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Gilbert C. Hoover

Gilbert Corwin Hoover (July 25, 1894 – January 8, 1980) was a United States Naval officer from 1916 to 1947. He served in both world wars, was involved in the early stages of the development of the Atomic Bomb, and managed the Atomic Energy Commission's Boulder facility as a civilian contractor. He was awarded the Navy Cross three times.[1]

Rear Admiral

Gilbert C. Hoover
Birth nameGilbert Corwin Hoover
Nickname(s)"Gil"
Born(1894-07-25)July 25, 1894
Columbus, OH
DiedJanuary 8, 1980(1980-01-08) (aged 85)
East Providence, RI
Buried
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of Service1916–1947
1951–1956
RankRear Admiral
Commands heldUSS Helena (CL-50),
Destroyer Division 25
Battles/warsWorld War I
World War II
 • Battle of Coral Sea
 • Battle of Midway
 • Guadalcanal Campaign
Spouse(s)Martha Smith, Mabel Dumbell
ChildrenGilbert Jr., Katherine, Ann

Early life edit

Hoover was born on July 25, 1894, in Columbus, Ohio to Fredrick Maynard Hoover (1868–1930[2]) and Eliza Florence Kinnear Hoover (1876–1955[3]).[4] His parents came from prominent families, and had ancestors from Kingston upon Hull in the United Kingdom.[citation needed] Due to his love of the ocean Hoover attended the United States Naval Academy and graduated in the Class of 1916.[citation needed]

Military service edit

World War I edit

After graduation Hoover was assigned to the battleship USS Wyoming (BB-32), which was undergoing dockyard work in New York, around March, 1916.[5] Wyoming returned to service on June 26 and was involved in maneuvers off the Virginia Capes for the remainder of the year.

Hoover was promoted to Lieutenant (junior grade) on January 1, 1917 — eight days before Wyoming left New York for Cuban waters. She left Cuba on March 27 and was cruising off Yorktown, Virginia when the US declared war on Germany.[6] Wyoming left the Chesapeake Bay area on November 25 for Scapa Flow. She arrived on December 7, joining the 6th Battle Squadron (United Kingdom).[citation needed]

Hoover was promoted to Lieutenant on January 2, 1918.[7] After months of drilling, Wyoming escorted a convoy to Stavanger, Norway, patrolled the North Sea, and covered a minelaying operation.[8] During this time there were multiple false reports of U-boat sightings. Wyoming became Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman's flagship after USS New York (BB-34) was damaged hitting a U-boat. On November 21 Wyoming and 370 other warships rendezvoused with the German High Seas Fleet and accepted its surrender. Afterwards she joined the SS George Washington, which was carrying president Woodrow Wilson to the Paris Peace Conference, along with nine other battleships and 28 destroyers off Brest, France. Wyoming then returned to Britain, sailing on to New York on December 25. In a roster from December 26, Hoover is listed as having been in European waters for 12 months.[9]

Interwar edit

On October 1, 1939 Hoover, by then a Commander, was assigned to the "Experimental Section" under the Bureau of Ordnance, headed by Rear Admiral William R. Furlong.[10]

World War II edit

On October 1, 1941 Hoover's signal number was 632.[11] He was commander of Destroyer Division 25, part of Destroyer Squadron 13 led by Captain L.H. Thebaud and Lt.Cmdr. H.C. Robinson. Division 25 included USS Woolsey (DD-437) (flagship), USS Ludlow (DD-438), USS Edison (DD-439), and USS Bristol (DD-453). Squadron 13 was part of Flotilla 3, which in October was part of Task Force Four of the Atlantic Fleet.[12][13]

After the attack on Pearl Harbor Hoover was transferred to the Pacific as a destroyer division commander in Task Force 17.5, responsible for guarding the carriers USS Yorktown (CV-5) and USS Lexington (CV-2).[14] The ships under his command were: USS Morris (DD-417); USS Anderson (DD-411); USS Hammann (DD-412); USS Hughes (DD-410); and USS Russell (DD-414). Hoover was involved in the Battle of the Coral Sea where he was awarded a Navy Cross for moving his ships alongside the USS Lexington to rescue survivors. His command became Task Group 17.4, including USS Gwin (DD-433) in addition to 17.5, a destroyer screen for Yorktown during the decisive Battle of Midway in early June. Hammann and Yorktown were the only American ships to be sunk during the battle.

Captain Hoover took command of the Brooklyn-class light cruiser USS Helena (CL-50) on September 25, 1942.[15] Under command of Hoover Helena took part in the battles of Cape Esperance and Guadalcanal.

As a result of the night action off Guadalcanal (12-13 November 1942) only six of the thirteen U.S. Navy ships involved were able to steam away under their own power. The six included Helena. By dawn, these survivors had been gathered together by the senior surviving officer, Captain Hoover, in the southeast end of Indispensable Strait. In Captain Hoover's preliminary action report to Vice Admiral William F. Halsey, Commander, South Pacific, Hoover stated that he was concerned that radio emissions might disclose the location of the ships, so he sent the report over to the USS O'Bannon and ordered her north of San Cristobal Island to transmit it by radio. Captain Hoover then turned the five ships south of San Cristobal and, in a loose formation, headed for Espiritu Santo. In the southeast end of Indispensable Strait the USS Juneau was torpedoed by the Japanese submarine I-26. Having received reports that three more Japanese submarines lurked along his route and with a submarine present in his area Hoover made the decision to not search for survivors of the USS Juneau, thereby abandoning 100 survivors, of which only ten survived.[16] Hoover was left with Helena and the USS San Francisco, which was in shambles, and two destroyers, the USS Sterett DD-407 and USS Fletcher DD-445. The Sterett's sonar was out of commission leaving the Fletcher as Hoover's only effective ASW ship. Hoover sent a signal to an overhead USAAF bomber to ask ComSoPac (Halsey) to rescue Juneau's survivors. The message was reportedly never received by Halsey. Admiral William Halsey, angered by Hoover's decision, had Captain Hoover removed from command, effectively ending his career. Halsey later expressed regret about his hasty decision to remove Hoover, but the damage had been done.

 
Flag in St. Michael's with names of Task Force 17 ships

Later life edit

Hoover retired from the navy in 1947.[17] In 1951 he returned to government service as a civilian official at the Atomic Energy Commission's (AEC) Sandia Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Following this he became manager of the AEC's facility in Boulder, Colorado. He returned to Bristol in 1956.[18] Hoover died on January 10, 1980 at the Hattie Ida Chaffee Nursing Home in East Providence, Rhode Island at the age of 85.[citation needed]

Personal life edit

Hoover served as a vestryman and warden of St. Michael's Episcopal Church where he donated a flag from Task Force 17 which is on display today. He was a member of the American Society of Metals, Army-Navy Legion of Valor, National Sojourners, Sons of the American Revolution, Chevy Chase Club, Hope Club, Bristol Yacht Club, and was a Mason.[19] His first child, Gilbert Corwin Jr., was born in 1924 in Washington D.C. to Hoover's first wife, Martha Smith. Gilbert Jr. went on to graduate from Brown University and become an officer in the Navy. Hoover's two daughters were born to his second wife, Mabel Dumbbell.[20]

Awards and decorations edit

  Navy Cross Rescuing survivors of USS Lexington during Battle of the Coral Sea

  Navy Cross Battle of Cape Esperance

  Navy Cross Naval Battle of Guadalcanal 12-13 Nov 1942

References edit

  1. ^ "Valor awards for Gilbert Corwin Hoover". valor.militarytimes.com. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  2. ^ "Frederick Maynard Hoover". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2017-06-16.
  3. ^ "Elizabeth Florence "Eliza" Hoover". geni_family_tree. Retrieved 2017-06-16.
  4. ^ "hoover1". www.usshelena.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  5. ^ "Battleship Photo Index BB-32 USS WYOMING". www.navsource.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  6. ^ "Wyoming III (Battleship No. 32)". www.history.navy.mil. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  7. ^ "Battleship Photo Index BB-32 USS WYOMING". www.navsource.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  8. ^ "Wyoming III (Battleship No. 32)". www.history.navy.mil. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  9. ^ "Battleship Photo Index BB-32 USS WYOMING". www.navsource.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  10. ^ Svonavec, Stephen. "Bureaus, October 1, 1939". fleetorganization.com. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  11. ^ Svonavec, Stephen. "US Navy – Commanders by Signal Number,October 1, 1941". fleetorganization.com. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  12. ^ Svonavec, Stephen. "US Navy – Atlantic Fleet Organization by Task Force 1941". fleetorganization.com. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  13. ^ Svonavec, Stephen. "US Fleet – Atlantic Fleet, October 1, 1941". fleetorganization.com. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  14. ^ "hoover1". www.usshelena.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  15. ^ "Cruiser Photo Index CL-50 USS HELENA – Navsource – Photographic History of the U.S. Navy". www.navsource.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  16. ^ Kurzman, Dan (1994). Left to Die: The Tragedy of the USS Juneau. New York: Pocket Books. pp. 339. ISBN 0-671-74874-2.
  17. ^ "hoover1". www.usshelena.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  18. ^ "hoover1". www.usshelena.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  19. ^ "hoover1". www.usshelena.org. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  20. ^ "GILBERT C. HOOVER Jr. Obituary (2011) New York Times". Legacy.com.

External links edit

gilbert, hoover, gilbert, corwin, hoover, july, 1894, january, 1980, united, states, naval, officer, from, 1916, 1947, served, both, world, wars, involved, early, stages, development, atomic, bomb, managed, atomic, energy, commission, boulder, facility, civili. Gilbert Corwin Hoover July 25 1894 January 8 1980 was a United States Naval officer from 1916 to 1947 He served in both world wars was involved in the early stages of the development of the Atomic Bomb and managed the Atomic Energy Commission s Boulder facility as a civilian contractor He was awarded the Navy Cross three times 1 Rear AdmiralGilbert C HooverBirth nameGilbert Corwin HooverNickname s Gil Born 1894 07 25 July 25 1894Columbus OHDiedJanuary 8 1980 1980 01 08 aged 85 East Providence RIBuriedBristol RIAllegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of Service1916 19471951 1956RankRear AdmiralCommands heldUSS Helena CL 50 Destroyer Division 25Battles warsWorld War IWorld War II Battle of Coral Sea Battle of Midway Guadalcanal CampaignSpouse s Martha Smith Mabel DumbellChildrenGilbert Jr Katherine Ann Contents 1 Early life 2 Military service 2 1 World War I 2 2 Interwar 2 3 World War II 3 Later life 4 Personal life 5 Awards and decorations 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editHoover was born on July 25 1894 in Columbus Ohio to Fredrick Maynard Hoover 1868 1930 2 and Eliza Florence Kinnear Hoover 1876 1955 3 4 His parents came from prominent families and had ancestors from Kingston upon Hull in the United Kingdom citation needed Due to his love of the ocean Hoover attended the United States Naval Academy and graduated in the Class of 1916 citation needed Military service editWorld War I edit After graduation Hoover was assigned to the battleship USS Wyoming BB 32 which was undergoing dockyard work in New York around March 1916 5 Wyoming returned to service on June 26 and was involved in maneuvers off the Virginia Capes for the remainder of the year Hoover was promoted to Lieutenant junior grade on January 1 1917 eight days before Wyoming left New York for Cuban waters She left Cuba on March 27 and was cruising off Yorktown Virginia when the US declared war on Germany 6 Wyoming left the Chesapeake Bay area on November 25 for Scapa Flow She arrived on December 7 joining the 6th Battle Squadron United Kingdom citation needed Hoover was promoted to Lieutenant on January 2 1918 7 After months of drilling Wyoming escorted a convoy to Stavanger Norway patrolled the North Sea and covered a minelaying operation 8 During this time there were multiple false reports of U boat sightings Wyoming became Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman s flagship after USS New York BB 34 was damaged hitting a U boat On November 21 Wyoming and 370 other warships rendezvoused with the German High Seas Fleet and accepted its surrender Afterwards she joined the SS George Washington which was carrying president Woodrow Wilson to the Paris Peace Conference along with nine other battleships and 28 destroyers off Brest France Wyoming then returned to Britain sailing on to New York on December 25 In a roster from December 26 Hoover is listed as having been in European waters for 12 months 9 Interwar edit On October 1 1939 Hoover by then a Commander was assigned to the Experimental Section under the Bureau of Ordnance headed by Rear Admiral William R Furlong 10 World War II edit On October 1 1941 Hoover s signal number was 632 11 He was commander of Destroyer Division 25 part of Destroyer Squadron 13 led by Captain L H Thebaud and Lt Cmdr H C Robinson Division 25 included USS Woolsey DD 437 flagship USS Ludlow DD 438 USS Edison DD 439 and USS Bristol DD 453 Squadron 13 was part of Flotilla 3 which in October was part of Task Force Four of the Atlantic Fleet 12 13 After the attack on Pearl Harbor Hoover was transferred to the Pacific as a destroyer division commander in Task Force 17 5 responsible for guarding the carriers USS Yorktown CV 5 and USS Lexington CV 2 14 The ships under his command were USS Morris DD 417 USS Anderson DD 411 USS Hammann DD 412 USS Hughes DD 410 and USS Russell DD 414 Hoover was involved in the Battle of the Coral Sea where he was awarded a Navy Cross for moving his ships alongside the USS Lexington to rescue survivors His command became Task Group 17 4 including USS Gwin DD 433 in addition to 17 5 a destroyer screen for Yorktown during the decisive Battle of Midway in early June Hammann and Yorktown were the only American ships to be sunk during the battle Captain Hoover took command of the Brooklyn class light cruiser USS Helena CL 50 on September 25 1942 15 Under command of Hoover Helena took part in the battles of Cape Esperance and Guadalcanal As a result of the night action off Guadalcanal 12 13 November 1942 only six of the thirteen U S Navy ships involved were able to steam away under their own power The six included Helena By dawn these survivors had been gathered together by the senior surviving officer Captain Hoover in the southeast end of Indispensable Strait In Captain Hoover s preliminary action report to Vice Admiral William F Halsey Commander South Pacific Hoover stated that he was concerned that radio emissions might disclose the location of the ships so he sent the report over to the USS O Bannon and ordered her north of San Cristobal Island to transmit it by radio Captain Hoover then turned the five ships south of San Cristobal and in a loose formation headed for Espiritu Santo In the southeast end of Indispensable Strait the USS Juneau was torpedoed by the Japanese submarine I 26 Having received reports that three more Japanese submarines lurked along his route and with a submarine present in his area Hoover made the decision to not search for survivors of the USS Juneau thereby abandoning 100 survivors of which only ten survived 16 Hoover was left with Helena and the USS San Francisco which was in shambles and two destroyers the USS Sterett DD 407 and USS Fletcher DD 445 The Sterett s sonar was out of commission leaving the Fletcher as Hoover s only effective ASW ship Hoover sent a signal to an overhead USAAF bomber to ask ComSoPac Halsey to rescue Juneau s survivors The message was reportedly never received by Halsey Admiral William Halsey angered by Hoover s decision had Captain Hoover removed from command effectively ending his career Halsey later expressed regret about his hasty decision to remove Hoover but the damage had been done nbsp Flag in St Michael s with names of Task Force 17 shipsLater life editHoover retired from the navy in 1947 17 In 1951 he returned to government service as a civilian official at the Atomic Energy Commission s AEC Sandia Base in Albuquerque New Mexico Following this he became manager of the AEC s facility in Boulder Colorado He returned to Bristol in 1956 18 Hoover died on January 10 1980 at the Hattie Ida Chaffee Nursing Home in East Providence Rhode Island at the age of 85 citation needed Personal life editHoover served as a vestryman and warden of St Michael s Episcopal Church where he donated a flag from Task Force 17 which is on display today He was a member of the American Society of Metals Army Navy Legion of Valor National Sojourners Sons of the American Revolution Chevy Chase Club Hope Club Bristol Yacht Club and was a Mason 19 His first child Gilbert Corwin Jr was born in 1924 in Washington D C to Hoover s first wife Martha Smith Gilbert Jr went on to graduate from Brown University and become an officer in the Navy Hoover s two daughters were born to his second wife Mabel Dumbbell 20 Awards and decorations edit nbsp Navy Cross Rescuing survivors of USS Lexington during Battle of the Coral Sea nbsp Navy Cross Battle of Cape Esperance nbsp Navy Cross Naval Battle of Guadalcanal 12 13 Nov 1942References edit Valor awards for Gilbert Corwin Hoover valor militarytimes com Retrieved 2017 04 20 Frederick Maynard Hoover geni family tree Retrieved 2017 06 16 Elizabeth Florence Eliza Hoover geni family tree Retrieved 2017 06 16 hoover1 www usshelena org Retrieved 2017 04 20 Battleship Photo Index BB 32 USS WYOMING www navsource org Retrieved 2017 04 20 Wyoming III Battleship No 32 www history navy mil Retrieved 2017 04 20 Battleship Photo Index BB 32 USS WYOMING www navsource org Retrieved 2017 04 20 Wyoming III Battleship No 32 www history navy mil Retrieved 2017 04 20 Battleship Photo Index BB 32 USS WYOMING www navsource org Retrieved 2017 04 20 Svonavec Stephen Bureaus October 1 1939 fleetorganization com Retrieved 2017 04 20 Svonavec Stephen US Navy Commanders by Signal Number October 1 1941 fleetorganization com Retrieved 2017 04 20 Svonavec Stephen US Navy Atlantic Fleet Organization by Task Force 1941 fleetorganization com Retrieved 2017 04 20 Svonavec Stephen US Fleet Atlantic Fleet October 1 1941 fleetorganization com Retrieved 2017 04 20 hoover1 www usshelena org Retrieved 2017 04 20 Cruiser Photo Index CL 50 USS HELENA Navsource Photographic History of the U S Navy www navsource org Retrieved 2017 04 20 Kurzman Dan 1994 Left to Die The Tragedy of the USS Juneau New York Pocket Books pp 339 ISBN 0 671 74874 2 hoover1 www usshelena org Retrieved 2017 04 20 hoover1 www usshelena org Retrieved 2017 04 20 hoover1 www usshelena org Retrieved 2017 04 20 GILBERT C HOOVER Jr Obituary 2011 New York Times Legacy com External links edithttp valor militarytimes com recipient php recipientid 20527 http www usshelena org hoover html https www facebook com pg Gilbert C Hoover 352474184804545 posts ref page interna http www thisweeknews com content stories bexley news 2010 06 09 kinnear became household name in north columbus html Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gilbert C Hoover amp oldid 1171328496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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