medal with FLEET clasp American Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal with four battle stars European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with one battle star World War II Victory Medal China Service Medal National Defense Service Medal with star Korean Service Medal United Nations Korea Medal Philippine Liberation Medal Order of the Sacred Treasure Second Class Japan 1969 7 1955 Golden Fleece Award National Association of Wool Manufacturers Submarine Combat Patrol insignia with three bronze service starAfter retiring from the Navy Admiral Wilkinson received the following awards 1976 Navy Meritorious Civilian Service Award 1983 George Washington Gold Medal ASME 1984 Oliver Townsend Medal 1989 Uranium Institute Gold Medal 1990 Elected National Academy of Engineering 1994 Henry DeWolf Smyth Nuclear Statesman Award 8 1998 Walter H Zinn Award from the American Nuclear Society 9 See also Edit Biography portalRemarks by VADM Eugene P Dennis Wilkinson USN ret Archived 2011 06 13 at the Wayback Machine First Commanding Officer of USS NAUTILUS SSN 571 50th Anniversary of NAUTILUS First Underway on Nuclear Power Submarine Force Museum Monday January 17 2005 Wilkinson Eugene P Stillwell Paul interviewer The Reminiscences of Vice Admiral Eugen P Wilkinson U S Navy Retired Annapolis U S Naval Institute 2006 OCLC OCLC 73501313 Stillwell Paul ed Submarine Stories Recollections from the Diesel Boats 2007 References Edit Winters Ann 2017 03 28 Underway on Nuclear Power The Man Behind the Words Eugene P Dennis Wilkinson Vice Admiral USN The American Nuclear Society USS Nautilus Events www ussnautilus org Archived from the original on 2011 06 13 Winters Ann 2017 03 28 Underway on Nuclear Power The Man Behind the Words Eugene P Dennis Wilkinson Vice Admiral USN Kindle Locations 6065 6066 The American Nuclear Society Kindle Edition http www navytimes com article 20130715 NEWS04 307150022 First CO command nuclear sub dies dead link Winters Ann Underway on Nuclear Power The Man Behind the Words Eugene P Dennis Wilkinson Vice Admiral USN The American Nuclear Society VADM Eugene P Dennis Wilkinson retired United States Navy Submarine Force Museum Retrieved 2007 01 15 L Harmattan web site in French News Release Nuclear Energy Institute Wilkinson Receives Nuclear Statesman Award for Shaping Commercial Nuclear Program That Promotes Excellence during his tenure as the first president of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations INPO Walter H Zinn Award recipients Honors and Awards Recipients American Nuclear Society Retrieved February 14 2011 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Navy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eugene Parks Wilkinson amp oldid 1121824096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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