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Henry H. Arnold

Henry Harley "Hap" Arnold (June 25, 1886 – January 15, 1950) was an American general officer holding the ranks of General of the Army and later, General of the Air Force. Arnold was an aviation pioneer, Chief of the Air Corps (1938–1941), commanding general of the United States Army Air Forces, the only United States Air Force general to hold five-star rank, and the only officer to hold a five-star rank in two different U.S. military services.[1] Arnold was also the founder of Project RAND, which evolved into one of the world's largest non-profit global policy think tanks, the RAND Corporation, and was one of the founders of Pan American World Airways.


Henry H. Arnold
Arnold between 1946 and 1949
Nickname(s)"Hap", "Pewt", "Benny", "The Chief"
Born(1886-06-25)June 25, 1886
Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedJanuary 15, 1950(1950-01-15) (aged 63)
Sonoma, California, U.S.
Buried
AllegianceUnited States
Service/branch
Years of service1907–1947 (Army)
1947–1950 (Air Force)
RankGeneral of the Army
General of the Air Force
Service numberO-2255
Commands heldUnited States Army Air Forces
Twentieth Air Force
1st Wing, GHQ Air Force
Battles/warsPhilippine–American War
World War I
World War II
AwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal (3)
Legion of Merit
Distinguished Flying Cross
Air Medal

Instructed in flying by the Wright Brothers, Arnold was one of the first military pilots worldwide, and one of the first three rated pilots in the history of the United States Air Force.[nb 1] He overcame a fear of flying that resulted from his experiences with early flight, supervised the expansion of the Air Service during World War I, and became a protégé of General Billy Mitchell.

Arnold rose to command the Army Air Forces immediately prior to the American entry into World War II and directed its hundred-fold expansion from an organization of little more than 20,000 men and 800 first-line combat aircraft into the largest and most powerful air force in the world. An advocate of technological research and development, his tenure saw the development of the intercontinental bomber, the jet fighter, the extensive use of radar, global airlift and atomic warfare as mainstays of modern air power.

Arnold's most widely used nickname, "Hap", was short for "Happy", attributed variously to work associates when he moonlighted as a silent film stunt pilot in October 1911,[2][3] or to his wife, who began using the nickname in her correspondence in 1931 following the death of Arnold's mother. His family called him Harley during his youth, and his mother and wife called him "Sunny".[4] His West Point classmates called Arnold "Pewt" or "Benny" and his immediate subordinates and headquarters staff referred to him as "The Chief".[5]

Early life and career edit

Born June 25, 1886, in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, Arnold was the son of Dr. Herbert Alonzo Arnold (1857–1933), a physician and a member of the prominent political and military Arnold Family. His mother was Anna Louise ("Gangy") Harley (1857–1931),[4] from a "Dunker" farm family and the first female in her family to attend high school. Arnold was Baptist in religious belief but had strong Mennonite ties through both families. However, unlike her husband, "Gangy" Arnold was "fun-loving and prone to laughter," and not rigid in her beliefs.[6] When Arnold was eleven, his father responded to the Spanish–American War by serving as a surgeon in the Pennsylvania National Guard, of which he remained a member for the next 24 years.[7]

Arnold attended Lower Merion High School in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, graduating in 1903. The athletic fields at Lower Merion are named after him.[8] Arnold had no intention of attending West Point (he was preparing to attend Bucknell University and enter the Baptist ministry) but took the entrance examination after his older brother Thomas defied their father and refused to do so. Arnold placed second on the list and received a delayed appointment when the nominated cadet confessed to being married, prohibited by academy regulations.[9]

 
At West Point in 1907

Arnold entered the United States Military Academy at West Point as a "Juliette" (one month late), having just turned 17. His cadet career was spent as a "clean sleeve" (cadet private).[10] At the academy he helped found the "Black Hand", a group of cadet pranksters, and led it during his first class year. He played second-team running back for the varsity football team, was a shot putter on the track and field team, and excelled at polo. Arnold's academic standing varied between the middle and the lower end of his class, with his better scores in mathematics and science. He wanted assignment to the Cavalry but an inconsistent demerit record[11] and a cumulative general merit class standing of 66th out of 111 cadets resulted in his being commissioned on June 14, 1907, as a second lieutenant, Infantry.[12] He initially protested the assignment (there was no commissioning requirement for USMA graduates in 1907), but was persuaded to accept a commission in the 29th Infantry, at the time stationed in the Philippines.[13] Arnold arrived in Manila on December 7, 1907.[14]

Arnold disliked infantry troop duties and volunteered to assist Captain Arthur S. Cowan of the 20th Infantry, who was on temporary assignment in the Philippines mapping the island of Luzon. Cowan returned to the United States following completion of the cartography detail, transferred to the Signal Corps, and was assigned to recruit two lieutenants to become pilots. Cowan contacted Arnold, who cabled his interest in also transferring to the Signal Corps but heard nothing in reply for two years. In June 1909, the 29th Infantry relocated to Fort Jay, New York,[15] and en route to his new duty station by way of Paris, Arnold saw his first airplane in flight, piloted by Louis Blériot.[16] In 1911, Arnold applied for transfer to the United States Army Ordnance Department because it offered an immediate promotion to first lieutenant. While awaiting the results of the required competitive examination, he learned that his interest in aeronautics had not been forgotten.[17]

Military aviation pioneer edit

 
A young Henry Arnold at the second-seat controls of a Wright Model B airplane 1911
 
Colonel Henry Arnold in the War Department in Washington, D.C., April 1918

Arnold immediately sent a letter requesting a transfer to the Signal Corps and on April 21, 1911, received Special Order 95, detailing him and 2nd Lt. Thomas DeWitt Milling of the 15th Cavalry, to Dayton, Ohio, for a course in flight instruction at the Wright brothers' aviation school at Simms Station, Ohio.[18] While individually instructed, they were part of the school's May 1911 class that included three civilians and Lieutenant John Rodgers of the United States Navy.[19] Beginning instruction on May 3 with Arthur L. Welsh, Arnold made his first solo flight May 13 after three hours and forty-eight minutes of flight in 28 lessons.[20][21][nb 2] On May 14, he and Milling completed their instruction.[22] Arnold received Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) pilot certificate number 29 on July 6, 1911, and Military Aviator Certificate Number 2 a year later. He also was recognized by a general order in 1913 as one of the first 24 rated military aviators, authorized to wear the newly designed Military Aviator badge.[23]

After several more weeks of solo flying in Dayton to gain experience, Arnold and Milling were sent on June 14 to the Aeronautical Division, Signal Corps station established at College Park, Maryland, to be the Army's first flight instructors.[24] There Arnold set an altitude record of 3,260 feet (990 m) on July 7 and thrice broke it (August 18, 1911, to 4,167 feet (1,270 m);[25] January 25, 1912, to 4,764 feet (1,452 m);[26] and June 1, 1912, 6,540 feet (1,990 m)).[27] In August 1911, he experienced his first crash, trying to take off from a farm field after getting lost.[28] In September Arnold became the first U.S. pilot to carry mail, flying a bundle of letters five miles (8 km) on Long Island, New York,[29] and he is credited as the first pilot to fly over the U.S. Capitol and the first to carry a United States Congressman as a passenger.[2] The following month, Arnold moonlighted as a pilot in the filming of two silent movies, doubling for the leads in The Military Air-Scout and The Elopement.[2][3][30]

The flight school moved in November 1911 to a farm leased near Augusta, Georgia, hoping to continue flying there during the winter.[31] Training was limited by rain and flooding, and they returned to Maryland in May 1912.[12] Arnold began to develop a phobia about flying,[30] intensified by Al Welsh's fatal crash at College Park on June 11.[nb 3] In August Arnold was at Marblehead, Massachusetts, with 1st Lieutenant Roy C. Kirtland conducting acceptance tests of the Burgess Model H, an enclosed-fuselage tandem-seat seaplane and the Army's first tractor (front-mounted propeller and engine). The pair received orders to fly the new aircraft to Bridgeport, Connecticut, to participate in maneuvers but high winds forced them to land on Massachusetts Bay on August 12. Attempting to take off again, Arnold caught a wing tip in the water turning into the wind and crashed into the bay off Plymouth.[32] Arnold suffered a lacerated chin during the mishap but the aircraft was salvaged and repaired.[4] Another crash at College Park on September 18 killed 2nd Lieutenant Lewis Rockwell, an academy classmate of Arnold's.[12][33]

In October, Arnold and Milling were ordered to enter the competition for the first MacKay Trophy for "the most outstanding military flight of the year." Arnold won when he located a company of cavalry from the air and returned safely despite strong turbulence. As a result, he and Milling were sent to Fort Riley, Kansas, to experiment with radio and other communications from the air with the field artillery. Arnold's flight on November 2 in Wright C Speed Scout S.C. Number 10, with 1st Lieutenant Follett Bradley as his wireless operator, successfully sent the first radio telegraph message, at a distance of 6 miles (9.7 km), from an aircraft to a receiver on the ground, manned by 1st Lt. Joseph O. Mauborgne of the Signal Corps.[34][nb 4] Three days later, Arnold flew on an artillery spotting exercise with 1st Lieutenant Alfred L.P. Sands of the 6th Field Artillery as an observer. Spiraling down to land in S.C. No. 10, the plane stalled, went into a spin, and they narrowly avoided a fatal crash.[nb 5] He immediately grounded himself and applied for a leave of absence. Flying was considered so dangerous that no stigma was attached for refusing to fly, and his request was granted.[nb 6] During his leave of absence he renewed an acquaintance with Eleanor "Bee" Pool, the daughter of a banker, and one of his father's patients.[12][35][nb 7]

On December 1, Arnold took a staff assignment as assistant to the new head of the Aeronautical Division in the Office of the Chief Signal Officer in Washington, D.C. In the spring he was assigned the task of closing the flying school at College Park.[36][nb 8] Although promoted to 1st lieutenant on April 10, 1913, Arnold was unhappy and requested a transfer to the Philippines. While awaiting a response, he received orders to the 9th Infantry on July 10. In August, still awaiting transfer, he testified before the House Military Affairs Committee against HR5304, a bill to remove aviation from the Signal Corps and make it a semi-autonomous "Air Corps." Arnold, like fellow flyer Captain Benjamin Foulois, argued that the action was premature, and like his Signal Corps boss, Major Edgar Russel (a non-flyer), that the Signal Corps was doing all that could be done to develop military use of the airplane.[37] He was assigned to a company at Fort Thomas, Kentucky, on September 1, where he was stationed until transferred to the 13th Infantry on November 1.[38]

Marriage and return to aviation edit

On September 10, 1913, he and Bee married,[39] with Milling acting as his best man.[40] Sent back to the Philippines in January 1914, he was quartered near 1st Lieutenant George C. Marshall, who became his mentor, friend and patron. Soon after their arrival Bee miscarried,[41] but on January 17, 1915, their first child, Lois Elizabeth Arnold, was born at Fort William McKinley in Manila. After eight months of troop duty, Arnold became battalion adjutant.[nb 9] In January 1916, completing a two-year tour with the 13th Infantry, Arnold was attached to the 3rd Infantry and returned to the United States. En route to Madison Barracks, New York, he exchanged telegrams from Hawaii with an assistant executive of the Aviation Section, Signal Corps, Major William "Billy" Mitchell, who alerted him that he was being detailed to the Signal Corps again, as a first lieutenant if he chose non-flying status. However, if he volunteered to requalify for a rating of Junior Military Aviator, a temporary promotion to captain was mandated by law.[nb 10] On May 20, 1916, Arnold reported to Rockwell Field, California, on flying status but as supply officer at the Signal Corps Aviation School.[42] He received a permanent establishment promotion to captain, Infantry, on September 23.[43]

Between October and December 1916, encouraged by former associates, Arnold overcame his fear of flying by going up fifteen to twenty minutes a day in a Curtiss JN trainer, a much safer aircraft with a simpler flight control system than the Speed Scout of just four years' before.[44] On November 26, he flew solo, and on December 16 qualified again for his JMA.[nb 11] Before he could be reassigned to flying duties, however, he was involved as a witness in a controversial service dispute in January 1917. Over the objections of Captain Herbert A. Dargue, the Aviation School's director of training, and with Arnold present, Captain Frank P. Lahm, the school secretary (adjutant), authorized on January 6 an excursion flight for a non-aviator that took place on January 10, again over Dargue's protests, resulting in the loss of the airplane in Mexico and the disappearance of the crew for nine days. After testifying to army investigators on January 27, confirming that Lahm had authorized the flight in writing, Arnold was sent to Panama on January 30, 1917, one day after the birth of his second child, Henry H. Arnold Jr.[45][nb 12]

 
Major Henry H. Arnold with the first Liberty V12 aero engine completed

Arnold collected the men who would make up his first command, the 7th Aero Squadron, in New York City on February 5, 1917, and was ordered to find a suitable location for an airfield in the Panama Canal Zone. When the military in Panama could not agree on a site, Arnold was ordered back to Washington, D.C., to resolve the dispute and was en route by ship when the United States declared war on Germany. Arnold requested to be sent to France, but his presence in Washington worked against him, since the Aviation Section needed qualified officers for headquarters duty.

Beginning May 1, 1917, he received a series of assignments, as officer in charge of the Information Division,[nb 13] with a promotion to major on June 27, as assistant executive officer of the Aeronautical Division, and then as executive officer after it became the Air Division on October 1.[43] On August 5, 1917, he was promoted again, becoming the youngest full colonel in the Army.[43][46][nb 14]

Arnold gained experience in aircraft production and procurement, the construction of air schools and airfields, and the recruitment and training of large numbers of personnel; and learned political in-fighting in the Washington environment, all of which would help him as head of the military's air services.[12] When the Division of Military Aeronautics superseded the Air Division in April 1918, Arnold continued as executive assistant to its director, Major General William Kenly, and advanced to assistant director when the DMA was removed from the Signal Corps in May 1918.[43][47][nb 15]

Arnold's third child, William Bruce Arnold, was born July 17, 1918. Shortly after, Arnold arranged to go to France to brief General John Pershing, commanding the American Expeditionary Force, on the Kettering Bug, a weapons development. Aboard a ship to France in late October he developed Spanish influenza and was hospitalized on his arrival in England. He did reach the front on November 11, 1918, but the Armistice ended the war on the same day.[48]

Between the wars edit

Acolyte of Billy Mitchell edit

 
Maj. Gen. Mason M. Patrick, Chief of Air Service

The Air Service separated from the Signal Corps on May 20, 1918. However control of aviation remained with the ground forces when its post-war director was a field artillery general, Major General Charles T. Menoher,[49] who epitomized the view of the War Department General Staff that "military aviation can never be anything other than simply an arm of the (Army)".[50] Menoher was followed in 1921 by another non-aviator, Maj.Gen. Mason M. Patrick. Patrick, however, obtained a rating of Junior Airplane Pilot despite being 59 years old and became both an airpower advocate and a proponent of an independent air force.[51] Both Menoher and Patrick clashed often with Assistant Chief of Air Service Billy Mitchell, who had become radical in his desire for a single unified Air Force to control and develop all military airpower. Arnold supported Mitchell's highly publicized views, the consequence of which was a mutual dislike with Patrick.[52]

Arnold was sent to Rockwell Field on January 10, 1919, as District Supervisor, Western District of the Air Service, to oversee the demobilization of 8,000 airmen and surplus aircraft. There he first established relationships with the men who became his main aides, executive officer Captain Carl A. Spaatz and adjutant 1st Lieutenant Ira C. Eaker. Five months later Arnold became Air Officer of the Western Department (after June 1920 the Ninth Corps Area) in San Francisco and de facto commander of Crissy Field, being developed on a site determined by a board chaired by Arnold.[53]

Arnold's promotion to colonel expired June 30, 1920, and he reverted to his permanent establishment rank of captain.[43] Even though he received an automatic promotion to major because of his Military Aviator rating, he became junior to officers serving under him, including Spaatz, whose promotion received while in France was not rescinded.[54][nb 16] On August 11, 1920, Arnold was one of 21 Infantry majors formally transferred to the Air Service by War Department Special Orders No. 188-0.[nb 17] As Air Service Officer of the Ninth Corps area, he oversaw the first regular aerial patrols over the forested lands of California and Oregon to assist in preventing and suppressing wildfires. (This service marked the first use of aircraft for wildfire suppression, prior to the modern use of water dropping aircraft.)[55] Of Arnold, the National Park Service history of Crissy Field wrote: "During his tour of duty, Arnold had been instrumental both in bringing Crissy Field into existence, and establishing the pattern of its operations."[56] In October 1922 he was sent back to Rockwell, now a service depot, as base commander and there encouraged an aerial refueling, the first in history, that took place eight months later.[43]

Arnold experienced several serious illnesses and accidents requiring hospitalization, including recurring stomach ulcers[57] and the amputation of three fingertips on his left hand in 1922.[58][nb 18] His wife and sons also experienced serious health problems, including a near fatal case of scarlet fever for son Bruce. His fourth child, John Linton Arnold, born in the summer of 1921, died on June 30, 1923, of acute appendicitis.[59] Both Arnold and wife Bee needed almost a year to recover psychologically from the loss.[4]

 
The court-martial of Billy Mitchell (standing), November 1925

In August 1924, Arnold was unexpectedly assigned to attend a five-month course of study at the Army Industrial College. After completing the course he was hand-picked by Patrick, despite their mutual dislike, to head the Air Service's Information Division,[60] working closely with Mitchell.[43][61] When Mitchell was court-martialed, Arnold, Spaatz, and Eaker were all warned that they were jeopardizing their careers by vocally supporting Mitchell, but they testified on his behalf anyway. After Mitchell was convicted on December 17, 1925, his supporters including Arnold continued to use Information Division resources to promote his views to airpower-friendly congressmen and Air Service reservists. In February, Secretary of War Dwight F. Davis ordered Patrick to find and discipline the culprits. Patrick was already aware of the activity and chose Arnold to set an example. He gave Arnold the choice of resignation or a general court-martial, but when Arnold chose the latter, Patrick decided to avoid another public fiasco and instead transferred him to Ft. Riley, far from the aviation mainstream, where he took command of the 16th Observation Squadron on March 22, 1926.[62][63][nb 19] Patrick's press release on the investigation stated that Arnold was also reprimanded for violating Army General Order No. 20 by attempting "to influence legislation in an improper manner."[nb 20]

Despite this setback, which included a fitness report that stated "in an emergency he is liable to lose his head",[64] Arnold made a commitment to remain in the service, turning down an offer of the presidency of the soon-to-be operating Pan American Airways, which he had helped bring into being.[12][65][nb 21] Arnold made the best of his exile and in May 1927, his participation in war games at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, impressed Major General James E. Fechet, successor to Patrick as Chief of the U.S. Army Air Corps. He also received outstanding fitness reports from his commanders at Ft. Riley, Brigadier General Ewing E. Booth (who had been a member of the Mitchell court) and his successor, Brig. Gen. Charles J. Symmonds.[66]

Repairs to Arnold's service reputation may also have been aided by a professional article he wrote for the Cavalry Journal in January 1928, showing the influence of his association with the Cavalry School at Fort Riley. Arnold urged a strong combined arms team be developed between the Air Corps and the Cavalry; and by extension, all ground forces. This opportunity for development of the concept in both theory and practice was lost however, by the effects of cultural differences between the two service branches and the dominance of American isolationism. It did not develop until the United States was engaged in World War II.[67]

On February 24, 1927, his son David Lee Arnold was born at Ft. Riley.[68] In 1928 Arnold wrote and published six books of juvenile fiction, the "Bill Bruce Series," whose objective was to interest young people in flying.[69][nb 22]

Air Corps mid-career edit

Fechet intervened with Army Chief of Staff Gen. Charles P. Summerall to have Arnold's exile ended by assigning him in August 1928 to the Army's Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth.[nb 23] The year-long course was unpleasant for Arnold because of doctrinal differences with the school's commandant, Major General Edward L. King, but Arnold graduated with high marks in June 1929.[70][nb 24] Arnold was slated for assignment to the Air Corps Training Center in San Antonio following graduation, but Brigadier General Lahm, the commander of the ACTC, strongly opposed it, possibly recalling their 1917 dispute.[71] Instead Arnold commanded the Fairfield Air Service Depot, Ohio. In 1930 he also became Chief of the Field Service Section, Air Corps Materiel Division, and was promoted to lieutenant colonel on February 1, 1931.[43]

Arnold's parents were made destitute by the bank collapses in 1929, and on January 18, 1931, his mother died of a sudden heart attack. Arnold struggled emotionally with being absent from his parents' 50th wedding anniversary celebration the year before and with the depression afflicting his father after her death. A contemporary biographer of Arnold notes that not until after his mother's funeral did Bee begin use of the sobriquet "Hap" in place of "Sunny" when addressing him, apparently to avoid the "constant reminder" of his mother that the latter name might bring. Arnold himself eschewed the use of "Sunny" in his personal correspondence after May 1931, signing himself as "Hap" Arnold from that point forward.[4]

Arnold took command of March Field, California, where Spaatz had just assumed command of the grandiose-sounding but tiny 1st Wing, on November 27, 1931. Arnold's responsibilities included refurbishing the base into a showcase installation, which required that he resolve strained relations with the community. He accomplished this by having his officers join local social service organizations and by a series of well-publicized relief efforts.[72] Arnold took command of the 1st Wing himself on January 4, 1933,[73] which flew food-drops during blizzards in the winter of 1932–33, assisted in relief work during the Long Beach earthquake of March 10, 1933, and established camps for 3,000 boys of the Civilian Conservation Corps.[74] He organized a high-profile series of aerial reviews that featured visits from Hollywood celebrities and aviation notables.[75][76][nb 25] In August 1932, Arnold began acquisition of portions of Rogers Dry Lake as a bombing and gunnery range for his units, a site that later became Edwards Air Force Base.[77]

 
Martin B-10B bomber

In 1934, Chief of Air Corps Benjamin D. Foulois named Arnold to command one of the three military zones of the controversial Army Air Corps Mail Operation, with a temporary headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah. Arnold's pilots performed well and his own reputation was untouched by the fiasco.[78][79] Later that same year he won his second Mackay Trophy, when he led ten Martin B-10B bombers on an 8,290-mile (13,340 km) flight from Bolling Field to Fairbanks, Alaska, and back.[80][nb 26] Overly credited with its success, he nonetheless lobbied for recognition of the other airmen who took part, but the deputy chief of staff ignored his recommendations. His reputation among some of his peers was tarnished by resentment when he was belatedly awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for the flight in 1937.[81][nb 27]

On March 1, 1935, General Headquarters Air Force was activated to control all combat aviation units of the Air Corps based in the United States, although it was not subordinate to the Chief of Air Corps. While a significant step towards an independent air force, this dual authority created serious problems of unity of command for the next six years.[82] GHQAF commander Major General Frank Andrews tapped Arnold to retain command of its 1st Wing, which now carried with it a temporary promotion to the rank of brigadier general, effective March 2, 1935.[43]

On December 23, 1935, new Army Chief of Staff General Malin Craig summoned Arnold to Washington. He and Arnold had become personal friends and golfing partners during Craig's command of the Ninth Corps Area in 1933. Foulois had retired under fire in the wake of the Air Mail scandal and allegations of corruption in Air Corps procurement, and the new chief, Major General Oscar Westover, had asked Craig for Arnold to fill the vacant assistant chief position. Over Arnold's protests, and despite a left-handed recommendation by Secretary of War George Dern,[nb 28] who recalled Arnold's close association with Billy Mitchell,[83] Craig made him Assistant Chief of Air Corps, responsible for procurement and supply, to deal with the political struggles over them from the Foulois years.[84] In effect, however, Arnold had "switched sides" in the struggle between GHQ Air Force and the Air Corps.[85]

Chief of Air Corps edit

Westover was killed in an air crash at Burbank, California, on September 21, 1938. Prior vacancies in the office had been filled by an incumbent assistant chief, and Arnold's appointment to succeed Westover seemed automatic since he was well qualified. Yet the appointment was delayed when a faction developed supporting the appointment of Andrews that included two members of the White House staff, press secretary Stephen Early and military adviser Colonel Edwin M. Watson. A rumor circulated through the White House that Arnold was a "drunkard". In his memoirs, Arnold recorded that he enlisted the help of Harry Hopkins to attack the drinking rumors, but more recent research asserts that Craig threatened to resign as Army chief of staff if Arnold was not appointed.[86][nb 29] President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Arnold as Chief of Air Corps on September 29, which carried with it the rank of major general.[87] To repair his relationship with the Andrews faction, most of whom were part of GHQ Air Force, he selected its chief of staff, Colonel Walter G. Kilner, to fill the Assistant Chief of Air Corps vacancy.[88][nb 30] After Charles Lindbergh publicly lent his support in April 1939 for production of a very long range bomber in large numbers to counter Nazi production,[89] development of which had been prohibited since June 1938 by the Secretary of War, Arnold appointed Kilner to head a board to make appropriate recommendations to end the R&D moratorium.[90][nb 31]

Arnold encouraged research and development efforts, among his projects the B-17 and the concept of Jet-assisted takeoff. To encourage the use of civilian expertise, the California Institute of Technology became a beneficiary of Air Corps funding and Theodore von Kármán of its Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory developed a good working relationship with Arnold that led to the creation of the Scientific Advisory Group in 1944. Arnold characterized his wartime philosophy of research and development as: "Sacrifice some quality to get sufficient quantity to supply all fighting units. Never follow the mirage, looking for the perfect airplane, to a point where fighting squadrons are deficient in numbers of fighting planes."[91] To that end he concentrated on rapid returns from R&D investments, exploiting proven technologies to provide operational solutions to counter the rising threat of the Axis Powers. Arnold also pushed for jet propulsion, especially after the British shared their plans of Whittle's turbojet during his visit to Britain in April 1941.[92] The proposal was immediately opposed by the General Staff in all respects.[93] He and Eaker collaborated on three books promoting airpower: This Flying Game (1936, reprinted 1943), Winged Victory (1941), and Army Flyer (1942).[43]

In March 1939 Arnold was appointed to head the Air Board by Secretary of War Harry Woodring, to recommend doctrine and organization of Army airpower to the chief of staff. While the board's report concluded that airpower was indispensable to the defense of the hemisphere, stressed the need for long-range bombers, and became the basis for the first Air Corps field manual, it was a "considerable attenuation" of the doctrine being developed at the Air Corps Tactical School.[94] Arnold submitted the findings to George C. Marshall, newly appointed as chief of staff, on September 1, 1939, the day Nazi Germany invaded Poland. When Marshall requested a reorganization study from the Air Corps, Arnold submitted a proposal on October 5, 1940, that would create an air staff, unify the air arm under one commander, and grant it autonomy with the ground and supply forces.[95]

Congress repealed the Neutrality Act in November 1939 to permit the selling of aircraft to the belligerents, causing Arnold concern that shipments of planes to the Allies would slow delivery to the Air Corps, particularly since control of the allotment of aircraft production had been given to the Procurement Division of the Treasury Department in December 1938, and by extension, to Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr., a White House favorite. Arnold experienced two years of difficulties with Morgenthau, who was prone to denigrate the leadership of the War Department and Air Corps.[96][nb 32] Their conflict peaked on March 12, 1940, when Arnold's public complaint about increases in shipments[nb 33] brought a personal warning from Roosevelt that "there were places to which officers who did not 'play ball' might be sent, such as Guam," and got him banished from the White House for eight months.[97][98][nb 34]

The disfavor shown Arnold by Roosevelt reached a turning point in March 1941 when new Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, a supporter of Arnold, submitted his name with two others for promotion to the permanent rank of major general.[nb 35] Roosevelt refused to send the list to the Senate for confirmation because of Arnold's nomination, and his forced retirement from the service seemed imminent to both Stimson and Marshall. Stimson and Harry Hopkins arranged for Arnold, accompanied by Major Elwood "Pete" Quesada, to travel to England for three weeks in April to evaluate British aircraft production needs and to provide an up-to-date strategic analysis.[99][nb 36] One outcome of the visit was the setting up of a program for training British pilots in the US, which subsequently became known as the Arnold Scheme. Arnold's meeting with Roosevelt to report his findings was judged as impressively cogent and optimistic, but the president ruminated on Arnold's future for three weeks before submitting his name and the others to the Senate. From that point on, however, Arnold's "position in the White House was secure."[100][nb 37] His importance to Roosevelt in setting an airpower agenda was demonstrated when Arnold was invited to the Atlantic Conference in Newfoundland in August, the first of seven such summits that he, not Morgenthau, would attend.[101][nb 38]

World War II edit

Reorganization, autonomy, and strategic plans edit

The division of authority between the Air Corps and the GHQ Air Force was removed with promulgation of Army Regulation 95–5, creating the United States Army Air Forces on June 20, 1941, only two days before Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union. Arnold became Chief of the Army Air Forces and acting "Deputy Chief of Staff for Air" with authority over both the Air Corps and Air Force Combat Command (successor to GHQAF). While this provided the air arm with a staff of its own and brought the entire organization under the command of one general, it failed to grant the degree of autonomy sought. By consensus between Marshall and Arnold, debate on separation of the Air Force into a service co-equal with the Army and Navy was postponed until after the war.[102][103]

In July Roosevelt asked for production requirements to defeat potential enemies, and Arnold endorsed a request by his new Air War Plans Division to submit an air war plan. The assessment, designated AWPD/1, defined four tasks for the AAF: defense of the Western Hemisphere, an initial defensive strategy against Japan, a strategic air offensive against Germany, and a later strategic air offensive against Japan in prelude of invasion. It also planned for an expansion of the AAF to 60,000 aircraft and 2.1 million men. AWPD/1 called for 24 groups (approximately 750 airplanes) of very long range B-29 bombers to be based in Northern Ireland and Egypt for use against Nazi Germany, and for production of sufficient Consolidated B-36s for intercontinental bombing missions of Germany.[104]

Soon after U.S. entry in the war, Arnold was promoted to lieutenant general on December 15, 1941. On March 9, 1942, after the creation of the AAF failed to define clear channels of authority for the air forces, the Army adopted the functional reorganization that Arnold had advocated in October 1940. Acting on an executive order from Roosevelt, the War Department granted the AAF full autonomy, equal to and entirely separate from the Army Ground Forces and Services of Supply. The Air Force Combat Command and the Office of the Chief of Air Corps were abolished, and Arnold became AAF Commanding General and an ex officio member of both the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Combined Chiefs of Staff.[105][106]

In response to an August 1942 directive, Arnold had the AWPD revise its estimates. AWPD/42 resulted, calling for 75,000 aircraft and 2.7 million men, and increased the production of aircraft for use by other allies. AWPD/42 reaffirmed earlier strategic priorities, but increased the list of industrial targets from 23 to 177, ranking the German Luftwaffe first and its submarine force second in importance of destruction. It also directed that the B-29 bomber not be employed in Europe because of problems in its development, but instead that the B-29 program's deployment be concentrated in the Far East to destroy Japanese military power and combustible cities.[107]

Arnold was responsible for approving the Army Air Forces Women's Flying Training Detachment (WFTD). It was approved by September 14, 1942, and directed by aviator Jacqueline Cochran.[108]

Strategic bombing in Europe edit

 
B-17 Flying Fortresses of the 381st Bomb Group, Eighth Air Force

Immediately after the attack on Pearl Harbor Arnold began to carry out AWPD/1. The primary strategic bombing force against Nazi Germany would be the Eighth Air Force, and he named Spaatz to command it and Eaker to head its Bomber Command. Other Arnold protégés eventually filled key positions in the strategic bombing forces, including Haywood S. Hansell, Laurence S. Kuter, and James H. Doolittle.[109]

Despite protecting his strategic bombing force from demands of other services and allies, Arnold was forced to divert resources from the Eighth to support operations in North Africa, crippling the Eighth in its infancy and nearly killing it. Eaker (now Eighth Air Force commander) found from experience that the pre-war doctrine of daylight precision bombing, developed at the Air Corps Tactical School as a foundation for separating the Air Force from the Army, was mistaken in its tenet that heavily armed bombers could reach any target without the support of long-range escort fighters. Early in 1943 he began requesting more fighters and jettisonable fuel tanks to increase their range, in addition to repeated requests to increase the size of his small bombing force.[110]

Heavy losses in the summer and fall of 1943 on deep penetration missions intensified Eaker's requests. Arnold, under pressure and impatient for results, ignored Eaker's findings and placed the blame on a lack of aggressiveness by bomber commanders. This came at a time when General Dwight D. Eisenhower was putting together his command group for the invasion of Europe, and Arnold approved Eisenhower's request to replace Eaker with his own commanders, Spaatz and Doolittle.[111] Ironically, the very items Eaker requested—a larger bomber force, drop tanks, and P-51 fighters—accompanied the change of command and made the Eighth Air Force decisive in defeating Germany using the daylight bombing doctrine.[112]

The change in command at Eighth Air Force, particularly involving the relief of a friend or protégé, was just one of many that exemplified a ruthlessness Arnold developed to get results. In 1942, Brigadier General Walter R. Weaver, acting chief of the Air Corps, had his job eliminated and was relegated to a technical training command.[113] George C. Kenney relieved Jacob E. Fickel in command of Fourth Air Force[114][nb 39] and later that same year replaced former Chief of the Air Corps George H. Brett as Southwest Pacific air commander.[115] In the B-29 campaign, Curtis E. LeMay relieved Kenneth B. Wolfe in India in July 1944,[116][nb 40] and later Hansell on Guam in January 1945.[117][nb 41]

B-29 operations against Japan edit

 
B-29 Superfortress

With the strategic bombing crisis resolved in Europe, Arnold placed full emphasis on completion of the development and deployment of the B-29 Very Long Range (VLR) bomber to attack Japan. As early as 1942, Arnold planned to make himself commanding general of the Twentieth Air Force. This unique command arrangement may also have contributed to his health problems (see below), but after the negative experiences of building an effective bombing force against Germany, and realizing the consequences of failure against Japan, Arnold concluded that, absent any unity of command in the Pacific theaters, administrative decisions regarding B-29 bomber operations could best be handled personally. However, theater commanders Douglas MacArthur, Chester Nimitz, and Joseph Stilwell all coveted the B-29s for tactical support, to which Arnold was adamantly opposed as a diversion from strategic policy. He convinced not only Marshall, but also Chief of Naval Operations Ernest J. King, that the Twentieth was unique in that its operations cut across the jurisdiction of all three theaters, and thus should report directly to the Joint Chiefs with Arnold acting as their executive agent. In February 1944 President Roosevelt agreed and approved the arrangement.[118]

The VLR program had been plagued with a seemingly unending series of development problems, subjecting it and Arnold to much criticism in the press and from skeptical field commanders. The B-29 was the key component of the AAF's fourth strategic priority, since no other land-based bomber was capable of reaching the Japanese homeland, but by February 1944, the XX Bomber Command, slated to begin Operation Matterhorn on June 1, had virtually no flight time yet above an altitude of 20,000 feet (6,100 m).[119]

With a designated overseas deployment date of April 15, 1944, Arnold intervened in the situation personally by flying to Kansas on March 8, 1944. For three days he toured training bases involved in the modification program. He was distressed at his findings of shortages, and of work failures. On the spot he made Maj. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers, a military procurement officer accompanying him, the coordinator of the program. Meyers succeeded in the "Battle of Kansas." Despite labor problems, and blizzard weather, a complete bomb group was ready for deployment by April 9.[119] The mechanical problems of the B-29, however, had not been resolved. During early combat operations many new ones were identified. Arnold felt the pressure of achieving the goals of AWPD/1, and of justifying, by results, a very expensive technological project. Arnold needed the B-29 to provide the delivery platform for the highly classified atomic bomb, if the Manhattan Project succeeded.[120] B-29 operations against Japanese targets in China and Southeast Asia began in June 1944, and from the outset produced far less positive results than expected.[119][121]

The difficulties of the Twentieth Air Force's campaign against Japan mirrored those of the Eighth Air Force's against Germany. With characteristic impatience, Arnold quickly relieved Wolfe, the B-29 commander in China, after less than a month of operations, and replaced him with LeMay. A second B-29 command began operations from bases in the Mariana Islands in November.[122] Brigadier General Haywood S. Hansell, one of the architects of AWPD/1 and AWPD/42, encountered even more command problems than had Wolfe or LeMay. After two months of ostensibly poor results, but mostly because he resisted a campaign of firebombing attacks against Japanese population centers favored by Arnold and his chief of staff, Lauris Norstad, Arnold decided he too needed replacing. He shut down operations from China, consolidated all the B-29s in the Marianas, and replaced Hansell with LeMay in January 1945 as commander of XXI Bomber Command.[123]

Final years edit

 
Marshall (center) and Arnold (right) greeted by General Omar Bradley on Omaha Beach in Normandy, June 12, 1944[124]

Health problems edit

Between 1943 and 1945 Arnold experienced four heart attacks severe enough to require hospitalization. In addition to being by nature intensely impatient, Arnold considered that his personal presence was required wherever a crisis might be, and as a result he traveled extensively and for long hours under great stress during the war, aggravating what may have been a pre-existing coronary condition.[125] His extended trips and inspection tours were to the United Kingdom in April 1941 and again in May 1942;[126] the South Pacific in September 1942,[127] North Africa and China in January–February 1943;[128] the Middle East and Italy (where his party came under artillery fire) in November–December 1943;[129] London and Normandy accompanying Marshall in June 1944;[124] Germany and Italy in April–May 1945;[130] the Western Pacific in June 1945;[131] and Potsdam in July 1945.[132] A lesser but more frequent factor may have been his difficulty in handling inter-service politics, particularly with the Navy, which steadfastly refused to recognize him as a chief of staff or his subordinate staff as equals.[133][134][nb 42] On Guam, with knowledge of the approaching atomic bomb decision, he negotiated with Nimitz over the Navy's objections to basing the headquarters of the strategic air forces on the island.[131]

Arnold's first heart attack occurred February 28, 1943, just after his return from the Casablanca Conference and China. During that trip, Argonaut, the B-17 bomber transporting his party, became lost for several hours over Japanese-held territory trying to "fly the Hump" at night.[135] He was hospitalized at Walter Reed Army Hospital for several days, then took three weeks leave at the Coral Gables Biltmore Hotel in Florida, which had been converted into a convalescent hospital. U.S. Army regulations then required that he leave the service, but President Roosevelt waived the requirement in April after he demonstrated his recovery, and on the condition that the President be provided with monthly updates on Arnold's health.[136]

Arnold's second heart attack occurred just a month later, on May 10, 1943, and resulted in a 10-day stay in Walter Reed. Against the wishes of Marshall, he gave the commencement address for the Class of June 1943 at West Point, where his son Bruce was graduating.[137][nb 43] His third heart attack, less severe than the first two, occurred exactly a year after the second, on May 10, 1944, under the strain of the B-29 problems. Arnold took a month's leave, returning to duty by flying with Marshall to London on June 7 for a conference and an inspection of Omaha Beach.[138]

Arnold's last wartime heart attack came on January 17, 1945, just days after he replaced Hansell with LeMay. Arnold had not gone into his office for three days, and refused to permit the Air Force's chief flight surgeon to examine him. The flight surgeon enlisted a general and personal friend of Arnold's to inquire on his condition,[nb 44] after which Arnold was again flown to Coral Gables, Florida, and placed under 24-hour care for nine days.[139] Arnold again was allowed to remain in the service, but under conditions that amounted to light duty. He continued to tour air bases in both theaters. Arnold was returning by C-54 from Italy to Miami for a checkup when he received the news of the German surrender on May 7, 1945.[140] On July 16 he relinquished command of the Twentieth Air Force to LeMay.

Promotion and retirement edit

 
General of the Army

Arnold received honorary doctorates from Pennsylvania Military College and the University of Southern California in 1941, and from Iowa Wesleyan College in 1942.[43] Post-war honors included doctorates from Hahnemann College, the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Columbia University, the University of California, and Ursinus College.[141] Arnold also received 26 decorations and awards from foreign countries honoring his service in World War II.[142][nb 45]

On March 19, 1943, Arnold was promoted (wartime) to full general, and on December 21, 1944, appointed a five-star General of the Army under Public Law 78–482,[143] placing him fourth in Army rank seniority, behind only Marshall, MacArthur, and Eisenhower.[144]

In 1945, Arnold directed the founding of Project RAND (which became the RAND Corporation, a non-profit think tank) with $10,000,000 of funding left over from World War II. Initially tasked "to connect military planning with research and development decisions," RAND widely expanded in its scope beyond its original mission.[145]

After a trip to South America in January 1946, in which he developed a heart arrhythmia severe enough to cancel the remainder of the trip,[146] Arnold left active duty in the AAF on February 28, 1946, (his official date of retirement was June 30, 1946).[43] On March 23, 1946, Public Law 79–333 made the promotion to General of the Army permanent for all those holding it, and awarded full pay and allowances for those on the retired list.[147][148] He was succeeded by Spaatz, who also became first Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force when it became a separate service on September 18, 1947.

Arnold retired to a 40-acre (16 ha) ranch near Sonoma, California, and signed a contract with Harper & Brothers to write his memoirs, Global Mission.[nb 46] Unlike George S. Patton, who enjoyed independent wealth, or colleagues who had taken positions in government, such as Marshall (appointed Secretary of State), Arnold had no source of income beyond his retirement pay and allowances, and was not healthy enough to continue service.[149] His autobiography was an attempt to provide financial security for his wife after his death, and during the writing of it he suffered his fifth heart attack in January 1948, hospitalizing him for three months.[150]

On May 7, 1949, Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 81–58: An Act to establish the grade of General of the Air Force changed the designation of Arnold's final rank and grade to that of General of the Air Force, and he remains the only person to have held the rank. He is also the only person to hold five-star rank in two U.S. military services.

Death edit

Arnold died on January 15, 1950, at his home in Sonoma. He was given a state funeral in Washington, D.C., that included rare services held in Arlington Memorial Amphitheater, and he was buried in Section 34, plot number 44-A, of Arlington National Cemetery.[1] Robert A. Lovett, with whom Arnold worked closely during the war in his capacity as Assistant Secretary of War for Air, stated that Arnold had been as much a casualty of war as if he had been injured in the line of duty.[151]

All three of Arnold's surviving sons were graduates of West Point (Henry Harley Jr., 1939;[152][nb 47] Willam Bruce, June 1943;[153][nb 48] and David Lee, 1949[154][nb 49]) and reached the grade of colonel. The two youngest served in the United States Air Force and are interred near their father's burial site at Arlington National Cemetery.[1]

Legacy edit

General H. H. Arnold Field (Athletic Field) at Lower Merion High School, Ardmore, Pennsylvania, 19003, is named for Arnold.

[Hap Arnold was] a dedicated officer in a specialized field, ... and at the same time, a human being, a warm-hearted, loyal, mercurial, flamboyantly belligerent fellow who didn't care who he took on in battle.

— Robert A. Lovett, November 6, 1978[155]

Arnold Air Force Base, Tennessee, and the Arnold Engineering Development Complex are named for Arnold. The Air Force Research Laboratory generally recognizes Arnold as the visionary who first articulated that superior research and development capabilities are essential to deterring and winning wars. Arnold's ideas underpin the Laboratory's modern-day role within the Air Force.[12]

The cadet social center at the United States Air Force Academy, Arnold Hall,[156] and the Arnold Hall Community Center at Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio, Texas, are both named for Arnold.[157]

The Civil Air Patrol has named an award that accompanies the rank of Cadet Airman First Class after him, being known as the Hap Arnold Award.

The Air Force Association recognizes the "most significant contribution by a military member for national defense" with its H. H. Arnold Award.[158]

The top honorary organization in Air Force ROTC, the Arnold Air Society, is named for him,[159] and The George C. Marshall Foundation awards the George C. Marshall/Henry "Hap" Arnold ROTC Award annually to the top senior cadet at each college or university with an AFROTC program.[160] The Air Force Aid Society, which he founded, awards a college scholarship in his name to the dependents of Air Force members or retirees.[161]

On December 21, 1944, Arnold was appointed to the rank of General of the Army, placing him in the company of Dwight D. Eisenhower, George Marshall, and Douglas MacArthur, the only four men to achieve the rank in World War II, and along with Omar Bradley, one of only five men to achieve the rank since the August 5, 1888, death of Philip Sheridan, and the only five men to hold the rank as a Five-star general.[144] The rank was created by an Act of Congress on a temporary basis when Public Law 78–482 was passed on December 14, 1944,[162] as a temporary rank, subject to reversion to permanent rank six months after the end of the war. The temporary rank was then declared permanent March 23, 1946, by Public Law 333 of the 79th Congress, which also awarded full pay and allowances in the grade to those on the retired list.[147][148][163] It was created to give the most senior American commanders parity of rank with their British counterparts holding the ranks of field marshal and admiral of the fleet. This second General of the Army rank is not the same as the post-Civil War era version because of its purpose and five stars.

In 1967, "Hap" Arnold was enshrined in the National Aviation Hall of Fame.[164]

In 1972, Arnold was inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame.[165]

On May 18, 2006, the Department of the Air Force introduced prototypes of two new service dress uniforms, one resembling those worn by Air Service officers prior to 1926, called the "Billy Mitchell heritage coat," and another, resembling the U.S. Army Air Forces' Uniform of World War II and named the "Hap Arnold heritage coat".[166] In 2007, the Air Force decided in favor of the "Hap Arnold" prototype,[167] but in 2009 the new chief of staff of the Air Force directed that "no further effort be made on the Hap Arnold Heritage Coat" and the uniform change was suspended indefinitely.[168]

During the last mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour, STS-134, a five-star insignia of Arnold's preserved in the National Museum of the United States Air Force was carried into space by shuttle pilot Gregory H. Johnson as a commemorative gesture to Arnold's legacy. Arnold was then the featured honoree of the museum's National Aviation Day celebration of August 20, 2011, when Johnson returned the insignia to the museum.[169]

In the Great Bend Municipal Airport, the B-29 Memorial Plaza display a commemorative plaque for his contribution to the B-29 program.

The United States Department of Defense high school at the former Wiesbaden Air Base in Wiesbaden, Germany, was named General H. H. Arnold High School in 1949. The school was renamed Wiesbaden High School in 2006 after the installation was transferred to the United States Army.[170]

On November 7, 1988, the United States Postal Service released the H. H. "Hap" Arnold 65 cent postage stamp bearing the likeness of Arnold, in his honor, as part of the Great Americans series.[171][172]

Arnold Heights, California, is named in his honor, as is Arnold Drive, a main arterial road running through Sonoma Valley near his ranch.

Hap Arnold Boulevard,[173] the main access road to Tobyhanna Army Depot in Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania, is named in his honor.

General Arnold was the class exemplar of the United States Air Force Academy Class of 2012.

Film edit

In a rare depiction on film, Arnold was sympathetically portrayed in the 1954 film The Glenn Miller Story, played by Barton MacLane. He was portrayed by Robert Brubaker in The Court Martial of Billy Mitchell. In 1977, he was again portrayed on film by actor Walter O. Miles in the two-part opus The Amazing Howard Hughes, starring Tommy Lee Jones as Hughes.

Arnold appeared in a speaking role as himself in Men of the Sky, a Technicolor propaganda short made by Warner Brothers and released on July 25, 1942. He appears as himself in the first eight minutes of the twenty-minute short, filmed in May 1942 at Merced Army Air Field, California. In the short, he alights from his C-42 staff transport at the training base to preside at a graduation ceremony for pilots completing their flight training. Arnold delivers a short address and speaks with each of four pilots (actors Tod Andrews, Don DeFore, Ray Montgomery, and Dave Willock) as he pins on their wings.[174][175]

Summary of service edit

Dates of rank edit

All dates of rank sourced from AF Historical Study No. 91 and chronologically ordered.[43]

 
Cadet, United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, 1903
no insignia of rank in 1907
 
Second lieutenant, Infantry: June 14, 1907
 

 
First lieutenant, Infantry: April 10, 1913
 

 
Captain, Aviation Section, Signal Corps (ASSC): May 20, 1916
 

 
Captain, Infantry: September 23, 1916
 

 
Major, ASSC: June 27, 1917
 

 
Colonel, Signal Corps, National Army: August 5, 1917
 

 
Major, Infantry:

—Temporary: January 15, 1918
—Permanent Establishment: July 1, 1920

 

 
Major, Air Service: August 11, 1920
 

 
Lieutenant colonel, Air Corps: February 1, 1931
 
Brigadier general:

—Temporary: March 2, 1935
—Assistant Chief of Air Corps: December 24, 1935
—Permanent: December 2, 1940

 

 
Colonel, Air Corps: March 1, 1936
 
Major general:
—Chief of Air Corps: September 22, 1938
—Permanent: February 3, 1941
 
Lieutenant general, Army of the United States: December 15, 1941
 
General, Army of the United States: March 19, 1943
 
General of the Army:
—Temporary, Army of the United States: December 21, 1944
—Permanent: March 23, 1946
Placed on retired list: June 30, 1946
 
General of the Air Force, United States Air Force: May 7, 1949

Awards and decorations edit

Source: AF Historical Study No. 91.[43]

 
   
         
 
 
     
       
        
       
       
        
       
 
Command Pilot
Army Distinguished Service Medal with two bronze oak leaf clusters (October 1942, September 1945, October 1945)
Legion of Merit Distinguished Flying Cross Air Medal World War I Victory Medal with 2 campaign stars
American Defense Service Medal with 1 service star American Campaign Medal European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (United Kingdom) Grand Cross of the Légion d'honneur (France) Grand Cross of the Order of the Aztec Eagle (Mexico)
Grand Officer of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite (Morocco) Grand Cross of the Order of the Sun (Peru) Order of the Army, First Class (Guatemala) Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown (Belgium) with palm
World War II War Cross (Belgium) with bronze palm Grand Cross of the Order of the Southern Cross (Brazil) Order of Military Merit, Grand Cross (Brazil) Order of Aeronautical Merit, Grand Officer (Brazil)[176]
Order of Merit (Chile), Grand Cross Order of the Cloud and Banner, Special Grand Cordon (Republic of China) Order of Boyaca, Grand Officer (Colombia) Order of Abdon Calderón, First Class (Ecuador)
French Croix de guerre 1939–1945 with silver palm Order of George I, Grand Cross with swords (Greece) Military Order of Italy, Grand Cross Order of Orange-Nassau, Knight Grand Cross with swords (Netherlands)
Order of Vasco Núñez de Balboa, Grand Cross (Panama) Order of the Sword, Commander Grand Cross (Sweden) Aviation Cross, First Class (Peru) Order of Military Merit, First Class (Mexico)
Military Aviator badge

Published works edit

Non-fiction books edit

  • Arnold, Henry Harley (1926). Airmen and Aircraft: An Introduction to Aeronautics. Ronald Aeronautic Library. New York: Ronald Press. OCLC 567959130, 251155552.
  • ——— (1942). Greenville Army Flying School: Southeast Army Air Forces Training Center. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Army and Navy Publishing Company of Louisiana. OCLC 607347434.
  • ——— (1943) [1st published 1942]. Wings over America. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Army and Navy Publishing Company of Louisiana. OCLC 41450501.
  • ——— (1989) [1st published 1949]. Global Mission. Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania: TAB Books. ISBN 9780830640041.
  • Arnold, Henry Harley; Eaker, Ira Clarence (1938) [1st published 1936]. This Flying Game (Second ed.). New York & London: Funk & Wagnalls. OCLC 316155189.
  • ———; ——— (1941). Winged Warfare. New York & London: Harper & Brothers. OCLC 602377748, 556889569.
  • ———; ——— (1942). Army Flyer. New York & London: Harper & Brothers. OCLC 602019589.
  • Arnold, Henry Harley (2002). Huston, John W. (ed.). American Airpower Comes of Age: General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold's World War II Diaries. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Air University Press. OCLC 50186463.
    • ——— (2002). ——— (ed.). American Airpower Comes of Age. Vol. 1. ISBN 1585660930. Retrieved February 22, 2014.
    • ——— (2002). ——— (ed.). American Airpower Comes of Age (PDF). Vol. 2. ISBN 1585660949. Retrieved February 22, 2014.

Children's books edit

  • Arnold, Henry Harley (1928). Bill Bruce Becomes an Ace. New York: A. L. Burt Co. OCLC 2687645.
  • ——— (1928). Bill Bruce in the Trans-continental Race. New York: A. L. Burt Co. OCLC 2687574.
  • ——— (1928). Bill Bruce and the Pioneer Aviators. New York: A. L. Burt Co. OCLC 2687604.
  • ——— (1928). Bill Bruce on Forest Patrol. New York: A. L. Burt Co. OCLC 2687623.
  • ——— (1928). Bill Bruce, the Flying Cadet. New York: A. L. Burt Co. OCLC 2687671.

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Arnold, Capt. Charles DeF. Chandler, and Lt. Thomas Milling all qualified for the rating on July 5, 1912. Milling received the first certificate while Arnold was listed first on War Department General Order Number 39, which was the first list of rated Military Aviators. (Hennessy 1958, pp. 59, 229)
  2. ^ Milling, instructed by Cliff Turpin, had already soloed on May 8 with two hours of flight time. He had attracted the attention of Orville Wright, who went up with him (but not Arnold) and approved the early solo.
  3. ^ Also killed in the crash was 2d Lieutenant Leighton W. Hazelhurst Jr.
  4. ^ Ironically, Arnold was stationed in the Philippines as an infantry officer two years later when Mauborgne went aloft himself with Arnold's close friend 2nd Lieutenant Bert Dargue, and made the first two-way communication from the air to the ground, a radio station on Corregidor on December 11, 1914.
  5. ^ On February 9, 1914, Lieutenant Henry Post was flying this aircraft near San Diego in an attempt to establish an altitude record. As Post spiraled down below 600 feet, the aircraft went into a vertical dive similar to Arnold's and crashed into San Diego Bay, killing him. (Hennessy 1958, p. 102)
  6. ^ Five of the Army's 14 aviators transferred out during 1913.
  7. ^ "Bee" was shortened from "Beetle" or "Beadle", a name given to her by her older brothers. Although Arnold often used "Beadle" in his letters to her, there is no dispute that she was habitually referred to as "Bee" by family and associates.
  8. ^ The lease on the College Park property expired on June 30, and the Army made the decision to not renew it and instead move the school to San Diego, California. (Cameron 1999, p. 56)
  9. ^ Arnold's interest in aeronautics continued despite his fear of flying. During this period he applied to the Army for enrollment in the aeronautical engineering course at MIT but was turned down. (Heimdahl & Hurley 1997, p. 26)
  10. ^ The Aviation Section was in the midst of a turbulent leadership crisis, amounting almost to mutiny, and Mitchell was seeking mature, stable officers to lend it tone. Although the law establishing the Aviation Section in 1914 prohibited married officers and those over the age of 30 from being pilots, both provisions affecting Arnold, a bill rescinding the restrictions was then making its way through Congress. (Hennessy 1958, p. 155)
  11. ^ The 1914 Aviation Section law had also reduced all rated officers to JMA, not just Arnold, because of a provision requiring three years as a JMA before becoming eligible for an MA rating.
  12. ^ The school commandant, Colonel William A. Glassford, publicly asserted that the flight was unauthorized, based on Lahm's denials, but Arnold told investigators that he saw the authorization signed by Lahm, the source of Glassford's apparent retribution against him. Another interpretation of the facts, however, comes from Huston, who attributes the dispute to Arnold's perceived insubordination in participating in an immediate air search for the missing aviators after Lahm and Glassford had issued orders not to do so. Glassford's final fitness report on Arnold characterized him as "not suited for an independent command" and "a trouble maker." According to Huston, Arnold's transfer to Panama was ordered in December 1916 and was actually delayed when he had to remain at Rockwell to give a statement to investigators. Hennessy (page 192) states that the Panama orders were issued January 9, the day before the missing flight. However, Coffey's conclusions are those of Arnold himself, including the allegation that in compliance with the orders that no search be conducted, none occurred for six days, causing a near mutiny among the pilots including Arnold, a fact confirmed in newspaper accounts of the day. Hennessy attributes the delay "at least in part" to multiple rumors and sightings that allegedly had to be cleared up first, but does confirm that more than 30 operational aircraft sat idle at the school for six days, and that when a search was finally begun on January, only one plane took part, flown by Dargue. Neither historian acknowledges that the United States government was at the time trying to extract itself from the embarrassing Punitive Expedition without further international incident, which was ordered on January 18. Huston's cited source also confuses the 1917 search with a similar one ordered by Arnold in 1922 in which an immediate search did take place, making Huston's interpretation dubious. Glassford, like most of the senior leaders in aviation, was a non-pilot with a prior association in ballooning. He reached the mandatory retirement age of 64 in April 1917 and despite war having just been declared, did not receive a waiver but was placed on the retired list. Lahm was relieved of duties at the school and sent to the balloon school in Omaha, not returning to duties involving airplanes until June 1918. In November 1941, when Arnold was chief the Army Air Forces, Lahm reached mandatory retirement age and his subsequent request to return to duty just days later, when the United States entered World War II, was similarly rejected. The issue of improperly awarded flying pay, which had given the Army a public black eye only a year before, also became part of the controversy when as the result of the flight, the student involved, field artillery officer Lieutenant Colonel Harry G. Bishop (who was one of four senior officers being groomed as future executives in the Aviation Section), was revealed to have received the pay to which he was not entitled as a student without flying duties. Of the four, he was the only one who subsequently was not assigned to aviation. (Hennessy, p. 191)
  13. ^ "Information" in the World War I era meant the same as "military intelligence" in modern usage.
  14. ^ Nine days later, Walter G. "Mike" Kilner, chief, Training Section, Air Service of the AEF, took that distinction from Arnold, becoming a full colonel at the age of 30 years, one month, and six days. The youngest colonel of the Air Service during the war was Edgar S. Gorrell, chief of staff, Air Service AEF, on October 28, 1918, at the age of 27 years, eight months, and 25 days.
  15. ^ Arnold again received an unsatisfactory fitness report, as Chief Signal Officer George O. Squier placed much of the blame on him for the failures of the Signal Corps Aviation Section, which cost Squier control of the air service, describing Arnold as "inclined to be disloyal". Arnold's subsequent boss, Gen. Kenley, saw things differently and recommended Arnold for a Distinguished Service Medal, although the Squier fitness report quashed it.
  16. ^ Spaatz resolved the "problem" by going to Western Department commanding general Hunter Liggett and having himself transferred to Mather Field. (Haller 1994, p. 17)
  17. ^ Major Benjamin D. Foulois was also transferred on this date from the Signal Corps, (Air Service News Letter, Vol. IV No. 35, September 20, 1920)
  18. ^ Ironically, the accident involving his fingers occurred during a visit by his father, a physician, who reattached the fingertips.
  19. ^ As commanding officer of the 16th O.S., Arnold was "dual-hatted" as Aviation Officer to the inactive 7th Division (demonstration unit for the Cavalry School) until August 15, 1927, and the Aviation Officer of the 2nd Cavalry Division until August 1, 1928. (Clay 2010, pp. 1270–1271)
  20. ^ The activity of which Patrick had actual knowledge and for which he disciplined Arnold had nothing to do with use of official resources to promote Mitchell's views. Patrick himself had encouraged Arnold to lobby for support of Patrick's version of the pending Air Corps Act. The mailing for which Patrick attempted to cashier Arnold was to all Reserve pilots encouraging them to contact their congressmen to support Patrick's version of the bill, and this embarrassing circumstance led the Chief of the Air Service to back down when Arnold called his bluff. (Davis, page 13)
  21. ^ The offer came from naval aviation pioneer John K. Montgomery at the end of July 1927, when Arnold was already eligible for retirement at half-pay. Montgomery was president of American International Airways, a firm he had founded with financing originally intended to create Pan Am for Arnold. AIA's landing rights in Cuba had been transferred to Juan Trippe, putting together the companies (including AIA) that would become Pan Am in June 1928.
  22. ^ The books were titled Bill Bruce and the Pioneer Aviators; Bill Bruce, The Flying Cadet; Bill Bruce Becomes an Ace; Bill Bruce on Border Patrol; Bill Bruce in the Transcontinental Race and Bill Bruce on Forest Patrol (New York: A. L. Burt, 1928).
  23. ^ Summerall had been Arnold's mathematics instructor at West Point.
  24. ^ King had also been on the court that tried Billy Mitchell.
  25. ^ Arnold became close friends with Jack L. Warner and Donald Douglas, and began cultivating a relationship with the California Institute of Technology.
  26. ^ Publicity of the flight was the first major step taken to repair the image of the Air Corps caused by the Air Mail fiasco. The flight was the second major air expedition to Alaska. The first, covering the 8,690 miles between Mitchel Field, New York, and Nome, was flown between July 15 and October 20, 1920, in four DH-4s led by Captain St. Clair Streett, for which they too earned the Mackay Trophy.
  27. ^ Major General Hugh A. Drum, a key member of the General Staff in its clashes with the Air Corps, ignored Arnold's recommendations.
  28. ^ Dern favored Lieutenant Colonel "Mike" Kilner, the officer who in World War I had been the Army's youngest full colonel. Calling Arnold's record "spotted," Dern nevertheless recommended him to Craig.
  29. ^ Although having a known fondness for White Horse Scotch whisky, especially when mixed as an Old Fashioned cocktail, Arnold's intake had been sharply curtailed since the early 1920s by stomach ulcers. (Haller 1994, p. 17) Steve Early's disdain stemmed from assignment in 1926 as Washington correspondent for the Associated Press during Arnold's problems with Patrick, while "Pa" Watson held a personal dislike of Arnold and had been a West Point classmate of Andrews.
  30. ^ Unfortunately, Kilner was compelled to take a medical retirement less than a year later due to a previously undiagnosed heart condition, which apparently so distressed him that he committed suicide in 1940. Andrews' candidacy for the Air Corps chief position was led by his chief of staff, Colonel Hugh J. Knerr, who had been Arnold's executive officer on the Alaska flight. The DFC for Arnold, coming at a time when his support for the B-17 had become lukewarm, embittered Knerr, who continued his efforts to unseat Arnold until Andrews' death in 1943. Andrews himself took no part in the controversy. Although his relationship with Arnold remained cordial, Andrews was not reappointed as commander of GHQAF when his term expired in March 1939 and Knerr was coerced to retire at the same time. However when Andrews asked Arnold to return Knerr to active duty in 1941, Arnold agreed and later recommended him to head the VIII Service Command in England.
  31. ^ Development of such a bomber required five years at minimum, of which Arnold was well aware. Known as the "Project A" bomber (with a tactical radius of at least 2,000 miles), Kilner's board resulted in the end of the R&D moratorium in August 1939 and a request from Arnold in November that the project be approved. Both the B-32 Dominator and the B-29 resulted from this critical policy reversal, with the B-32 ironically being the first to fly.
  32. ^ Arnold got himself into the president's doghouse early. In January 1939, his pique over sub rosa negotiations between the French, Morgenthau and the U.S. Navy over an Air Corps project (the Douglas DB-7 bomber), conducted without Air Corps knowledge, led him to ill-advised public criticism of the administration before Congress after the prototype crashed during flight testing with a French Air Force observer on board.
  33. ^ Roosevelt had decided that all production from new aircraft plants would go to the British, with the result that while the British acquired nearly 2,000 new aircraft by mid-1941, the Air Corps received only 1,000 in the same period. Arnold protested loudly, claiming that the lack of aircraft needed to train itself during its expansion would "cripple the Army Air Corps." (Perret 1997, pages 44–45)
  34. ^ Secretary Morgenthau's control of aircraft production declined after January 1941 when Harry Hopkins became Roosevelt's closest confidant. Another indication of Arnold's disfavor with the president was that his promotion to permanent brigadier general was delayed until December 1940, which placed him fourth in seniority among those promoted from the Air Corps, behind H. Conger Pratt, Andrews, and James E. Chaney.
  35. ^ The other two nominees were Courtney H. Hodges as Chief of Infantry, and William N. Porter as Chief of Chemical Warfare Service.
  36. ^ At the time of the trip to Britain, Quesada was chief of the Foreign Language Section, Intelligence Division.
  37. ^ Arnold's promotion to permanent major general was approved by the Senate with "date of effect" retroactive to February 2, 1941, preceding that of Pratt by a month and making Arnold first in seniority within the Air Corps.
  38. ^ The conference also saw one of the first instances of Arnold's legendary propensity to relieve from command a subordinate who displeased him. The newly appointed commander of the Newfoundland Base Command, Brigadier General Henry W. "Swede" Harms, so irritated Arnold with petty complaints and excuses that Arnold had him relieved of command, reduced to his permanent grade of colonel, and sent to Pendleton AAF, Oregon, an Air Service Command base, where he became base commander. Harms had been the Army's 37th pilot and an airman since 1915, and the relief spelled the end of his career. He passed through a series of "backwater" billets, the last of which was command of the 21st Bombardment Wing in Kansas, a personnel processing organization that had become a dumping ground for out-of-favor senior officers, before dying in June 1945 at the age of 57. (Huston 2002, p. 257 note 69)
  39. ^ Arnold had known Fickel since they were lieutenants together in the 29th and 13th Infantry Regiments in the Philippines.
  40. ^ The wing commander of the 58th Bomb Wing acted as interim commander until LeMay's arrival at the end of August.
  41. ^ Arnold demonstrated that he had learned political savvy from his experiences with FDR when soon after sacking "Swede" Harms he relieved Brigadier General "Sue" Clagett from command of the Philippine Department Air Force. Instead of choosing the replacement himself, he allowed the imperious Douglas MacArthur to select it from a choice of three candidates. Ironically, Fickel was also one of the candidates and was himself relieved from command six months after not being selected.
  42. ^ Huston states that King rarely spoke to Arnold at meetings, instead directing air matters to Marshall.
  43. ^ Arnold also presented the wings of the 208 graduates commissioned in the Air Corps, including Robin Olds, but Bruce Arnold was medically disqualified from being a pilot.
  44. ^ The friend was Brig. Gen. Eugene H. Beebe, who had returned to Washington to become caretaker commander of the new Continental Air Forces. Beebe's first assignment as a newly-minted lieutenant and aviator was under Arnold with the 16th Observation Squadron at Fort Riley in 1929. Arnold had been Beebe's mentor since 1932 when the lieutenant was assigned to the 31st Bomb Squadron at March Field, often flying together and using Beebe as a junior officer on the 1st Wing staff. In October 1938 when he was named chief of the Air Corps, Arnold was told he could no longer fly himself and chose Captain Beebe as his personal pilot, a position Beebe held for the next four years, rising to colonel. In the summer of 1942, recalling his own disappointment at never serving overseas in World War I, Arnold approved Beebe's request for combat duty, which resulted in command of the 308th Bomb Group, a B-24 unit Beebe trained and led in China with the Fourteenth Air Force.
  45. ^ From Belgium, the Grand Cross with Palm, Order of the Crown and Croix de Guerre with Palm. From Brazil: Brazilian Pilot Wings; Grand Commander, National Order of the Southern Cross; and Grand Cross, Order of Military Merit. From Chile: Grand Cross of the Order of Merit. From the Republic of China: Order of the Cloud and Banner with Grand Cordon. From Colombia: Grand Officer, Order of Boyaca. From Czechoslovakia: Czechoslovakian Pilot Wings. From Ecuador: Order of Abdon Calderón, First Class. From France: Croix de Guerre with Palm, and Grand Cross, Legion of Honor. From Great Britain: Knight Grand Cross of the Military Division, Order of the Bath. From Greece: Grand Cross of the Order of George I with Swords. From Guatemala: Cross of Military Merit, First Class. From Italy: Grand Cross of the Military Order of Italy. From Mexico: Order of Military Merit, First Class; and Grand Cross, Order of the Aztec Eagle. From Morocco: Grand Cross of the Order of Quissam Alaouite. From the Netherlands: Knight Grand Cross with Swords, Order of Orange-Nassau. From Panama: Grand Cross of Chile, First Class; and Grand Cross, Order of Vasco Núñez de Balboa. From Peru: Grand Commander, Order of the Sun; and Cross of Aviation, First Class. From Sweden: Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Sword. From Yugoslavia: Yugoslavian Pilot Wings.
  46. ^ Arnold was assisted in the endeavor by William R. Laidlaw, who had been a public relations officer with the Eighth Air Force in England and recently established his credentials as a writer collaborating on the screenplay for the film Command Decision.
  47. ^ Because poor eyesight disqualified him as a pilot, "Hank" Arnold was commissioned in the Coast Artillery Corps and commanded an AAA automatic weapons battalion in Italy. After 1945, the remainder of his career was as a Field Artillery officer.
  48. ^ Bruce Arnold entered the United States Naval Academy's Class of 1942, but dropped out in June 1939. He enlisted in the Cavalry, took and passed a competitive exam for entrance to West Point, and entered the Class of 1944 in July 1940. His class was accelerated because of the war and graduated as the Class of June 1943. Because of poor eyesight he too went into the Coast Artillery Corps, becoming an antiaircraft battery commander on Okinawa by the end of the war. Bruce resolved a 20-year resentment of his father and transferred to the United States Air Force in March 1949.
  49. ^ Col. David Arnold was the only son to spend his entire career in the USAF, but like his brothers, was not rated.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c "Henry Harley "Hap" Arnold". Arlington National Cemetery. 2011. Retrieved January 13, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c Huston 2002, p. 5
  3. ^ a b Hennessy 1958, p. 54
  4. ^ a b c d e Daso 2013.
  5. ^ Daso 1996: see note 1 for a detailed discussion of the chronology and sources of Arnold's nicknames.
  6. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 12–13
  7. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 15
  8. ^ . LMH Aliumni Association. 2011. Archived from the original on October 19, 2010. Retrieved January 9, 2011.
  9. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 15–16
  10. ^ Huston 2002, p. 1
  11. ^ Daso 1996 has an addenda table showing that his demerits tripled and his conduct standing doubled during his first class year.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Daso 1996.
  13. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 26–27, 30
  14. ^ Davis1997, p. 2
  15. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 32–33
  16. ^ Davis 1997, p. 3
  17. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 38–39
  18. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 39
  19. ^ Walker & Wickam 1986, p. 12.
  20. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 44
  21. ^ Huston 2002, p. 109
  22. ^ Cameron 1999, p. 33.
  23. ^ Hennessy 1958, pp. 59, 229, 236
  24. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 47
  25. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 48
  26. ^ Hennessy 1958, p. 57
  27. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 52
  28. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 48–49
  29. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 51
  30. ^ a b Kindy, David (March 10, 2021). "How Gen. Henry 'Hap' Arnold, the Architect of American Air Power, Overcame His Fear of Flying". Smithsonian.
  31. ^ Hennessy 1958, pp. 54–57
  32. ^ Hennessy 1958, p. 62
  33. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 53–55
  34. ^ Hennessy 1958, p. 72
  35. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 57–62, 68
  36. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 64–66
  37. ^ Huston 2002, p. 6
  38. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 69–70, 75
  39. ^ Huston 2002, p. 7
  40. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 73
  41. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 76
  42. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 80–83
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Fogerty 1953
  44. ^ Davis 1997, p. 6
  45. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 84–86; Huston 2002, pp. 8–9
  46. ^ Watson 2002, p. 45; Davis 1997, p. 8.
  47. ^ Huston 2002, p. 10
  48. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 91–92.
  49. ^ Tate 1998, pp. 5–6
  50. ^ Tate 1998, p. 8
  51. ^ Tate 1998, p. 18
  52. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 94–97
  53. ^ Haller 1994, p. 15
  54. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 102–103
  55. ^ Aero Club of America (1914). "Flying": v. ISSN 0015-4806. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  56. ^ Haller 1994, p. 33
  57. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 102
  58. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 107
  59. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 109
  60. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 13–14
  61. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 112–115
  62. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 122–124
  63. ^ Clay 2010, p. 1384
  64. ^ Huston 2002, p. 20
  65. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 126
  66. ^ Huston 2002, p. 23
  67. ^ Hofmann 2006, pp. 102–103
  68. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 130
  69. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 130–131
  70. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 132–133
  71. ^ Huston 2002, p. 25
  72. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 142–143
  73. ^ Clay 2010, p. 1242
  74. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 147–150
  75. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 27–28
  76. ^ Davis 1997, p. 15
  77. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 152
  78. ^ Shiner 1997, pp. 122–123
  79. ^ Huston 2002, p. 33
  80. ^ . National Museum of the United States Air Force. Archived from the original on December 20, 2010. Retrieved January 11, 2011.
  81. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 157
  82. ^ Craven & Cate 1948, pp. 31–33.
  83. ^ Rice 2004, p. 134
  84. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 165–166
  85. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 47–49
  86. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 47–51
  87. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 178–180
  88. ^ Huston 2002, p. 53
  89. ^ Herman 2012, pp. 289–291
  90. ^ Cate 1945, pp. 21–22
  91. ^ Daso 1997, see note 21.
  92. ^ Daso 1997.
  93. ^ Goss 1954, pp. 17–18.
  94. ^ Greer 1985, p. 113
  95. ^ Craven & Cate 1948, pp. 17–18.
  96. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 85–82
  97. ^ Tate 1998, pp. 171–172
  98. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 206–207
  99. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 132–135
  100. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 174–176.
  101. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 208–209
  102. ^ Nalty 1997a, pp. 179–180.
  103. ^ Goss 1954, pp. 24–25.
  104. ^ Griffith 1999, pp. 75–78
  105. ^ Nalty 1997a, p. 183.
  106. ^ Goss 1954, pp. 28–30, 50.
  107. ^ Griffith 1999, p. 95
  108. ^ "Women Airforce Service Pilots Digital Archive". Gateway to Women's History. Texas Women's University. Retrieved December 1, 2016.
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  111. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 315–316, 323–324
  112. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 328–329
  113. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 257
  114. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 250
  115. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 271
  116. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 344
  117. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 347
  118. ^ Cate 1954, pp. 37–38.
  119. ^ a b c Coffey 1982, pp. 329–333
  120. ^ Herman 2012, pp. 313–314
  121. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 333–334, 339–340
  122. ^ Cate 1954, pp. 103, 125.
  123. ^ Griffith 1999, pp. 189–193
  124. ^ a b Coffey 1982, pp. 337–339
  125. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 300
  126. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 220–226
  127. ^ Huston 2002, p. 345
  128. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 287–295
  129. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 316–322
  130. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 352–355
  131. ^ a b Coffey 1982, pp. 357–360
  132. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 360–363
  133. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 252–254
  134. ^ Huston 2002, pp. 359–360
  135. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 291–291
  136. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 297–300
  137. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 303–304
  138. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 334–336
  139. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 348–349
  140. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 355
  141. ^ Cullum 1950, p. 118.
  142. ^ Cullum 1950, p. 117.
  143. ^ Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 78–482
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  145. ^ "History and Mission". RAND Corporation. 2011. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
  146. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 366
  147. ^ a b Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 79–333
  148. ^ a b 79th U.S. Congress (March 23, 1946). "Public Law 333, 79th Congress". Retrieved May 26, 2021 – via Naval History and Heritage Command.
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  150. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 370
  151. ^ Watson 2002, p. 46.
  152. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 211
  153. ^ Coffey 1982, pp. 174, 195–196, and 305
  154. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 376
  155. ^ Coffey 1982, p. 337
  156. ^ "Arnold Hall: A Great Place to Entertain". U.S. Air Force Academy. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  157. ^ . Lackland AFB Force Support Squadron. 2011. Archived from the original on November 7, 2009. Retrieved January 14, 2011.
  158. ^ . Air Force Association. 2011. Archived from the original on December 26, 2010. Retrieved January 14, 2011.
  159. ^ . Arnold Air Society. 2011. Archived from the original on May 15, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2011.
  160. ^ . George C. Marshall Foundation. 2011. Archived from the original on February 5, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2011.
  161. ^ . Air Force Aid Society. 2011. Archived from the original on December 23, 2010. Retrieved January 14, 2011.
  162. ^ Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 78–482. This law allowed only 75% of pay and allowances to the grade for those on the retired list.
  163. ^ The retirement provisions were also applied to the World War II Commandant of the Marine Corps and the Commandant of the Coast Guard, both of whom held four-star rank.
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  165. ^ Sprekelmeyer 2006.
  166. ^ "New service dress prototypes pique interest". Inside AF.mil. Accessed April 6, 2016.
  167. ^ "New service coat to better represent Airmen set for testing", Staff Sgt. J.G. Buzanowski, Inside AF.mil, July 19, 2007. Accessed April 16, 2016.
  168. ^ "New uniforms: Comfortable, functional are goals" April 22, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Col. Steve Gray, Inside AF.mil, May 15, 2009. Accessed April 6, 2016.
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  170. ^ . Wiesbaden High School. 2011. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2011.
  171. ^ Scott catalog # 2192.
  172. ^ Publication 528 – Veterans and the Military on Stamps January 27, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  173. ^ "Contact Us".
  174. ^ Douglas Cunningham. Imaging/Imagining Air Force Identity: "Hap" Arnold, Warner Bros., and the Formation of the First Motion Picture Unit, The Moving Image 5.1 (Spring 2005) Reprinted by Academia. Retrieved January 12, 2016
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References edit

  • Cameron, Rebecca Hancock (1999). Training to Fly: Military Flight Training 1907–1945. Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program. OCLC 606500804.
  • Cate, James L. (1954). The Pacific: Matterhorn to Nagasaki, June 1944 to August 1945 (PDF). The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. V. Air Force Historical Studies Office. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  • Clay, Steven E. (2010). (PDF). US Army Order of Battle 1919–1941. Vol. 3. Command and General Staff College, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-9841901-4-0. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 13, 2011. Retrieved September 20, 2011.
  • Coffey, Thomas M. (1982). Hap: The Story of the U.S. Air Force and the Man Who Built It General Henry H. 'Hap' Arnold. Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-36069-4.
  • Craven, Wesley Frank; Cate, James Lea (1948). "The Army Air Arm Between Two Wars, 1919–39". In Craven, Wesley F.; Cate, James L. (eds.). Plans and Early Operations, January 1939 to August 1942 (PDF). The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. I. Air Force Historical Studies Office. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  • Cullum, George W. (1950). Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. Vol. IX: 1940–1950. West Point, New York: USMA Digital Library.
  • Daso, Dik A. (1996). "Origins of Airpower: Hap Arnold's Early Career in Aviation Technology, 1903–1935" (PDF). Airpower Journal. X (Winter). Retrieved January 7, 2011. (Part I)
  • ——— (1997). "Origins of Airpower: Hap Arnold's Command Years and Aviation Technology, 1936–1945" (PDF). Airpower Journal. XI (Fall). Retrieved January 12, 2011. (Part II)
  • ——— (2013). "Arnold's Evolution". Air Force Magazine. Vol. 96, no. 9. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  • Davis, Richard G. (1997). Hap: Henry H. Arnold, Military Aviator (PDF). Bolling AFB, Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program. ISBN 0-16-049071-5.
  • Goss, William A. (1954). "Origins of the Army Air Forces". In Craven, Wesley F.; Cate, James L. (eds.). Men and Planes (PDF). The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. VI. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-912799-03-X. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  • Griffith, Charles (1999). The Quest: Haywood Hansell and American Strategic Bombing in World War II (PDF). Maxwell Air Force Base: Air University Press. ISBN 1-58566-069-8. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
  • Haller, Stephen A. (1994). (PDF). San Francisco, California: National Park Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 14, 2014.
  • Herman, Arthur (2012). Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  • Hofmann, George F. (2006). Through Mobility We Conquer: The Mechanization of the U.S. Cavalry. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2403-4.
  • Huston, John W. (2002). "Biography". In Huston, John W. (ed.). American Airpower Comes of Age: General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold's World War II Diaries. Air University Press. ISBN 1-58566-093-0. Retrieved May 26, 2021. Huston's introductory biography is 108 pages in length, and is a detailed account of Arnold's life, both professional and personal, to 1941.
  • Nalty, Bernard C., ed. (1997). Winged Shield, Winged Sword: A History of the United States Air Force. Vol. I: 1907–1950. Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program, United States Air Force. ISBN 0-16-049009-X. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
    • Heimdahl, William C.; Hurley, Alfred F. "The Roots of U.S. Military Aviation". In Nalty 1997.
    • Nalty, Bernard C. (1997a). "Reaction to the War in Europe". In Nalty 1997.
    • Shiner, John F. "The Coming of the GHQ Air Force, 1925–1935". In Nalty 1997.
  • Rice, Rondall Ravor (2004). The Politics of Air Power: From Confrontation to Cooperation in Army Aviation Civil-Military Relations. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-3960-2.
  • Sprekelmeyer, Linda, ed. (2006). These We Honor: The International Aerospace Hall of Fame. Donning Co. Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57864-397-4.
  • Tate, James P. (1998). The Army and its Air Corps: Army Policy Toward Aviation 1919–1941. Air University Press. ISBN 0-16-061379-5.
  • Walker, Lois F.; Wickam, Shelby Z. (1986). "Part I: Huffman Prairie 1904–1916". From Huffman Prairie to the Moon: A History of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Office of History, 2750th Air Base Wing, Wright-Patterson AFB. ISBN 0-16-002204-5.
  • Watson, George M. Jr. (2002). "Arnold, Henry H. "Hap" (1886–1950)". In Boyne, Walter J. (ed.). Air Warfare: An International Encyclopedia. Vol. I: Entries A-L. ABC-CLIO. p. 45. ISBN 1-57607-345-9.

USAF Historical Studies

  • No. 89: Greer, Thomas H. (1985). The Development of Air Doctrine in the Army Air Arm, 1917–1941 (PDF) (Report). Maxwell Air Force Base: Center For Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-25-0. OCLC 12558056. USAF historical studies: no. 89. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  • No. 91: Fogerty, Robert P. (1953). "Arnold, Henry Harley". Biographical Data on Air Force General Officers, 1917–1952, Volume 1 – A thru L (PDF) (Report). Maxwell Air Force Base: USAF Historical Division. USAF historical studies: no. 91. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  • No. 98: Hennessy, Juliette A. (1958). The United States Army Air Arm, April 1861 to April 1917 (Report). Maxwell Air Force Base: USAF Historical Division. ISBN 0-912799-34-X. OCLC 12553968. USAF historical studies: no. 98. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  • No. 112: Cate, James L. (1945). History of the Twentieth Air Force: Genesis (PDF) (Report). Maxwell Air Force Base: USAF Historical Division. USAF historical studies: no. 112. Retrieved November 1, 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Arnold, Henry H. (1989) [First published 1949]. Global Mission (Reprint ed.). McGraw-Hill Publishing. ISBN 0-8306-4004-5.
  • Huston, John W. (1979). "The Wartime Leadership of 'Hap' Arnold". In Hurley, Alfred F.; Erhart, Robert C. (eds.). Air Power and Air Warfare. pp. 168–85.
  • Jordan, Jonathan W. (2015). American Warlords: How Roosevelt's High Command Led America to Victory in World War II. NAL/Caliber. ISBN 9780451414571.
  • Perret, Geoffrey (1997). Winged Victory: The U.S. Army Air Corps During World War II. Random House. ISBN 978-0375750472.

External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by
Major General Oscar M. Westover
Chief of Air Corps
1938–1941
Succeeded by
Maj. Gen. George H. Brett
Preceded by
New title
Commanding General
United States Army Air Forces

1941 — 1946
Succeeded by

henry, arnold, confused, with, henry, arnhold, general, arnold, redirects, here, other, uses, general, arnold, disambiguation, henry, harley, arnold, june, 1886, january, 1950, american, general, officer, holding, ranks, general, army, later, general, force, a. Not to be confused with Henry H Arnhold General Arnold redirects here For other uses see General Arnold disambiguation Henry Harley Hap Arnold June 25 1886 January 15 1950 was an American general officer holding the ranks of General of the Army and later General of the Air Force Arnold was an aviation pioneer Chief of the Air Corps 1938 1941 commanding general of the United States Army Air Forces the only United States Air Force general to hold five star rank and the only officer to hold a five star rank in two different U S military services 1 Arnold was also the founder of Project RAND which evolved into one of the world s largest non profit global policy think tanks the RAND Corporation and was one of the founders of Pan American World Airways General of the ArmyGeneral of the Air ForceHenry H ArnoldArnold between 1946 and 1949Nickname s Hap Pewt Benny The Chief Born 1886 06 25 June 25 1886Gladwyne Pennsylvania U S DiedJanuary 15 1950 1950 01 15 aged 63 Sonoma California U S BuriedArlington National Cemetery Arlington County Virginia AllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branch United States Army Army Air Service Army Air Corps Army Air Forces United States Air ForceYears of service1907 1947 Army 1947 1950 Air Force RankGeneral of the ArmyGeneral of the Air ForceService numberO 2255Commands heldUnited States Army Air ForcesTwentieth Air Force1st Wing GHQ Air ForceBattles warsPhilippine American WarWorld War IWorld War IIAwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal 3 Legion of MeritDistinguished Flying CrossAir MedalInstructed in flying by the Wright Brothers Arnold was one of the first military pilots worldwide and one of the first three rated pilots in the history of the United States Air Force nb 1 He overcame a fear of flying that resulted from his experiences with early flight supervised the expansion of the Air Service during World War I and became a protege of General Billy Mitchell Arnold rose to command the Army Air Forces immediately prior to the American entry into World War II and directed its hundred fold expansion from an organization of little more than 20 000 men and 800 first line combat aircraft into the largest and most powerful air force in the world An advocate of technological research and development his tenure saw the development of the intercontinental bomber the jet fighter the extensive use of radar global airlift and atomic warfare as mainstays of modern air power Arnold s most widely used nickname Hap was short for Happy attributed variously to work associates when he moonlighted as a silent film stunt pilot in October 1911 2 3 or to his wife who began using the nickname in her correspondence in 1931 following the death of Arnold s mother His family called him Harley during his youth and his mother and wife called him Sunny 4 His West Point classmates called Arnold Pewt or Benny and his immediate subordinates and headquarters staff referred to him as The Chief 5 Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 Military aviation pioneer 1 2 Marriage and return to aviation 2 Between the wars 2 1 Acolyte of Billy Mitchell 2 2 Air Corps mid career 2 3 Chief of Air Corps 3 World War II 3 1 Reorganization autonomy and strategic plans 3 2 Strategic bombing in Europe 3 3 B 29 operations against Japan 4 Final years 4 1 Health problems 4 2 Promotion and retirement 5 Death 6 Legacy 6 1 Film 7 Summary of service 7 1 Dates of rank 8 Awards and decorations 9 Published works 9 1 Non fiction books 9 2 Children s books 10 See also 11 Notes 11 1 Footnotes 11 2 Citations 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and career editBorn June 25 1886 in Gladwyne Pennsylvania Arnold was the son of Dr Herbert Alonzo Arnold 1857 1933 a physician and a member of the prominent political and military Arnold Family His mother was Anna Louise Gangy Harley 1857 1931 4 from a Dunker farm family and the first female in her family to attend high school Arnold was Baptist in religious belief but had strong Mennonite ties through both families However unlike her husband Gangy Arnold was fun loving and prone to laughter and not rigid in her beliefs 6 When Arnold was eleven his father responded to the Spanish American War by serving as a surgeon in the Pennsylvania National Guard of which he remained a member for the next 24 years 7 Arnold attended Lower Merion High School in Ardmore Pennsylvania graduating in 1903 The athletic fields at Lower Merion are named after him 8 Arnold had no intention of attending West Point he was preparing to attend Bucknell University and enter the Baptist ministry but took the entrance examination after his older brother Thomas defied their father and refused to do so Arnold placed second on the list and received a delayed appointment when the nominated cadet confessed to being married prohibited by academy regulations 9 nbsp At West Point in 1907Arnold entered the United States Military Academy at West Point as a Juliette one month late having just turned 17 His cadet career was spent as a clean sleeve cadet private 10 At the academy he helped found the Black Hand a group of cadet pranksters and led it during his first class year He played second team running back for the varsity football team was a shot putter on the track and field team and excelled at polo Arnold s academic standing varied between the middle and the lower end of his class with his better scores in mathematics and science He wanted assignment to the Cavalry but an inconsistent demerit record 11 and a cumulative general merit class standing of 66th out of 111 cadets resulted in his being commissioned on June 14 1907 as a second lieutenant Infantry 12 He initially protested the assignment there was no commissioning requirement for USMA graduates in 1907 but was persuaded to accept a commission in the 29th Infantry at the time stationed in the Philippines 13 Arnold arrived in Manila on December 7 1907 14 Arnold disliked infantry troop duties and volunteered to assist Captain Arthur S Cowan of the 20th Infantry who was on temporary assignment in the Philippines mapping the island of Luzon Cowan returned to the United States following completion of the cartography detail transferred to the Signal Corps and was assigned to recruit two lieutenants to become pilots Cowan contacted Arnold who cabled his interest in also transferring to the Signal Corps but heard nothing in reply for two years In June 1909 the 29th Infantry relocated to Fort Jay New York 15 and en route to his new duty station by way of Paris Arnold saw his first airplane in flight piloted by Louis Bleriot 16 In 1911 Arnold applied for transfer to the United States Army Ordnance Department because it offered an immediate promotion to first lieutenant While awaiting the results of the required competitive examination he learned that his interest in aeronautics had not been forgotten 17 Military aviation pioneer edit nbsp A young Henry Arnold at the second seat controls of a Wright Model B airplane 1911 nbsp Colonel Henry Arnold in the War Department in Washington D C April 1918Arnold immediately sent a letter requesting a transfer to the Signal Corps and on April 21 1911 received Special Order 95 detailing him and 2nd Lt Thomas DeWitt Milling of the 15th Cavalry to Dayton Ohio for a course in flight instruction at the Wright brothers aviation school at Simms Station Ohio 18 While individually instructed they were part of the school s May 1911 class that included three civilians and Lieutenant John Rodgers of the United States Navy 19 Beginning instruction on May 3 with Arthur L Welsh Arnold made his first solo flight May 13 after three hours and forty eight minutes of flight in 28 lessons 20 21 nb 2 On May 14 he and Milling completed their instruction 22 Arnold received Federation Aeronautique Internationale FAI pilot certificate number 29 on July 6 1911 and Military Aviator Certificate Number 2 a year later He also was recognized by a general order in 1913 as one of the first 24 rated military aviators authorized to wear the newly designed Military Aviator badge 23 After several more weeks of solo flying in Dayton to gain experience Arnold and Milling were sent on June 14 to the Aeronautical Division Signal Corps station established at College Park Maryland to be the Army s first flight instructors 24 There Arnold set an altitude record of 3 260 feet 990 m on July 7 and thrice broke it August 18 1911 to 4 167 feet 1 270 m 25 January 25 1912 to 4 764 feet 1 452 m 26 and June 1 1912 6 540 feet 1 990 m 27 In August 1911 he experienced his first crash trying to take off from a farm field after getting lost 28 In September Arnold became the first U S pilot to carry mail flying a bundle of letters five miles 8 km on Long Island New York 29 and he is credited as the first pilot to fly over the U S Capitol and the first to carry a United States Congressman as a passenger 2 The following month Arnold moonlighted as a pilot in the filming of two silent movies doubling for the leads in The Military Air Scout and The Elopement 2 3 30 The flight school moved in November 1911 to a farm leased near Augusta Georgia hoping to continue flying there during the winter 31 Training was limited by rain and flooding and they returned to Maryland in May 1912 12 Arnold began to develop a phobia about flying 30 intensified by Al Welsh s fatal crash at College Park on June 11 nb 3 In August Arnold was at Marblehead Massachusetts with 1st Lieutenant Roy C Kirtland conducting acceptance tests of the Burgess Model H an enclosed fuselage tandem seat seaplane and the Army s first tractor front mounted propeller and engine The pair received orders to fly the new aircraft to Bridgeport Connecticut to participate in maneuvers but high winds forced them to land on Massachusetts Bay on August 12 Attempting to take off again Arnold caught a wing tip in the water turning into the wind and crashed into the bay off Plymouth 32 Arnold suffered a lacerated chin during the mishap but the aircraft was salvaged and repaired 4 Another crash at College Park on September 18 killed 2nd Lieutenant Lewis Rockwell an academy classmate of Arnold s 12 33 In October Arnold and Milling were ordered to enter the competition for the first MacKay Trophy for the most outstanding military flight of the year Arnold won when he located a company of cavalry from the air and returned safely despite strong turbulence As a result he and Milling were sent to Fort Riley Kansas to experiment with radio and other communications from the air with the field artillery Arnold s flight on November 2 in Wright C Speed Scout S C Number 10 with 1st Lieutenant Follett Bradley as his wireless operator successfully sent the first radio telegraph message at a distance of 6 miles 9 7 km from an aircraft to a receiver on the ground manned by 1st Lt Joseph O Mauborgne of the Signal Corps 34 nb 4 Three days later Arnold flew on an artillery spotting exercise with 1st Lieutenant Alfred L P Sands of the 6th Field Artillery as an observer Spiraling down to land in S C No 10 the plane stalled went into a spin and they narrowly avoided a fatal crash nb 5 He immediately grounded himself and applied for a leave of absence Flying was considered so dangerous that no stigma was attached for refusing to fly and his request was granted nb 6 During his leave of absence he renewed an acquaintance with Eleanor Bee Pool the daughter of a banker and one of his father s patients 12 35 nb 7 On December 1 Arnold took a staff assignment as assistant to the new head of the Aeronautical Division in the Office of the Chief Signal Officer in Washington D C In the spring he was assigned the task of closing the flying school at College Park 36 nb 8 Although promoted to 1st lieutenant on April 10 1913 Arnold was unhappy and requested a transfer to the Philippines While awaiting a response he received orders to the 9th Infantry on July 10 In August still awaiting transfer he testified before the House Military Affairs Committee against HR5304 a bill to remove aviation from the Signal Corps and make it a semi autonomous Air Corps Arnold like fellow flyer Captain Benjamin Foulois argued that the action was premature and like his Signal Corps boss Major Edgar Russel a non flyer that the Signal Corps was doing all that could be done to develop military use of the airplane 37 He was assigned to a company at Fort Thomas Kentucky on September 1 where he was stationed until transferred to the 13th Infantry on November 1 38 Marriage and return to aviation edit On September 10 1913 he and Bee married 39 with Milling acting as his best man 40 Sent back to the Philippines in January 1914 he was quartered near 1st Lieutenant George C Marshall who became his mentor friend and patron Soon after their arrival Bee miscarried 41 but on January 17 1915 their first child Lois Elizabeth Arnold was born at Fort William McKinley in Manila After eight months of troop duty Arnold became battalion adjutant nb 9 In January 1916 completing a two year tour with the 13th Infantry Arnold was attached to the 3rd Infantry and returned to the United States En route to Madison Barracks New York he exchanged telegrams from Hawaii with an assistant executive of the Aviation Section Signal Corps Major William Billy Mitchell who alerted him that he was being detailed to the Signal Corps again as a first lieutenant if he chose non flying status However if he volunteered to requalify for a rating of Junior Military Aviator a temporary promotion to captain was mandated by law nb 10 On May 20 1916 Arnold reported to Rockwell Field California on flying status but as supply officer at the Signal Corps Aviation School 42 He received a permanent establishment promotion to captain Infantry on September 23 43 Between October and December 1916 encouraged by former associates Arnold overcame his fear of flying by going up fifteen to twenty minutes a day in a Curtiss JN trainer a much safer aircraft with a simpler flight control system than the Speed Scout of just four years before 44 On November 26 he flew solo and on December 16 qualified again for his JMA nb 11 Before he could be reassigned to flying duties however he was involved as a witness in a controversial service dispute in January 1917 Over the objections of Captain Herbert A Dargue the Aviation School s director of training and with Arnold present Captain Frank P Lahm the school secretary adjutant authorized on January 6 an excursion flight for a non aviator that took place on January 10 again over Dargue s protests resulting in the loss of the airplane in Mexico and the disappearance of the crew for nine days After testifying to army investigators on January 27 confirming that Lahm had authorized the flight in writing Arnold was sent to Panama on January 30 1917 one day after the birth of his second child Henry H Arnold Jr 45 nb 12 nbsp Major Henry H Arnold with the first Liberty V12 aero engine completedArnold collected the men who would make up his first command the 7th Aero Squadron in New York City on February 5 1917 and was ordered to find a suitable location for an airfield in the Panama Canal Zone When the military in Panama could not agree on a site Arnold was ordered back to Washington D C to resolve the dispute and was en route by ship when the United States declared war on Germany Arnold requested to be sent to France but his presence in Washington worked against him since the Aviation Section needed qualified officers for headquarters duty Beginning May 1 1917 he received a series of assignments as officer in charge of the Information Division nb 13 with a promotion to major on June 27 as assistant executive officer of the Aeronautical Division and then as executive officer after it became the Air Division on October 1 43 On August 5 1917 he was promoted again becoming the youngest full colonel in the Army 43 46 nb 14 Arnold gained experience in aircraft production and procurement the construction of air schools and airfields and the recruitment and training of large numbers of personnel and learned political in fighting in the Washington environment all of which would help him as head of the military s air services 12 When the Division of Military Aeronautics superseded the Air Division in April 1918 Arnold continued as executive assistant to its director Major General William Kenly and advanced to assistant director when the DMA was removed from the Signal Corps in May 1918 43 47 nb 15 Arnold s third child William Bruce Arnold was born July 17 1918 Shortly after Arnold arranged to go to France to brief General John Pershing commanding the American Expeditionary Force on the Kettering Bug a weapons development Aboard a ship to France in late October he developed Spanish influenza and was hospitalized on his arrival in England He did reach the front on November 11 1918 but the Armistice ended the war on the same day 48 Between the wars editAcolyte of Billy Mitchell edit nbsp Maj Gen Mason M Patrick Chief of Air ServiceThe Air Service separated from the Signal Corps on May 20 1918 However control of aviation remained with the ground forces when its post war director was a field artillery general Major General Charles T Menoher 49 who epitomized the view of the War Department General Staff that military aviation can never be anything other than simply an arm of the Army 50 Menoher was followed in 1921 by another non aviator Maj Gen Mason M Patrick Patrick however obtained a rating of Junior Airplane Pilot despite being 59 years old and became both an airpower advocate and a proponent of an independent air force 51 Both Menoher and Patrick clashed often with Assistant Chief of Air Service Billy Mitchell who had become radical in his desire for a single unified Air Force to control and develop all military airpower Arnold supported Mitchell s highly publicized views the consequence of which was a mutual dislike with Patrick 52 Arnold was sent to Rockwell Field on January 10 1919 as District Supervisor Western District of the Air Service to oversee the demobilization of 8 000 airmen and surplus aircraft There he first established relationships with the men who became his main aides executive officer Captain Carl A Spaatz and adjutant 1st Lieutenant Ira C Eaker Five months later Arnold became Air Officer of the Western Department after June 1920 the Ninth Corps Area in San Francisco and de facto commander of Crissy Field being developed on a site determined by a board chaired by Arnold 53 Arnold s promotion to colonel expired June 30 1920 and he reverted to his permanent establishment rank of captain 43 Even though he received an automatic promotion to major because of his Military Aviator rating he became junior to officers serving under him including Spaatz whose promotion received while in France was not rescinded 54 nb 16 On August 11 1920 Arnold was one of 21 Infantry majors formally transferred to the Air Service by War Department Special Orders No 188 0 nb 17 As Air Service Officer of the Ninth Corps area he oversaw the first regular aerial patrols over the forested lands of California and Oregon to assist in preventing and suppressing wildfires This service marked the first use of aircraft for wildfire suppression prior to the modern use of water dropping aircraft 55 Of Arnold the National Park Service history of Crissy Field wrote During his tour of duty Arnold had been instrumental both in bringing Crissy Field into existence and establishing the pattern of its operations 56 In October 1922 he was sent back to Rockwell now a service depot as base commander and there encouraged an aerial refueling the first in history that took place eight months later 43 Arnold experienced several serious illnesses and accidents requiring hospitalization including recurring stomach ulcers 57 and the amputation of three fingertips on his left hand in 1922 58 nb 18 His wife and sons also experienced serious health problems including a near fatal case of scarlet fever for son Bruce His fourth child John Linton Arnold born in the summer of 1921 died on June 30 1923 of acute appendicitis 59 Both Arnold and wife Bee needed almost a year to recover psychologically from the loss 4 nbsp The court martial of Billy Mitchell standing November 1925In August 1924 Arnold was unexpectedly assigned to attend a five month course of study at the Army Industrial College After completing the course he was hand picked by Patrick despite their mutual dislike to head the Air Service s Information Division 60 working closely with Mitchell 43 61 When Mitchell was court martialed Arnold Spaatz and Eaker were all warned that they were jeopardizing their careers by vocally supporting Mitchell but they testified on his behalf anyway After Mitchell was convicted on December 17 1925 his supporters including Arnold continued to use Information Division resources to promote his views to airpower friendly congressmen and Air Service reservists In February Secretary of War Dwight F Davis ordered Patrick to find and discipline the culprits Patrick was already aware of the activity and chose Arnold to set an example He gave Arnold the choice of resignation or a general court martial but when Arnold chose the latter Patrick decided to avoid another public fiasco and instead transferred him to Ft Riley far from the aviation mainstream where he took command of the 16th Observation Squadron on March 22 1926 62 63 nb 19 Patrick s press release on the investigation stated that Arnold was also reprimanded for violating Army General Order No 20 by attempting to influence legislation in an improper manner nb 20 Despite this setback which included a fitness report that stated in an emergency he is liable to lose his head 64 Arnold made a commitment to remain in the service turning down an offer of the presidency of the soon to be operating Pan American Airways which he had helped bring into being 12 65 nb 21 Arnold made the best of his exile and in May 1927 his participation in war games at Fort Sam Houston Texas impressed Major General James E Fechet successor to Patrick as Chief of the U S Army Air Corps He also received outstanding fitness reports from his commanders at Ft Riley Brigadier General Ewing E Booth who had been a member of the Mitchell court and his successor Brig Gen Charles J Symmonds 66 Repairs to Arnold s service reputation may also have been aided by a professional article he wrote for the Cavalry Journal in January 1928 showing the influence of his association with the Cavalry School at Fort Riley Arnold urged a strong combined arms team be developed between the Air Corps and the Cavalry and by extension all ground forces This opportunity for development of the concept in both theory and practice was lost however by the effects of cultural differences between the two service branches and the dominance of American isolationism It did not develop until the United States was engaged in World War II 67 On February 24 1927 his son David Lee Arnold was born at Ft Riley 68 In 1928 Arnold wrote and published six books of juvenile fiction the Bill Bruce Series whose objective was to interest young people in flying 69 nb 22 Air Corps mid career edit Fechet intervened with Army Chief of Staff Gen Charles P Summerall to have Arnold s exile ended by assigning him in August 1928 to the Army s Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth nb 23 The year long course was unpleasant for Arnold because of doctrinal differences with the school s commandant Major General Edward L King but Arnold graduated with high marks in June 1929 70 nb 24 Arnold was slated for assignment to the Air Corps Training Center in San Antonio following graduation but Brigadier General Lahm the commander of the ACTC strongly opposed it possibly recalling their 1917 dispute 71 Instead Arnold commanded the Fairfield Air Service Depot Ohio In 1930 he also became Chief of the Field Service Section Air Corps Materiel Division and was promoted to lieutenant colonel on February 1 1931 43 Arnold s parents were made destitute by the bank collapses in 1929 and on January 18 1931 his mother died of a sudden heart attack Arnold struggled emotionally with being absent from his parents 50th wedding anniversary celebration the year before and with the depression afflicting his father after her death A contemporary biographer of Arnold notes that not until after his mother s funeral did Bee begin use of the sobriquet Hap in place of Sunny when addressing him apparently to avoid the constant reminder of his mother that the latter name might bring Arnold himself eschewed the use of Sunny in his personal correspondence after May 1931 signing himself as Hap Arnold from that point forward 4 Arnold took command of March Field California where Spaatz had just assumed command of the grandiose sounding but tiny 1st Wing on November 27 1931 Arnold s responsibilities included refurbishing the base into a showcase installation which required that he resolve strained relations with the community He accomplished this by having his officers join local social service organizations and by a series of well publicized relief efforts 72 Arnold took command of the 1st Wing himself on January 4 1933 73 which flew food drops during blizzards in the winter of 1932 33 assisted in relief work during the Long Beach earthquake of March 10 1933 and established camps for 3 000 boys of the Civilian Conservation Corps 74 He organized a high profile series of aerial reviews that featured visits from Hollywood celebrities and aviation notables 75 76 nb 25 In August 1932 Arnold began acquisition of portions of Rogers Dry Lake as a bombing and gunnery range for his units a site that later became Edwards Air Force Base 77 nbsp Martin B 10B bomberIn 1934 Chief of Air Corps Benjamin D Foulois named Arnold to command one of the three military zones of the controversial Army Air Corps Mail Operation with a temporary headquarters in Salt Lake City Utah Arnold s pilots performed well and his own reputation was untouched by the fiasco 78 79 Later that same year he won his second Mackay Trophy when he led ten Martin B 10B bombers on an 8 290 mile 13 340 km flight from Bolling Field to Fairbanks Alaska and back 80 nb 26 Overly credited with its success he nonetheless lobbied for recognition of the other airmen who took part but the deputy chief of staff ignored his recommendations His reputation among some of his peers was tarnished by resentment when he was belatedly awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for the flight in 1937 81 nb 27 On March 1 1935 General Headquarters Air Force was activated to control all combat aviation units of the Air Corps based in the United States although it was not subordinate to the Chief of Air Corps While a significant step towards an independent air force this dual authority created serious problems of unity of command for the next six years 82 GHQAF commander Major General Frank Andrews tapped Arnold to retain command of its 1st Wing which now carried with it a temporary promotion to the rank of brigadier general effective March 2 1935 43 On December 23 1935 new Army Chief of Staff General Malin Craig summoned Arnold to Washington He and Arnold had become personal friends and golfing partners during Craig s command of the Ninth Corps Area in 1933 Foulois had retired under fire in the wake of the Air Mail scandal and allegations of corruption in Air Corps procurement and the new chief Major General Oscar Westover had asked Craig for Arnold to fill the vacant assistant chief position Over Arnold s protests and despite a left handed recommendation by Secretary of War George Dern nb 28 who recalled Arnold s close association with Billy Mitchell 83 Craig made him Assistant Chief of Air Corps responsible for procurement and supply to deal with the political struggles over them from the Foulois years 84 In effect however Arnold had switched sides in the struggle between GHQ Air Force and the Air Corps 85 Chief of Air Corps edit Westover was killed in an air crash at Burbank California on September 21 1938 Prior vacancies in the office had been filled by an incumbent assistant chief and Arnold s appointment to succeed Westover seemed automatic since he was well qualified Yet the appointment was delayed when a faction developed supporting the appointment of Andrews that included two members of the White House staff press secretary Stephen Early and military adviser Colonel Edwin M Watson A rumor circulated through the White House that Arnold was a drunkard In his memoirs Arnold recorded that he enlisted the help of Harry Hopkins to attack the drinking rumors but more recent research asserts that Craig threatened to resign as Army chief of staff if Arnold was not appointed 86 nb 29 President Franklin D Roosevelt appointed Arnold as Chief of Air Corps on September 29 which carried with it the rank of major general 87 To repair his relationship with the Andrews faction most of whom were part of GHQ Air Force he selected its chief of staff Colonel Walter G Kilner to fill the Assistant Chief of Air Corps vacancy 88 nb 30 After Charles Lindbergh publicly lent his support in April 1939 for production of a very long range bomber in large numbers to counter Nazi production 89 development of which had been prohibited since June 1938 by the Secretary of War Arnold appointed Kilner to head a board to make appropriate recommendations to end the R amp D moratorium 90 nb 31 Arnold encouraged research and development efforts among his projects the B 17 and the concept of Jet assisted takeoff To encourage the use of civilian expertise the California Institute of Technology became a beneficiary of Air Corps funding and Theodore von Karman of its Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory developed a good working relationship with Arnold that led to the creation of the Scientific Advisory Group in 1944 Arnold characterized his wartime philosophy of research and development as Sacrifice some quality to get sufficient quantity to supply all fighting units Never follow the mirage looking for the perfect airplane to a point where fighting squadrons are deficient in numbers of fighting planes 91 To that end he concentrated on rapid returns from R amp D investments exploiting proven technologies to provide operational solutions to counter the rising threat of the Axis Powers Arnold also pushed for jet propulsion especially after the British shared their plans of Whittle s turbojet during his visit to Britain in April 1941 92 The proposal was immediately opposed by the General Staff in all respects 93 He and Eaker collaborated on three books promoting airpower This Flying Game 1936 reprinted 1943 Winged Victory 1941 and Army Flyer 1942 43 In March 1939 Arnold was appointed to head the Air Board by Secretary of War Harry Woodring to recommend doctrine and organization of Army airpower to the chief of staff While the board s report concluded that airpower was indispensable to the defense of the hemisphere stressed the need for long range bombers and became the basis for the first Air Corps field manual it was a considerable attenuation of the doctrine being developed at the Air Corps Tactical School 94 Arnold submitted the findings to George C Marshall newly appointed as chief of staff on September 1 1939 the day Nazi Germany invaded Poland When Marshall requested a reorganization study from the Air Corps Arnold submitted a proposal on October 5 1940 that would create an air staff unify the air arm under one commander and grant it autonomy with the ground and supply forces 95 Congress repealed the Neutrality Act in November 1939 to permit the selling of aircraft to the belligerents causing Arnold concern that shipments of planes to the Allies would slow delivery to the Air Corps particularly since control of the allotment of aircraft production had been given to the Procurement Division of the Treasury Department in December 1938 and by extension to Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr a White House favorite Arnold experienced two years of difficulties with Morgenthau who was prone to denigrate the leadership of the War Department and Air Corps 96 nb 32 Their conflict peaked on March 12 1940 when Arnold s public complaint about increases in shipments nb 33 brought a personal warning from Roosevelt that there were places to which officers who did not play ball might be sent such as Guam and got him banished from the White House for eight months 97 98 nb 34 The disfavor shown Arnold by Roosevelt reached a turning point in March 1941 when new Secretary of War Henry L Stimson a supporter of Arnold submitted his name with two others for promotion to the permanent rank of major general nb 35 Roosevelt refused to send the list to the Senate for confirmation because of Arnold s nomination and his forced retirement from the service seemed imminent to both Stimson and Marshall Stimson and Harry Hopkins arranged for Arnold accompanied by Major Elwood Pete Quesada to travel to England for three weeks in April to evaluate British aircraft production needs and to provide an up to date strategic analysis 99 nb 36 One outcome of the visit was the setting up of a program for training British pilots in the US which subsequently became known as the Arnold Scheme Arnold s meeting with Roosevelt to report his findings was judged as impressively cogent and optimistic but the president ruminated on Arnold s future for three weeks before submitting his name and the others to the Senate From that point on however Arnold s position in the White House was secure 100 nb 37 His importance to Roosevelt in setting an airpower agenda was demonstrated when Arnold was invited to the Atlantic Conference in Newfoundland in August the first of seven such summits that he not Morgenthau would attend 101 nb 38 World War II editSee also Air warfare of World War II Reorganization autonomy and strategic plans edit The division of authority between the Air Corps and the GHQ Air Force was removed with promulgation of Army Regulation 95 5 creating the United States Army Air Forces on June 20 1941 only two days before Germany s invasion of the Soviet Union Arnold became Chief of the Army Air Forces and acting Deputy Chief of Staff for Air with authority over both the Air Corps and Air Force Combat Command successor to GHQAF While this provided the air arm with a staff of its own and brought the entire organization under the command of one general it failed to grant the degree of autonomy sought By consensus between Marshall and Arnold debate on separation of the Air Force into a service co equal with the Army and Navy was postponed until after the war 102 103 In July Roosevelt asked for production requirements to defeat potential enemies and Arnold endorsed a request by his new Air War Plans Division to submit an air war plan The assessment designated AWPD 1 defined four tasks for the AAF defense of the Western Hemisphere an initial defensive strategy against Japan a strategic air offensive against Germany and a later strategic air offensive against Japan in prelude of invasion It also planned for an expansion of the AAF to 60 000 aircraft and 2 1 million men AWPD 1 called for 24 groups approximately 750 airplanes of very long range B 29 bombers to be based in Northern Ireland and Egypt for use against Nazi Germany and for production of sufficient Consolidated B 36s for intercontinental bombing missions of Germany 104 Soon after U S entry in the war Arnold was promoted to lieutenant general on December 15 1941 On March 9 1942 after the creation of the AAF failed to define clear channels of authority for the air forces the Army adopted the functional reorganization that Arnold had advocated in October 1940 Acting on an executive order from Roosevelt the War Department granted the AAF full autonomy equal to and entirely separate from the Army Ground Forces and Services of Supply The Air Force Combat Command and the Office of the Chief of Air Corps were abolished and Arnold became AAF Commanding General and an ex officio member of both the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Combined Chiefs of Staff 105 106 In response to an August 1942 directive Arnold had the AWPD revise its estimates AWPD 42 resulted calling for 75 000 aircraft and 2 7 million men and increased the production of aircraft for use by other allies AWPD 42 reaffirmed earlier strategic priorities but increased the list of industrial targets from 23 to 177 ranking the German Luftwaffe first and its submarine force second in importance of destruction It also directed that the B 29 bomber not be employed in Europe because of problems in its development but instead that the B 29 program s deployment be concentrated in the Far East to destroy Japanese military power and combustible cities 107 Arnold was responsible for approving the Army Air Forces Women s Flying Training Detachment WFTD It was approved by September 14 1942 and directed by aviator Jacqueline Cochran 108 Strategic bombing in Europe edit nbsp B 17 Flying Fortresses of the 381st Bomb Group Eighth Air ForceImmediately after the attack on Pearl Harbor Arnold began to carry out AWPD 1 The primary strategic bombing force against Nazi Germany would be the Eighth Air Force and he named Spaatz to command it and Eaker to head its Bomber Command Other Arnold proteges eventually filled key positions in the strategic bombing forces including Haywood S Hansell Laurence S Kuter and James H Doolittle 109 Despite protecting his strategic bombing force from demands of other services and allies Arnold was forced to divert resources from the Eighth to support operations in North Africa crippling the Eighth in its infancy and nearly killing it Eaker now Eighth Air Force commander found from experience that the pre war doctrine of daylight precision bombing developed at the Air Corps Tactical School as a foundation for separating the Air Force from the Army was mistaken in its tenet that heavily armed bombers could reach any target without the support of long range escort fighters Early in 1943 he began requesting more fighters and jettisonable fuel tanks to increase their range in addition to repeated requests to increase the size of his small bombing force 110 Heavy losses in the summer and fall of 1943 on deep penetration missions intensified Eaker s requests Arnold under pressure and impatient for results ignored Eaker s findings and placed the blame on a lack of aggressiveness by bomber commanders This came at a time when General Dwight D Eisenhower was putting together his command group for the invasion of Europe and Arnold approved Eisenhower s request to replace Eaker with his own commanders Spaatz and Doolittle 111 Ironically the very items Eaker requested a larger bomber force drop tanks and P 51 fighters accompanied the change of command and made the Eighth Air Force decisive in defeating Germany using the daylight bombing doctrine 112 The change in command at Eighth Air Force particularly involving the relief of a friend or protege was just one of many that exemplified a ruthlessness Arnold developed to get results In 1942 Brigadier General Walter R Weaver acting chief of the Air Corps had his job eliminated and was relegated to a technical training command 113 George C Kenney relieved Jacob E Fickel in command of Fourth Air Force 114 nb 39 and later that same year replaced former Chief of the Air Corps George H Brett as Southwest Pacific air commander 115 In the B 29 campaign Curtis E LeMay relieved Kenneth B Wolfe in India in July 1944 116 nb 40 and later Hansell on Guam in January 1945 117 nb 41 B 29 operations against Japan edit nbsp B 29 SuperfortressWith the strategic bombing crisis resolved in Europe Arnold placed full emphasis on completion of the development and deployment of the B 29 Very Long Range VLR bomber to attack Japan As early as 1942 Arnold planned to make himself commanding general of the Twentieth Air Force This unique command arrangement may also have contributed to his health problems see below but after the negative experiences of building an effective bombing force against Germany and realizing the consequences of failure against Japan Arnold concluded that absent any unity of command in the Pacific theaters administrative decisions regarding B 29 bomber operations could best be handled personally However theater commanders Douglas MacArthur Chester Nimitz and Joseph Stilwell all coveted the B 29s for tactical support to which Arnold was adamantly opposed as a diversion from strategic policy He convinced not only Marshall but also Chief of Naval Operations Ernest J King that the Twentieth was unique in that its operations cut across the jurisdiction of all three theaters and thus should report directly to the Joint Chiefs with Arnold acting as their executive agent In February 1944 President Roosevelt agreed and approved the arrangement 118 The VLR program had been plagued with a seemingly unending series of development problems subjecting it and Arnold to much criticism in the press and from skeptical field commanders The B 29 was the key component of the AAF s fourth strategic priority since no other land based bomber was capable of reaching the Japanese homeland but by February 1944 the XX Bomber Command slated to begin Operation Matterhorn on June 1 had virtually no flight time yet above an altitude of 20 000 feet 6 100 m 119 With a designated overseas deployment date of April 15 1944 Arnold intervened in the situation personally by flying to Kansas on March 8 1944 For three days he toured training bases involved in the modification program He was distressed at his findings of shortages and of work failures On the spot he made Maj Gen Bennett E Meyers a military procurement officer accompanying him the coordinator of the program Meyers succeeded in the Battle of Kansas Despite labor problems and blizzard weather a complete bomb group was ready for deployment by April 9 119 The mechanical problems of the B 29 however had not been resolved During early combat operations many new ones were identified Arnold felt the pressure of achieving the goals of AWPD 1 and of justifying by results a very expensive technological project Arnold needed the B 29 to provide the delivery platform for the highly classified atomic bomb if the Manhattan Project succeeded 120 B 29 operations against Japanese targets in China and Southeast Asia began in June 1944 and from the outset produced far less positive results than expected 119 121 The difficulties of the Twentieth Air Force s campaign against Japan mirrored those of the Eighth Air Force s against Germany With characteristic impatience Arnold quickly relieved Wolfe the B 29 commander in China after less than a month of operations and replaced him with LeMay A second B 29 command began operations from bases in the Mariana Islands in November 122 Brigadier General Haywood S Hansell one of the architects of AWPD 1 and AWPD 42 encountered even more command problems than had Wolfe or LeMay After two months of ostensibly poor results but mostly because he resisted a campaign of firebombing attacks against Japanese population centers favored by Arnold and his chief of staff Lauris Norstad Arnold decided he too needed replacing He shut down operations from China consolidated all the B 29s in the Marianas and replaced Hansell with LeMay in January 1945 as commander of XXI Bomber Command 123 Final years edit nbsp Marshall center and Arnold right greeted by General Omar Bradley on Omaha Beach in Normandy June 12 1944 124 Health problems edit Between 1943 and 1945 Arnold experienced four heart attacks severe enough to require hospitalization In addition to being by nature intensely impatient Arnold considered that his personal presence was required wherever a crisis might be and as a result he traveled extensively and for long hours under great stress during the war aggravating what may have been a pre existing coronary condition 125 His extended trips and inspection tours were to the United Kingdom in April 1941 and again in May 1942 126 the South Pacific in September 1942 127 North Africa and China in January February 1943 128 the Middle East and Italy where his party came under artillery fire in November December 1943 129 London and Normandy accompanying Marshall in June 1944 124 Germany and Italy in April May 1945 130 the Western Pacific in June 1945 131 and Potsdam in July 1945 132 A lesser but more frequent factor may have been his difficulty in handling inter service politics particularly with the Navy which steadfastly refused to recognize him as a chief of staff or his subordinate staff as equals 133 134 nb 42 On Guam with knowledge of the approaching atomic bomb decision he negotiated with Nimitz over the Navy s objections to basing the headquarters of the strategic air forces on the island 131 Arnold s first heart attack occurred February 28 1943 just after his return from the Casablanca Conference and China During that trip Argonaut the B 17 bomber transporting his party became lost for several hours over Japanese held territory trying to fly the Hump at night 135 He was hospitalized at Walter Reed Army Hospital for several days then took three weeks leave at the Coral Gables Biltmore Hotel in Florida which had been converted into a convalescent hospital U S Army regulations then required that he leave the service but President Roosevelt waived the requirement in April after he demonstrated his recovery and on the condition that the President be provided with monthly updates on Arnold s health 136 Arnold s second heart attack occurred just a month later on May 10 1943 and resulted in a 10 day stay in Walter Reed Against the wishes of Marshall he gave the commencement address for the Class of June 1943 at West Point where his son Bruce was graduating 137 nb 43 His third heart attack less severe than the first two occurred exactly a year after the second on May 10 1944 under the strain of the B 29 problems Arnold took a month s leave returning to duty by flying with Marshall to London on June 7 for a conference and an inspection of Omaha Beach 138 Arnold s last wartime heart attack came on January 17 1945 just days after he replaced Hansell with LeMay Arnold had not gone into his office for three days and refused to permit the Air Force s chief flight surgeon to examine him The flight surgeon enlisted a general and personal friend of Arnold s to inquire on his condition nb 44 after which Arnold was again flown to Coral Gables Florida and placed under 24 hour care for nine days 139 Arnold again was allowed to remain in the service but under conditions that amounted to light duty He continued to tour air bases in both theaters Arnold was returning by C 54 from Italy to Miami for a checkup when he received the news of the German surrender on May 7 1945 140 On July 16 he relinquished command of the Twentieth Air Force to LeMay Promotion and retirement edit nbsp General of the ArmyArnold received honorary doctorates from Pennsylvania Military College and the University of Southern California in 1941 and from Iowa Wesleyan College in 1942 43 Post war honors included doctorates from Hahnemann College the University of Pennsylvania Harvard University South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Columbia University the University of California and Ursinus College 141 Arnold also received 26 decorations and awards from foreign countries honoring his service in World War II 142 nb 45 On March 19 1943 Arnold was promoted wartime to full general and on December 21 1944 appointed a five star General of the Army under Public Law 78 482 143 placing him fourth in Army rank seniority behind only Marshall MacArthur and Eisenhower 144 In 1945 Arnold directed the founding of Project RAND which became the RAND Corporation a non profit think tank with 10 000 000 of funding left over from World War II Initially tasked to connect military planning with research and development decisions RAND widely expanded in its scope beyond its original mission 145 After a trip to South America in January 1946 in which he developed a heart arrhythmia severe enough to cancel the remainder of the trip 146 Arnold left active duty in the AAF on February 28 1946 his official date of retirement was June 30 1946 43 On March 23 1946 Public Law 79 333 made the promotion to General of the Army permanent for all those holding it and awarded full pay and allowances for those on the retired list 147 148 He was succeeded by Spaatz who also became first Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force when it became a separate service on September 18 1947 Arnold retired to a 40 acre 16 ha ranch near Sonoma California and signed a contract with Harper amp Brothers to write his memoirs Global Mission nb 46 Unlike George S Patton who enjoyed independent wealth or colleagues who had taken positions in government such as Marshall appointed Secretary of State Arnold had no source of income beyond his retirement pay and allowances and was not healthy enough to continue service 149 His autobiography was an attempt to provide financial security for his wife after his death and during the writing of it he suffered his fifth heart attack in January 1948 hospitalizing him for three months 150 On May 7 1949 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 81 58 An Act to establish the grade of General of the Air Force changed the designation of Arnold s final rank and grade to that of General of the Air Force and he remains the only person to have held the rank He is also the only person to hold five star rank in two U S military services Death editArnold died on January 15 1950 at his home in Sonoma He was given a state funeral in Washington D C that included rare services held in Arlington Memorial Amphitheater and he was buried in Section 34 plot number 44 A of Arlington National Cemetery 1 Robert A Lovett with whom Arnold worked closely during the war in his capacity as Assistant Secretary of War for Air stated that Arnold had been as much a casualty of war as if he had been injured in the line of duty 151 All three of Arnold s surviving sons were graduates of West Point Henry Harley Jr 1939 152 nb 47 Willam Bruce June 1943 153 nb 48 and David Lee 1949 154 nb 49 and reached the grade of colonel The two youngest served in the United States Air Force and are interred near their father s burial site at Arlington National Cemetery 1 Legacy editGeneral H H Arnold Field Athletic Field at Lower Merion High School Ardmore Pennsylvania 19003 is named for Arnold Hap Arnold was a dedicated officer in a specialized field and at the same time a human being a warm hearted loyal mercurial flamboyantly belligerent fellow who didn t care who he took on in battle Robert A Lovett November 6 1978 155 Arnold Air Force Base Tennessee and the Arnold Engineering Development Complex are named for Arnold The Air Force Research Laboratory generally recognizes Arnold as the visionary who first articulated that superior research and development capabilities are essential to deterring and winning wars Arnold s ideas underpin the Laboratory s modern day role within the Air Force 12 The cadet social center at the United States Air Force Academy Arnold Hall 156 and the Arnold Hall Community Center at Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio Texas are both named for Arnold 157 The Civil Air Patrol has named an award that accompanies the rank of Cadet Airman First Class after him being known as the Hap Arnold Award The Air Force Association recognizes the most significant contribution by a military member for national defense with its H H Arnold Award 158 The top honorary organization in Air Force ROTC the Arnold Air Society is named for him 159 and The George C Marshall Foundation awards the George C Marshall Henry Hap Arnold ROTC Award annually to the top senior cadet at each college or university with an AFROTC program 160 The Air Force Aid Society which he founded awards a college scholarship in his name to the dependents of Air Force members or retirees 161 On December 21 1944 Arnold was appointed to the rank of General of the Army placing him in the company of Dwight D Eisenhower George Marshall and Douglas MacArthur the only four men to achieve the rank in World War II and along with Omar Bradley one of only five men to achieve the rank since the August 5 1888 death of Philip Sheridan and the only five men to hold the rank as a Five star general 144 The rank was created by an Act of Congress on a temporary basis when Public Law 78 482 was passed on December 14 1944 162 as a temporary rank subject to reversion to permanent rank six months after the end of the war The temporary rank was then declared permanent March 23 1946 by Public Law 333 of the 79th Congress which also awarded full pay and allowances in the grade to those on the retired list 147 148 163 It was created to give the most senior American commanders parity of rank with their British counterparts holding the ranks of field marshal and admiral of the fleet This second General of the Army rank is not the same as the post Civil War era version because of its purpose and five stars In 1967 Hap Arnold was enshrined in the National Aviation Hall of Fame 164 In 1972 Arnold was inducted into the International Air amp Space Hall of Fame 165 On May 18 2006 the Department of the Air Force introduced prototypes of two new service dress uniforms one resembling those worn by Air Service officers prior to 1926 called the Billy Mitchell heritage coat and another resembling the U S Army Air Forces Uniform of World War II and named the Hap Arnold heritage coat 166 In 2007 the Air Force decided in favor of the Hap Arnold prototype 167 but in 2009 the new chief of staff of the Air Force directed that no further effort be made on the Hap Arnold Heritage Coat and the uniform change was suspended indefinitely 168 During the last mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour STS 134 a five star insignia of Arnold s preserved in the National Museum of the United States Air Force was carried into space by shuttle pilot Gregory H Johnson as a commemorative gesture to Arnold s legacy Arnold was then the featured honoree of the museum s National Aviation Day celebration of August 20 2011 when Johnson returned the insignia to the museum 169 In the Great Bend Municipal Airport the B 29 Memorial Plaza display a commemorative plaque for his contribution to the B 29 program The United States Department of Defense high school at the former Wiesbaden Air Base in Wiesbaden Germany was named General H H Arnold High School in 1949 The school was renamed Wiesbaden High School in 2006 after the installation was transferred to the United States Army 170 On November 7 1988 the United States Postal Service released the H H Hap Arnold 65 cent postage stamp bearing the likeness of Arnold in his honor as part of the Great Americans series 171 172 Arnold Heights California is named in his honor as is Arnold Drive a main arterial road running through Sonoma Valley near his ranch Hap Arnold Boulevard 173 the main access road to Tobyhanna Army Depot in Tobyhanna Pennsylvania is named in his honor General Arnold was the class exemplar of the United States Air Force Academy Class of 2012 Film edit In a rare depiction on film Arnold was sympathetically portrayed in the 1954 film The Glenn Miller Story played by Barton MacLane He was portrayed by Robert Brubaker in The Court Martial of Billy Mitchell In 1977 he was again portrayed on film by actor Walter O Miles in the two part opus The Amazing Howard Hughes starring Tommy Lee Jones as Hughes Arnold appeared in a speaking role as himself in Men of the Sky a Technicolor propaganda short made by Warner Brothers and released on July 25 1942 He appears as himself in the first eight minutes of the twenty minute short filmed in May 1942 at Merced Army Air Field California In the short he alights from his C 42 staff transport at the training base to preside at a graduation ceremony for pilots completing their flight training Arnold delivers a short address and speaks with each of four pilots actors Tod Andrews Don DeFore Ray Montgomery and Dave Willock as he pins on their wings 174 175 Summary of service editDates of rank edit All dates of rank sourced from AF Historical Study No 91 and chronologically ordered 43 nbsp Cadet United States Military Academy at West Point New York 1903no insignia of rank in 1907 nbsp Second lieutenant Infantry June 14 1907 nbsp nbsp First lieutenant Infantry April 10 1913 nbsp nbsp Captain Aviation Section Signal Corps ASSC May 20 1916 nbsp nbsp Captain Infantry September 23 1916 nbsp nbsp Major ASSC June 27 1917 nbsp nbsp Colonel Signal Corps National Army August 5 1917 nbsp nbsp Major Infantry Temporary January 15 1918 Permanent Establishment July 1 1920 nbsp nbsp Major Air Service August 11 1920 nbsp nbsp Lieutenant colonel Air Corps February 1 1931 nbsp Brigadier general Temporary March 2 1935 Assistant Chief of Air Corps December 24 1935 Permanent December 2 1940 nbsp nbsp Colonel Air Corps March 1 1936 nbsp Major general Chief of Air Corps September 22 1938 Permanent February 3 1941 nbsp Lieutenant general Army of the United States December 15 1941 nbsp General Army of the United States March 19 1943 nbsp General of the Army Temporary Army of the United States December 21 1944 Permanent March 23 1946Placed on retired list June 30 1946 nbsp General of the Air Force United States Air Force May 7 1949Awards and decorations editSource AF Historical Study No 91 43 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Command PilotArmy Distinguished Service Medal with two bronze oak leaf clusters October 1942 September 1945 October 1945 Legion of Merit Distinguished Flying Cross Air Medal World War I Victory Medal with 2 campaign starsAmerican Defense Service Medal with 1 service star American Campaign Medal European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign MedalWorld War II Victory Medal Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom Grand Cross of the Legion d honneur France Grand Cross of the Order of the Aztec Eagle Mexico Grand Officer of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite Morocco Grand Cross of the Order of the Sun Peru Order of the Army First Class Guatemala Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown Belgium with palmWorld War II War Cross Belgium with bronze palm Grand Cross of the Order of the Southern Cross Brazil Order of Military Merit Grand Cross Brazil Order of Aeronautical Merit Grand Officer Brazil 176 Order of Merit Chile Grand Cross Order of the Cloud and Banner Special Grand Cordon Republic of China Order of Boyaca Grand Officer Colombia Order of Abdon Calderon First Class Ecuador French Croix de guerre 1939 1945 with silver palm Order of George I Grand Cross with swords Greece Military Order of Italy Grand Cross Order of Orange Nassau Knight Grand Cross with swords Netherlands Order of Vasco Nunez de Balboa Grand Cross Panama Order of the Sword Commander Grand Cross Sweden Aviation Cross First Class Peru Order of Military Merit First Class Mexico Military Aviator badgePublished works editNon fiction books edit Arnold Henry Harley 1926 Airmen and Aircraft An Introduction to Aeronautics Ronald Aeronautic Library New York Ronald Press OCLC 567959130 251155552 1942 Greenville Army Flying School Southeast Army Air Forces Training Center Baton Rouge Louisiana Army and Navy Publishing Company of Louisiana OCLC 607347434 1943 1st published 1942 Wings over America Baton Rouge Louisiana Army and Navy Publishing Company of Louisiana OCLC 41450501 1989 1st published 1949 Global Mission Blue Ridge Summit Pennsylvania TAB Books ISBN 9780830640041 Arnold Henry Harley Eaker Ira Clarence 1938 1st published 1936 This Flying Game Second ed New York amp London Funk amp Wagnalls OCLC 316155189 1941 Winged Warfare New York amp London Harper amp Brothers OCLC 602377748 556889569 1942 Army Flyer New York amp London Harper amp Brothers OCLC 602019589 Arnold Henry Harley 2002 Huston John W ed American Airpower Comes of Age General Henry H Hap Arnold s World War II Diaries Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama Air University Press OCLC 50186463 2002 ed American Airpower Comes of Age Vol 1 ISBN 1585660930 Retrieved February 22 2014 2002 ed American Airpower Comes of Age PDF Vol 2 ISBN 1585660949 Retrieved February 22 2014 Children s books edit Arnold Henry Harley 1928 Bill Bruce Becomes an Ace New York A L Burt Co OCLC 2687645 1928 Bill Bruce in the Trans continental Race New York A L Burt Co OCLC 2687574 1928 Bill Bruce and the Pioneer Aviators New York A L Burt Co OCLC 2687604 1928 Bill Bruce on Forest Patrol New York A L Burt Co OCLC 2687623 1928 Bill Bruce the Flying Cadet New York A L Burt Co OCLC 2687671 See also editList of United States Air Force four star generals List of United States Army four star generalsNotes editFootnotes edit Arnold Capt Charles DeF Chandler and Lt Thomas Milling all qualified for the rating on July 5 1912 Milling received the first certificate while Arnold was listed first on War Department General Order Number 39 which was the first list of rated Military Aviators Hennessy 1958 pp 59 229 Milling instructed by Cliff Turpin had already soloed on May 8 with two hours of flight time He had attracted the attention of Orville Wright who went up with him but not Arnold and approved the early solo Also killed in the crash was 2d Lieutenant Leighton W Hazelhurst Jr Ironically Arnold was stationed in the Philippines as an infantry officer two years later when Mauborgne went aloft himself with Arnold s close friend 2nd Lieutenant Bert Dargue and made the first two way communication from the air to the ground a radio station on Corregidor on December 11 1914 On February 9 1914 Lieutenant Henry Post was flying this aircraft near San Diego in an attempt to establish an altitude record As Post spiraled down below 600 feet the aircraft went into a vertical dive similar to Arnold s and crashed into San Diego Bay killing him Hennessy 1958 p 102 Five of the Army s 14 aviators transferred out during 1913 Bee was shortened from Beetle or Beadle a name given to her by her older brothers Although Arnold often used Beadle in his letters to her there is no dispute that she was habitually referred to as Bee by family and associates The lease on the College Park property expired on June 30 and the Army made the decision to not renew it and instead move the school to San Diego California Cameron 1999 p 56 Arnold s interest in aeronautics continued despite his fear of flying During this period he applied to the Army for enrollment in the aeronautical engineering course at MIT but was turned down Heimdahl amp Hurley 1997 p 26 The Aviation Section was in the midst of a turbulent leadership crisis amounting almost to mutiny and Mitchell was seeking mature stable officers to lend it tone Although the law establishing the Aviation Section in 1914 prohibited married officers and those over the age of 30 from being pilots both provisions affecting Arnold a bill rescinding the restrictions was then making its way through Congress Hennessy 1958 p 155 The 1914 Aviation Section law had also reduced all rated officers to JMA not just Arnold because of a provision requiring three years as a JMA before becoming eligible for an MA rating The school commandant Colonel William A Glassford publicly asserted that the flight was unauthorized based on Lahm s denials but Arnold told investigators that he saw the authorization signed by Lahm the source of Glassford s apparent retribution against him Another interpretation of the facts however comes from Huston who attributes the dispute to Arnold s perceived insubordination in participating in an immediate air search for the missing aviators after Lahm and Glassford had issued orders not to do so Glassford s final fitness report on Arnold characterized him as not suited for an independent command and a trouble maker According to Huston Arnold s transfer to Panama was ordered in December 1916 and was actually delayed when he had to remain at Rockwell to give a statement to investigators Hennessy page 192 states that the Panama orders were issued January 9 the day before the missing flight However Coffey s conclusions are those of Arnold himself including the allegation that in compliance with the orders that no search be conducted none occurred for six days causing a near mutiny among the pilots including Arnold a fact confirmed in newspaper accounts of the day Hennessy attributes the delay at least in part to multiple rumors and sightings that allegedly had to be cleared up first but does confirm that more than 30 operational aircraft sat idle at the school for six days and that when a search was finally begun on January only one plane took part flown by Dargue Neither historian acknowledges that the United States government was at the time trying to extract itself from the embarrassing Punitive Expedition without further international incident which was ordered on January 18 Huston s cited source also confuses the 1917 search with a similar one ordered by Arnold in 1922 in which an immediate search did take place making Huston s interpretation dubious Glassford like most of the senior leaders in aviation was a non pilot with a prior association in ballooning He reached the mandatory retirement age of 64 in April 1917 and despite war having just been declared did not receive a waiver but was placed on the retired list Lahm was relieved of duties at the school and sent to the balloon school in Omaha not returning to duties involving airplanes until June 1918 In November 1941 when Arnold was chief the Army Air Forces Lahm reached mandatory retirement age and his subsequent request to return to duty just days later when the United States entered World War II was similarly rejected The issue of improperly awarded flying pay which had given the Army a public black eye only a year before also became part of the controversy when as the result of the flight the student involved field artillery officer Lieutenant Colonel Harry G Bishop who was one of four senior officers being groomed as future executives in the Aviation Section was revealed to have received the pay to which he was not entitled as a student without flying duties Of the four he was the only one who subsequently was not assigned to aviation Hennessy p 191 Information in the World War I era meant the same as military intelligence in modern usage Nine days later Walter G Mike Kilner chief Training Section Air Service of the AEF took that distinction from Arnold becoming a full colonel at the age of 30 years one month and six days The youngest colonel of the Air Service during the war was Edgar S Gorrell chief of staff Air Service AEF on October 28 1918 at the age of 27 years eight months and 25 days Arnold again received an unsatisfactory fitness report as Chief Signal Officer George O Squier placed much of the blame on him for the failures of the Signal Corps Aviation Section which cost Squier control of the air service describing Arnold as inclined to be disloyal Arnold s subsequent boss Gen Kenley saw things differently and recommended Arnold for a Distinguished Service Medal although the Squier fitness report quashed it Spaatz resolved the problem by going to Western Department commanding general Hunter Liggett and having himself transferred to Mather Field Haller 1994 p 17 Major Benjamin D Foulois was also transferred on this date from the Signal Corps Air Service News Letter Vol IV No 35 September 20 1920 Ironically the accident involving his fingers occurred during a visit by his father a physician who reattached the fingertips As commanding officer of the 16th O S Arnold was dual hatted as Aviation Officer to the inactive 7th Division demonstration unit for the Cavalry School until August 15 1927 and the Aviation Officer of the 2nd Cavalry Division until August 1 1928 Clay 2010 pp 1270 1271 The activity of which Patrick had actual knowledge and for which he disciplined Arnold had nothing to do with use of official resources to promote Mitchell s views Patrick himself had encouraged Arnold to lobby for support of Patrick s version of the pending Air Corps Act The mailing for which Patrick attempted to cashier Arnold was to all Reserve pilots encouraging them to contact their congressmen to support Patrick s version of the bill and this embarrassing circumstance led the Chief of the Air Service to back down when Arnold called his bluff Davis page 13 The offer came from naval aviation pioneer John K Montgomery at the end of July 1927 when Arnold was already eligible for retirement at half pay Montgomery was president of American International Airways a firm he had founded with financing originally intended to create Pan Am for Arnold AIA s landing rights in Cuba had been transferred to Juan Trippe putting together the companies including AIA that would become Pan Am in June 1928 The books were titled Bill Bruce and the Pioneer Aviators Bill Bruce The Flying Cadet Bill Bruce Becomes an Ace Bill Bruce on Border Patrol Bill Bruce in the Transcontinental Race and Bill Bruce on Forest Patrol New York A L Burt 1928 Summerall had been Arnold s mathematics instructor at West Point King had also been on the court that tried Billy Mitchell Arnold became close friends with Jack L Warner and Donald Douglas and began cultivating a relationship with the California Institute of Technology Publicity of the flight was the first major step taken to repair the image of the Air Corps caused by the Air Mail fiasco The flight was the second major air expedition to Alaska The first covering the 8 690 miles between Mitchel Field New York and Nome was flown between July 15 and October 20 1920 in four DH 4s led by Captain St Clair Streett for which they too earned the Mackay Trophy Major General Hugh A Drum a key member of the General Staff in its clashes with the Air Corps ignored Arnold s recommendations Dern favored Lieutenant Colonel Mike Kilner the officer who in World War I had been the Army s youngest full colonel Calling Arnold s record spotted Dern nevertheless recommended him to Craig Although having a known fondness for White Horse Scotch whisky especially when mixed as an Old Fashioned cocktail Arnold s intake had been sharply curtailed since the early 1920s by stomach ulcers Haller 1994 p 17 Steve Early s disdain stemmed from assignment in 1926 as Washington correspondent for the Associated Press during Arnold s problems with Patrick while Pa Watson held a personal dislike of Arnold and had been a West Point classmate of Andrews Unfortunately Kilner was compelled to take a medical retirement less than a year later due to a previously undiagnosed heart condition which apparently so distressed him that he committed suicide in 1940 Andrews candidacy for the Air Corps chief position was led by his chief of staff Colonel Hugh J Knerr who had been Arnold s executive officer on the Alaska flight The DFC for Arnold coming at a time when his support for the B 17 had become lukewarm embittered Knerr who continued his efforts to unseat Arnold until Andrews death in 1943 Andrews himself took no part in the controversy Although his relationship with Arnold remained cordial Andrews was not reappointed as commander of GHQAF when his term expired in March 1939 and Knerr was coerced to retire at the same time However when Andrews asked Arnold to return Knerr to active duty in 1941 Arnold agreed and later recommended him to head the VIII Service Command in England Development of such a bomber required five years at minimum of which Arnold was well aware Known as the Project A bomber with a tactical radius of at least 2 000 miles Kilner s board resulted in the end of the R amp D moratorium in August 1939 and a request from Arnold in November that the project be approved Both the B 32 Dominator and the B 29 resulted from this critical policy reversal with the B 32 ironically being the first to fly Arnold got himself into the president s doghouse early In January 1939 his pique over sub rosa negotiations between the French Morgenthau and the U S Navy over an Air Corps project the Douglas DB 7 bomber conducted without Air Corps knowledge led him to ill advised public criticism of the administration before Congress after the prototype crashed during flight testing with a French Air Force observer on board Roosevelt had decided that all production from new aircraft plants would go to the British with the result that while the British acquired nearly 2 000 new aircraft by mid 1941 the Air Corps received only 1 000 in the same period Arnold protested loudly claiming that the lack of aircraft needed to train itself during its expansion would cripple the Army Air Corps Perret 1997 pages 44 45 Secretary Morgenthau s control of aircraft production declined after January 1941 when Harry Hopkins became Roosevelt s closest confidant Another indication of Arnold s disfavor with the president was that his promotion to permanent brigadier general was delayed until December 1940 which placed him fourth in seniority among those promoted from the Air Corps behind H Conger Pratt Andrews and James E Chaney The other two nominees were Courtney H Hodges as Chief of Infantry and William N Porter as Chief of Chemical Warfare Service At the time of the trip to Britain Quesada was chief of the Foreign Language Section Intelligence Division Arnold s promotion to permanent major general was approved by the Senate with date of effect retroactive to February 2 1941 preceding that of Pratt by a month and making Arnold first in seniority within the Air Corps The conference also saw one of the first instances of Arnold s legendary propensity to relieve from command a subordinate who displeased him The newly appointed commander of the Newfoundland Base Command Brigadier General Henry W Swede Harms so irritated Arnold with petty complaints and excuses that Arnold had him relieved of command reduced to his permanent grade of colonel and sent to Pendleton AAF Oregon an Air Service Command base where he became base commander Harms had been the Army s 37th pilot and an airman since 1915 and the relief spelled the end of his career He passed through a series of backwater billets the last of which was command of the 21st Bombardment Wing in Kansas a personnel processing organization that had become a dumping ground for out of favor senior officers before dying in June 1945 at the age of 57 Huston 2002 p 257 note 69 Arnold had known Fickel since they were lieutenants together in the 29th and 13th Infantry Regiments in the Philippines The wing commander of the 58th Bomb Wing acted as interim commander until LeMay s arrival at the end of August Arnold demonstrated that he had learned political savvy from his experiences with FDR when soon after sacking Swede Harms he relieved Brigadier General Sue Clagett from command of the Philippine Department Air Force Instead of choosing the replacement himself he allowed the imperious Douglas MacArthur to select it from a choice of three candidates Ironically Fickel was also one of the candidates and was himself relieved from command six months after not being selected Huston states that King rarely spoke to Arnold at meetings instead directing air matters to Marshall Arnold also presented the wings of the 208 graduates commissioned in the Air Corps including Robin Olds but Bruce Arnold was medically disqualified from being a pilot The friend was Brig Gen Eugene H Beebe who had returned to Washington to become caretaker commander of the new Continental Air Forces Beebe s first assignment as a newly minted lieutenant and aviator was under Arnold with the 16th Observation Squadron at Fort Riley in 1929 Arnold had been Beebe s mentor since 1932 when the lieutenant was assigned to the 31st Bomb Squadron at March Field often flying together and using Beebe as a junior officer on the 1st Wing staff In October 1938 when he was named chief of the Air Corps Arnold was told he could no longer fly himself and chose Captain Beebe as his personal pilot a position Beebe held for the next four years rising to colonel In the summer of 1942 recalling his own disappointment at never serving overseas in World War I Arnold approved Beebe s request for combat duty which resulted in command of the 308th Bomb Group a B 24 unit Beebe trained and led in China with the Fourteenth Air Force From Belgium the Grand Cross with Palm Order of the Crown and Croix de Guerre with Palm From Brazil Brazilian Pilot Wings Grand Commander National Order of the Southern Cross and Grand Cross Order of Military Merit From Chile Grand Cross of the Order of Merit From the Republic of China Order of the Cloud and Banner with Grand Cordon From Colombia Grand Officer Order of Boyaca From Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakian Pilot Wings From Ecuador Order of Abdon Calderon First Class From France Croix de Guerre with Palm and Grand Cross Legion of Honor From Great Britain Knight Grand Cross of the Military Division Order of the Bath From Greece Grand Cross of the Order of George I with Swords From Guatemala Cross of Military Merit First Class From Italy Grand Cross of the Military Order of Italy From Mexico Order of Military Merit First Class and Grand Cross Order of the Aztec Eagle From Morocco Grand Cross of the Order of Quissam Alaouite From the Netherlands Knight Grand Cross with Swords Order of Orange Nassau From Panama Grand Cross of Chile First Class and Grand Cross Order of Vasco Nunez de Balboa From Peru Grand Commander Order of the Sun and Cross of Aviation First Class From Sweden Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Sword From Yugoslavia Yugoslavian Pilot Wings Arnold was assisted in the endeavor by William R Laidlaw who had been a public relations officer with the Eighth Air Force in England and recently established his credentials as a writer collaborating on the screenplay for the film Command Decision Because poor eyesight disqualified him as a pilot Hank Arnold was commissioned in the Coast Artillery Corps and commanded an AAA automatic weapons battalion in Italy After 1945 the remainder of his career was as a Field Artillery officer Bruce Arnold entered the United States Naval Academy s Class of 1942 but dropped out in June 1939 He enlisted in the Cavalry took and passed a competitive exam for entrance to West Point and entered the Class of 1944 in July 1940 His class was accelerated because of the war and graduated as the Class of June 1943 Because of poor eyesight he too went into the Coast Artillery Corps becoming an antiaircraft battery commander on Okinawa by the end of the war Bruce resolved a 20 year resentment of his father and transferred to the United States Air Force in March 1949 Col David Arnold was the only son to spend his entire career in the USAF but like his brothers was not rated Citations edit a b c Henry Harley Hap Arnold Arlington National Cemetery 2011 Retrieved January 13 2011 a b c Huston 2002 p 5 a b Hennessy 1958 p 54 a b c d e Daso 2013 Daso 1996 see note 1 for a detailed discussion of the chronology and sources of Arnold s nicknames Coffey 1982 pp 12 13 Coffey 1982 p 15 The History of Lower Merion High School LMH Aliumni Association 2011 Archived from the original on October 19 2010 Retrieved January 9 2011 Coffey 1982 pp 15 16 Huston 2002 p 1 Daso 1996 has an addenda table showing that his demerits tripled and his conduct standing doubled during his first class year a b c d e f g Daso 1996 Coffey 1982 pp 26 27 30 Davis1997 p 2 Coffey 1982 pp 32 33 Davis 1997 p 3 Coffey 1982 pp 38 39 Coffey 1982 p 39 Walker amp Wickam 1986 p 12 Coffey 1982 p 44 Huston 2002 p 109 Cameron 1999 p 33 Hennessy 1958 pp 59 229 236 Coffey 1982 p 47 Coffey 1982 p 48 Hennessy 1958 p 57 Coffey 1982 p 52 Coffey 1982 pp 48 49 Coffey 1982 p 51 a b Kindy David March 10 2021 How Gen Henry Hap Arnold the Architect of American Air Power Overcame His Fear of Flying Smithsonian Hennessy 1958 pp 54 57 Hennessy 1958 p 62 Coffey 1982 pp 53 55 Hennessy 1958 p 72 Coffey 1982 pp 57 62 68 Coffey 1982 pp 64 66 Huston 2002 p 6 Coffey 1982 pp 69 70 75 Huston 2002 p 7 Coffey 1982 p 73 Coffey 1982 p 76 Coffey 1982 pp 80 83 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Fogerty 1953 Davis 1997 p 6 Coffey 1982 pp 84 86 Huston 2002 pp 8 9 Watson 2002 p 45 Davis 1997 p 8 Huston 2002 p 10 Coffey 1982 pp 91 92 Tate 1998 pp 5 6 Tate 1998 p 8 Tate 1998 p 18 Coffey 1982 pp 94 97 Haller 1994 p 15 Coffey 1982 pp 102 103 Aero Club of America 1914 Flying v ISSN 0015 4806 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Haller 1994 p 33 Coffey 1982 p 102 Coffey 1982 p 107 Coffey 1982 p 109 Huston 2002 pp 13 14 Coffey 1982 pp 112 115 Coffey 1982 pp 122 124 Clay 2010 p 1384 Huston 2002 p 20 Coffey 1982 p 126 Huston 2002 p 23 Hofmann 2006 pp 102 103 Coffey 1982 p 130 Coffey 1982 pp 130 131 Coffey 1982 pp 132 133 Huston 2002 p 25 Coffey 1982 pp 142 143 Clay 2010 p 1242 Coffey 1982 pp 147 150 Huston 2002 pp 27 28 Davis 1997 p 15 Coffey 1982 p 152 Shiner 1997 pp 122 123 Huston 2002 p 33 Martin B 10 Fact Sheet National Museum of the United States Air Force Archived from the original on December 20 2010 Retrieved January 11 2011 Coffey 1982 p 157 Craven amp Cate 1948 pp 31 33 Rice 2004 p 134 Coffey 1982 pp 165 166 Huston 2002 pp 47 49 Huston 2002 pp 47 51 Coffey 1982 pp 178 180 Huston 2002 p 53 Herman 2012 pp 289 291 Cate 1945 pp 21 22 Daso 1997 see note 21 Daso 1997 Goss 1954 pp 17 18 Greer 1985 p 113 Craven amp Cate 1948 pp 17 18 Huston 2002 pp 85 82 Tate 1998 pp 171 172 Coffey 1982 pp 206 207 Huston 2002 pp 132 135 Huston 2002 pp 174 176 Huston 2002 pp 208 209 Nalty 1997a pp 179 180 Goss 1954 pp 24 25 Griffith 1999 pp 75 78 Nalty 1997a p 183 Goss 1954 pp 28 30 50 Griffith 1999 p 95 Women Airforce Service Pilots Digital Archive Gateway to Women s History Texas Women s University Retrieved December 1 2016 Coffey 1982 pp 245 247 Coffey 1982 pp 299 300 305 307 Coffey 1982 pp 315 316 323 324 Coffey 1982 pp 328 329 Coffey 1982 p 257 Coffey 1982 p 250 Coffey 1982 p 271 Coffey 1982 p 344 Coffey 1982 p 347 Cate 1954 pp 37 38 a b c Coffey 1982 pp 329 333 Herman 2012 pp 313 314 Coffey 1982 pp 333 334 339 340 Cate 1954 pp 103 125 Griffith 1999 pp 189 193 a b Coffey 1982 pp 337 339 Coffey 1982 p 300 Coffey 1982 pp 220 226 Huston 2002 p 345 Coffey 1982 pp 287 295 Coffey 1982 pp 316 322 Coffey 1982 pp 352 355 a b Coffey 1982 pp 357 360 Coffey 1982 pp 360 363 Coffey 1982 pp 252 254 Huston 2002 pp 359 360 Coffey 1982 pp 291 291 Coffey 1982 pp 297 300 Coffey 1982 pp 303 304 Coffey 1982 pp 334 336 Coffey 1982 pp 348 349 Coffey 1982 p 355 Cullum 1950 p 118 Cullum 1950 p 117 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 78 482 a b U S Army Center of Military History January 31 2021 U S Army Five Star Generals U S Army Center of Military History Retrieved May 26 2021 History and Mission RAND Corporation 2011 Retrieved January 12 2011 Coffey 1982 p 366 a b Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 79 333 a b 79th U S Congress March 23 1946 Public Law 333 79th Congress Retrieved May 26 2021 via Naval History and Heritage Command Coffey 1982 pp 1 3 Coffey 1982 p 370 Watson 2002 p 46 Coffey 1982 p 211 Coffey 1982 pp 174 195 196 and 305 Coffey 1982 p 376 Coffey 1982 p 337 Arnold Hall A Great Place to Entertain U S Air Force Academy Retrieved May 26 2021 Arnold Hall Community Center Lackland AFB Force Support Squadron 2011 Archived from the original on November 7 2009 Retrieved January 14 2011 National Aerospace amp Special Awards Air Force Association 2011 Archived from the original on December 26 2010 Retrieved January 14 2011 The Early History of Arnold Air Society Arnold Air Society 2011 Archived from the original on May 15 2011 Retrieved January 14 2011 Marshall Arnold Air Force ROTC Award Seminar George C Marshall Foundation 2011 Archived from the original on February 5 2011 Retrieved January 14 2011 2011 2012 Air Force Aid Society General Henry H Arnold Education Grant Program Air Force Aid Society 2011 Archived from the original on December 23 2010 Retrieved January 14 2011 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 78 482 This law allowed only 75 of pay and allowances to the grade for those on the retired list The retirement provisions were also applied to the World War II Commandant of the Marine Corps and the Commandant of the Coast Guard both of whom held four star rank Enshrinee Henry Hap Arnold nationalaviation org Retrieved January 20 2023 Sprekelmeyer 2006 New service dress prototypes pique interest Inside AF mil Accessed April 6 2016 New service coat to better represent Airmen set for testing Staff Sgt J G Buzanowski Inside AF mil July 19 2007 Accessed April 16 2016 New uniforms Comfortable functional are goals Archived April 22 2016 at the Wayback Machine Col Steve Gray Inside AF mil May 15 2009 Accessed April 6 2016 Carnes Bryan D August 3 2011 Family Day program to honor Hap Arnold on Aug 20 Air Force Print News Today Archived from the original on October 17 2012 Retrieved August 20 2011 Wiesbaden High School Wiesbaden High School 2011 Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved January 14 2011 Scott catalog 2192 Publication 528 Veterans and the Military on Stamps Archived January 27 2006 at the Wayback Machine Contact Us Douglas Cunningham Imaging Imagining Air Force Identity Hap Arnold Warner Bros and the Formation of the First Motion Picture Unit The Moving Image 5 1 Spring 2005 Reprinted by Academia Retrieved January 12 2016 Men of the Sky at Internet Movie Data Base Retrieved January 12 2016 American Airpower Comes of Age General Henry H Hap Arnold s World War II Diaries PDF May 4 1945 Retrieved November 5 2019 References editCameron Rebecca Hancock 1999 Training to Fly Military Flight Training 1907 1945 Washington D C Air Force History and Museums Program OCLC 606500804 Cate James L 1954 The Pacific Matterhorn to Nagasaki June 1944 to August 1945 PDF The Army Air Forces in World War II Vol V Air Force Historical Studies Office Retrieved May 26 2021 Clay Steven E 2010 The Services Air Service Engineers and Special Troops Organizations PDF US Army Order of Battle 1919 1941 Vol 3 Command and General Staff College Kansas Combat Studies Institute Press ISBN 978 0 9841901 4 0 Archived from the original PDF on August 13 2011 Retrieved September 20 2011 Coffey Thomas M 1982 Hap The Story of the U S Air Force and the Man Who Built It General Henry H Hap Arnold Viking Press ISBN 0 670 36069 4 Craven Wesley Frank Cate James Lea 1948 The Army Air Arm Between Two Wars 1919 39 In Craven Wesley F Cate James L eds Plans and Early Operations January 1939 to August 1942 PDF The Army Air Forces in World War II Vol I Air Force Historical Studies Office Retrieved August 11 2012 Cullum George W 1950 Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point New York Vol IX 1940 1950 West Point New York USMA Digital Library Daso Dik A 1996 Origins of Airpower Hap Arnold s Early Career in Aviation Technology 1903 1935 PDF Airpower Journal X Winter Retrieved January 7 2011 Part I 1997 Origins of Airpower Hap Arnold s Command Years and Aviation Technology 1936 1945 PDF Airpower Journal XI Fall Retrieved January 12 2011 Part II 2013 Arnold s Evolution Air Force Magazine Vol 96 no 9 Retrieved May 26 2021 Davis Richard G 1997 Hap Henry H Arnold Military Aviator PDF Bolling AFB Washington D C Air Force History and Museums Program ISBN 0 16 049071 5 Goss William A 1954 Origins of the Army Air Forces In Craven Wesley F Cate James L eds Men and Planes PDF The Army Air Forces in World War II Vol VI University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 912799 03 X Retrieved May 26 2021 Griffith Charles 1999 The Quest Haywood Hansell and American Strategic Bombing in World War II PDF Maxwell Air Force Base Air University Press ISBN 1 58566 069 8 Retrieved January 12 2011 Haller Stephen A 1994 The Last Word in Airfields A Special History Study of Crissy Field Presidio of San Francisco California PDF San Francisco California National Park Service Archived from the original PDF on January 14 2014 Herman Arthur 2012 Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II New York Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 Hofmann George F 2006 Through Mobility We Conquer The Mechanization of the U S Cavalry Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2403 4 Huston John W 2002 Biography In Huston John W ed American Airpower Comes of Age General Henry H Hap Arnold s World War II Diaries Air University Press ISBN 1 58566 093 0 Retrieved May 26 2021 Huston s introductory biography is 108 pages in length and is a detailed account of Arnold s life both professional and personal to 1941 Nalty Bernard C ed 1997 Winged Shield Winged Sword A History of the United States Air Force Vol I 1907 1950 Washington D C Air Force History and Museums Program United States Air Force ISBN 0 16 049009 X Retrieved May 26 2021 Heimdahl William C Hurley Alfred F The Roots of U S Military Aviation In Nalty 1997 Nalty Bernard C 1997a Reaction to the War in Europe In Nalty 1997 Shiner John F The Coming of the GHQ Air Force 1925 1935 In Nalty 1997 Rice Rondall Ravor 2004 The Politics of Air Power From Confrontation to Cooperation in Army Aviation Civil Military Relations University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 3960 2 Sprekelmeyer Linda ed 2006 These We Honor The International Aerospace Hall of Fame Donning Co Publishers ISBN 978 1 57864 397 4 Tate James P 1998 The Army and its Air Corps Army Policy Toward Aviation 1919 1941 Air University Press ISBN 0 16 061379 5 Walker Lois F Wickam Shelby Z 1986 Part I Huffman Prairie 1904 1916 From Huffman Prairie to the Moon A History of Wright Patterson Air Force Base Office of History 2750th Air Base Wing Wright Patterson AFB ISBN 0 16 002204 5 Watson George M Jr 2002 Arnold Henry H Hap 1886 1950 In Boyne Walter J ed Air Warfare An International Encyclopedia Vol I Entries A L ABC CLIO p 45 ISBN 1 57607 345 9 USAF Historical Studies No 89 Greer Thomas H 1985 The Development of Air Doctrine in the Army Air Arm 1917 1941 PDF Report Maxwell Air Force Base Center For Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 25 0 OCLC 12558056 USAF historical studies no 89 Retrieved November 1 2016 No 91 Fogerty Robert P 1953 Arnold Henry Harley Biographical Data on Air Force General Officers 1917 1952 Volume 1 A thru L PDF Report Maxwell Air Force Base USAF Historical Division USAF historical studies no 91 Retrieved November 1 2016 No 98 Hennessy Juliette A 1958 The United States Army Air Arm April 1861 to April 1917 Report Maxwell Air Force Base USAF Historical Division ISBN 0 912799 34 X OCLC 12553968 USAF historical studies no 98 Retrieved November 1 2016 No 112 Cate James L 1945 History of the Twentieth Air Force Genesis PDF Report Maxwell Air Force Base USAF Historical Division USAF historical studies no 112 Retrieved November 1 2016 Further reading editArnold Henry H 1989 First published 1949 Global Mission Reprint ed McGraw Hill Publishing ISBN 0 8306 4004 5 Huston John W 1979 The Wartime Leadership of Hap Arnold In Hurley Alfred F Erhart Robert C eds Air Power and Air Warfare pp 168 85 Jordan Jonathan W 2015 American Warlords How Roosevelt s High Command Led America to Victory in World War II NAL Caliber ISBN 9780451414571 Perret Geoffrey 1997 Winged Victory The U S Army Air Corps During World War II Random House ISBN 978 0375750472 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry H Arnold nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Henry H Arnold NMUSAF fact sheet Gen Henry H Hap Arnold General Henry H Arnold official USAF biography General of the Air Force Henry H Hap Arnold Air University biography Henry H Arnold at Early Birds of Aviation Arlington National Cemetery The short film Big Picture The Hap Arnold Story is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive Arnold Air Society biography National Aviation Hall of Fame enshrinement page Archived August 5 2011 at the Wayback Machine Works by Henry H Arnold at Project Gutenberg Newspaper clippings about Henry H Arnold in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWMilitary officesPreceded byMajor General Oscar M Westover Chief of Air Corps1938 1941 Succeeded byMaj Gen George H BrettPreceded byNew title Commanding GeneralUnited States Army Air Forces1941 1946 Succeeded byGeneral Carl A Spaatz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry H Arnold amp oldid 1179874460, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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