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Kenneth Whiting

Kenneth Whiting (July 22, 1881 – April 24, 1943) was a United States Navy officer who was a pioneer in submarines and is best known for his lengthy career as a pioneering naval aviator. During World War I, he commanded the first American military force to arrive in Europe for combat. After the war, he was instrumental in development of the aircraft carrier in the United States, where he sometimes is known as the U.S. Navy's "father of the aircraft carrier." He was involved in some way in the design or construction of five of the first six U.S. Navy aircraft carriers, and served as acting commanding officer of the first carrier to enter U.S. Navy service and as executive officer of the first two American carriers. In the earliest days of the U.S. Navy's development of an aircraft carrier force, he led many shipboard innovations still in use aboard carriers today.

Kenneth Whiting
Commander Kenneth Whiting aboard the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga (CV-3) during his 1927–1929 tour as her executive officer.
Born(1881-07-22)July 22, 1881
Stockbridge, Massachusetts, US
DiedApril 24, 1943(1943-04-24) (aged 61)
Bethesda, Maryland, US
Buried
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1905–1943
RankCaptain
Commands held
Battles/wars
Awards

Birth and early career edit

Whiting was born in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, on July 22, 1881, but moved to Larchmont, New York, at an early age. Larchmont remained his residence for the rest of his life.[4] He was appointed as a naval cadet on September 7, 1900, and became a midshipman from New York at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, in 1901. After graduating from the Naval Academy on January 30, 1905,[5] he reported aboard the armored cruiser USS West Virginia. After serving the requisite sea duty, he was commissioned as an ensign on either January 31, 1907[6] or February 25, 1908, according to different sources.[7]

In June 1907, Whiting detached from West Virginia and transferred to the gunboat USS Concord in the United States Asiatic Fleet. He transferred again, to the steamer USS Supply, in May 1908.[8]

Submarine service edit

After a brief stint aboard Concord again from August to October 1908,[9] Whiting volunteered for submarine duty[10] and was reassigned to command of the submarine USS Shark at Naval Station Cavite in the Philippine Islands to oversee her fitting-out. He then assumed command of the submarine USS Porpoise at Cavite on November 20, 1908.[11]

On April 15, 1909, Whiting took Porpoise out for what his crew of six thought would be a routine run. After Porpoise leveled off in Manila Bay at a depth of 20 feet (6.1 meters), Whiting informed his crew that he was convinced that a man could escape from a submarine through a torpedo tube and that he intended to test the idea on himself. He squeezed into Porpoise's 18-inch (460-mm) tube and clung to the crossbar which stiffened the outer torpedo tube door as the crew closed the inner door. When the crew opened the outer door and seawater rushed in, Whiting hung onto the crossbar, which drew his elbows out of the tube's mouth, and then muscled his way out using his hands and arms. After 77 seconds, he was free of the submarine and swam to the surface; Porpoise soon surfaced and recovered him. Reluctant to speak about the incident in public – in Porpoise's log that day, Whiting simply commented, "Whiting went through the torpedo tube, boat lying in water in normal condition, as an experiment..." – he nevertheless informed his flotilla commander, Lieutenant Guy W. S. Castle, who submitted a report on how the feat had been accomplished.[12]

In September 1910, Whiting detached from Porpoise. He next took command of the Atlantic Fleet submarine USS Tarpon. In January 1911, he reported to the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in Newport News, Virginia, to fit out the new submarine USS Seal, which was renamed G-1 later that year. He became the first commanding officer of G-1 when she was commissioned on October 28, 1912.[13]

Naval aviation edit

In 1910, Whiting applied for flight training by Glenn Curtiss and talked his friend from the submarine service Theodore G. Ellyson into applying as well. Ellyson was accepted and went on to become Naval Aviator No. 1 in 1911, but Whiting was not and continued his submarine duties.[14] On June 29, 1914, however, Whiting finally began his career in naval aviation, the field in which he was to make his name as a true pioneer, when he reported to the Wright Company at Dayton, Ohio, to learn to fly.[15] The last naval officer to take flight training from Orville Wright personally,[16] Whiting was designated Naval Aviator No. 16 on September 6, 1914.[17]

Whiting then became officer-in-charge of the Naval Aeronautic Station at Pensacola, Florida. He and fellow naval aviator Henry C. Mustin worked together on seaplane designs and filed a patent application for the design of a "hydroaeroplane" on October 27, 1916.[18] In November 1916, he transferred to the armored cruiser USS Washington – renamed USS Seattle on December 1, 1916 – and took command of a unit of seaplanes attached to the ship.[19]

Whiting would later become a member of the Early Birds of Aviation, an organization founded in 1928 and dedicated to the history of pilots who learned to fly before December 17, 1916.

World War I edit

The United States entered World War I on April 6, 1917, and Whiting was selected to command the 1st Naval Air Unit (or First Aeronautic Detachment) and assigned to the collier USS Neptune in May 1917. The unit's seven officers and 122 enlisted men crossed the Atlantic Ocean to France aboard Neptune and the collier USS Jupiter to become the first American military unit to debark in Europe for combat, with Jupiter arriving at Pauillac on June 5, 1917, and Neptune at St. Nazaire on June 8, 1917.[20][21][22]

With only vague guidance and, at first, no aircraft, Whiting set about establishing a European presence for U.S. Navy aviation.[23] In June 1917, he selected Dunkirk as the site for a U.S. Navy air base,[24] laying the groundwork for the establishment in 1918 of the U.S. Navy's Northern Bombing Group.[25] He also instructed French pilots.

On June 1 or July 20, 1918, according to different sources, Whiting, by now promoted to lieutenant commander, took command of Naval Air Stations 14 and 15 at RNAS Killingholme, England.[26][27]

For his World War I service, Whiting was awarded the Navy Cross "for exceptionally meritorious service in a duty of great responsibility,"[28] and France awarded him the Legion of Honor (Chevalier).[29]

Interwar aircraft carrier advocacy edit

Whiting sometimes is referred to as the U.S. Navy's "father of the aircraft carrier." He had begun agitating for the U.S. Navy development of what were then called "plane carriers" in the spring of 1916,[30] and as early as March 1917 he had proposed to United States Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels that the Navy acquire a ship with an aircraft catapult and a flight deck, prompting the first serious U.S. Navy consideration of the acquisition of any kind of aviation ship since the American Civil War of 1861–1865.[31] The United States Department of the Navy rejected his proposal on June 20, 1917.[32] In the years between World War I and World War II, however, Whiting would be instrumental in the construction of five of the U.S. Navy's first six aircraft carriers and serve as executive officer of its first two.[33] He also served as acting commanding officer of its first carrier at a time when the United States was experimenting with many aspects of the operation of aircraft carriers and their aircraft.

Returning to the United States after World War I, Whiting was assigned to the Chief of Naval Operations' Office of Naval Aviation in Washington, D.C., in 1919.[34] Testifying along with other leading naval aviators, including Henry C. Mustin and John Henry Towers, before the General Board of the United States Navy about the need for U.S. Navy aircraft carriers, Whiting was partially responsible for the General Board's April 1919 recommendation that the collier USS Jupiter be converted into the U.S. Navy's first aircraft carrier. On July 11, 1919, the United States Congress authorized Jupiter's conversion into the carrier, which later would be named USS Langley (CV-1).[35][36][37]

Later in 1919, after the battleship USS Texas (BB-35) experimented successfully with the use of aircraft to spot her gunfire and found that the aircraft spotters allowed her greater accuracy, Whiting testified before the General Board, attesting that aircraft spotting could increase the accuracy of ship gunnery by up to 200 percent.[38] The success of the experiments led the Navy to embark floatplanes aboard all of its battleships and cruisers.[39]

On September 1, 1921, Whiting transferred to the Navy's newly established Bureau of Aeronautics.[40] There he continued his advocacy for an American aircraft carrier force. In January 1922, he said, "The Langley when commissioned will provide our Navy with an experimental ' carrier' which, while not ideal, will be sufficiently serviceable to conduct any experiment required for the design of future 'carriers' and for the development of naval aerial tactics, and for the development of the various types of aircraft...for these last are also lacking in our Navy, due to concentrating on anti-submarine work during the War [i.e., World War I]. That 'carriers' will be successful, and an absolute necessity to any well-equipped navy in the future, there is not the slightest doubt in my mind. We are asking this Congress for the first properly designed 'carrier.' It will take from three to four years to build it. Will they give it to us?"[41] The "properly designed" carriers Whiting wanted first began to appear in 1927, with the commissioning of USS Saratoga (CV-3) and USS Lexington (CV-2).

USS Langley (CV-1) edit

Whiting reported aboard Langley on March 20, 1922, the day of her commissioning, as her first executive officer, also serving on an acting basis as her first commanding officer and thus becoming the first person to command a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier.[42] Langley was far too slow to keep up with the battle fleet,[43] and her main purpose was to serve as a laboratory for the exploration of the new naval warfare discipline of aircraft carrier operations, with her personnel and those of her embarked air squadrons experimenting to discover what practices worked best.[44] Flying a Vought VE-7, Lieutenant Virgil C. Griffin made the first takeoff from an American carrier from Langley on October 17, 1922, and Lieutenant Commander Godfrey Chevalier made the first landing on October 26, 1922, in an Aeromarine 39B.[45] On November 18, 1922, Whiting himself made the world's first catapult launch of an aircraft from an aircraft carrier while aboard Langley, piloting a Naval Aircraft Factory PT[46][47] while Langley was at anchor in Virginia's York River.[48]

Whiting was credited with establishing many basic tenets of carrier aviation, largely worked out during his first Langley tour. He established the first pilot ready rooms aboard Langley.[49] He had a hand-cranked movie camera film every landing on the carrier to aid in the evaluation of landing techniques,[50] and had a darkroom and photography laboratory installed on board to allow the landing films to be developed at sea.[51] Langley's pilots had no signaling system with which shipboard personnel could assist them in landing,[52] so when not flying himself, Whiting observed all landings from the aft port corner of Langley's flight deck.[53] where he was visible to pilots in critical touchdown attitudes when the nose of the aircraft might obscure their view straight ahead as they approached the ship to land. Pilots found Whiting's body language helpful and suggested an experienced pilot be assigned to occupy that position as a "landing signal officer" or "landing safety officer" (LSO), using signals to guide them to safe landings. In an advanced form, the LSO concept survives aboard aircraft carriers to this day.[54] Whiting also was influential in the U.S. Navy's decision to make pilot qualification a requirement for command of an aircraft carrier.[55]

Later duties edit

In July 1924, Whiting returned to duty at the Bureau of Aeronautics to serve as its assistant chief. Later he became head of the Aircraft Carriers Division.[56] In September 1926, he reported to the Brown-Boveri Electric Company in Camden, New Jersey, to oversee the construction of the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga (CV-3), which was commissioned in 1927 as the second American aircraft carrier and the first one capable of operating with the battle fleet. He became her first executive officer on November 16, 1927, remaining in that position until May 1929.[57]

Whiting was promoted to captain on July 1, 1929. He became aide and chief of staff to Commander, Aircraft Squadrons, Battle Fleet, in September 1929.[58]

In August 1930, Whiting took command of Naval Air Station Norfolk at Norfolk, Virginia. In June 1932, he departed Norfolk for Newport, Rhode Island, where he attended the Naval War College and received instruction at the Naval Torpedo Station.[59] He returned to USS Langley as her commanding officer on June 15, 1933, leaving her in December 1933 to fit out the new aircraft carrier USS Ranger (CV-4) at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company. He left Ranger in 1934 to assist in developing plans for the new aircraft carriers USS Yorktown (CV-5) and USS Enterprise (CV-6). In June 1934 he returned to USS Saratoga to serve as her commanding officer.[60]

Whiting left Saratoga in July 1935 and next became Commander, Aircraft Squadrons, Battle Fleet, serving simultaneously as commander of Fleet Air Base Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii. In September 1937, he became commanding officer of Patrol Wing 2, remaining in that position until June 3, 1938.[61]

On July 14, 1939, Whiting reported for duty as General Inspector of Naval Aircraft, Eastern Division, in the Third Naval District at New York City. He was still in this position when he was placed on the retirement list on June 30, 1940. However, instead of retiring, he was retained on active duty.[62]

World War II edit

After the United States entered World War II on December 7, 1941, Whiting continued his general inspector duties until February 19, 1943, when he took command of Naval Air Station New York in Brooklyn, New York, serving also as District Aviation Officer, Third Naval District. He held these posts until his death. [63]

Death edit

Whiting was suffering from pneumonia and hospitalized at the National Naval Medical Center[64] in Bethesda, Maryland, when he died of a heart attack on April 24, 1943. Among the honorary pallbearers at his funeral in Larchmont, New York, on April 27, 1943, were Undersecretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal, Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics Rear Admiral John S. McCain, Sr., Rear Admiral George D. Murray, and Harry Frank Guggenheim.[65]

In accordance with Whiting's wishes, his ashes were buried at sea off the Execution Rocks[66] in the deepest part of Long Island Sound.[67]

Commemoration edit

Naval Air Station Whiting Field near Milton in Santa Rosa County, Florida, is named for Whiting. His widow, Edna Andresen Whiting,[68] was among 1,500 people who attended its commissioning on July 16, 1943.[69] A plaque there reads: ""Whiting Field, named in honor of Capt. Kenneth Whiting, U.S. Navy, Pioneer in Submarines and Aviation, Naval Aviator No. 16, Father of the Aircraft Carrier in our Navy, Died on Active Duty on April 24, 1943."[70]

One U.S. Navy ship, the seaplane tender USS Kenneth Whiting (AV-14), has been named for Whiting. Edna Andresen Whiting served as sponsor during the ship's launching ceremonies on December 15, 1943. The ship served in the latter stages of World War II in 1944–1945, in the Korean War in 1952–1953, and then in the Cold War until 1958.[71]

Whiting was inducted into the Naval Aviation Hall of Honor at the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida, in 1984.

Awards & Decorations edit

Photo gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  5. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  6. ^ Nimitz Library: Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943
  7. ^
  8. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  9. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  10. ^ Navsource.org Kenneth Whiting.
  11. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  12. ^ Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/a1/a-6.htm.
  13. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  14. ^ NavSource.org Kenneth Whiting
  15. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  16. ^ NavSource.org Kenneth Whiting
  17. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  18. ^ Universal Ship Cancellation Society Log, July 2011, p. 21.
  19. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  20. ^ Layman, p. 116.
  21. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  22. ^ Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917-1919. April 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ ResourceLibrary.comn Review by Sherman N. Mullin of Stalking the U-Boat: U.S. Naval Aviation in World War I by Geoffrey L. Rossano.
  24. ^ American Military and Naval History USN Northern Bombing Group I
  25. ^ Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917-1919. April 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  27. ^ Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917-1919. April 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  30. ^ NavSource.org Kenneth Whiting
  31. ^ Layman, p. 116.
  32. ^ Layman, R.D., Before the Aircraft Carrier: The Development of Aviation Vessels 1849-1922, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1989, ISBN 0-87021-210-9, p. 116.
  33. ^ Universal Ship Cancellation Society Log, July 2011, p. 23.
  34. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  35. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  36. ^ Wadle, p. 13.
  37. ^ Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917-1919. April 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ Hone and Hone, p. 81.
  39. ^ Hone and Hone, pp. 94-96.
  40. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  41. ^ Quote from "Aircraft Caiiers: Floating Homes For Naval Planes," Literary Digest, February 18, 1922, at 1920-30.com The First Aircraft Carriers.
  42. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294.
  43. ^ Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906-1921, p. 121.
  44. ^ Tate, p.66.
  45. ^ Naval History Blog, U.S. Naval Institute-U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command, "Navy's First Carrier Commissioned, 20 March 1922," 20 March 2011, 12:01 a.m.
  46. ^ Sweeny, p. 150.
  47. ^ NavSource.org Kenneth Whiting
  48. ^ "DCMilitary.com This Week in History 17 November 2011". Archived from the original on July 30, 2012. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  49. ^ Tate, pp. 62-69
  50. ^ Tate., p. 68.
  51. ^ Tate, pp. 62-69.
  52. ^ Tate, p.68.
  53. ^ Tate, p. 68.
  54. ^ Tate, p. 68.
  55. ^ Tate, pp. 62-69
  56. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  57. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  58. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  59. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  60. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  61. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  62. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  63. ^ Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  64. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  66. ^ . Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  67. ^
  68. ^ Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting, April 1943 January 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  69. ^ https://www.flickr.com/photos/26519181@N06/4377931374/ Flickr: NAS WHiting Field, Milton, FL.
  70. ^ Kemper Memorial Park Profiles: Captain Kenneth Whiting, US Navy, 98 Park Avenue, Larchmont
  71. ^

References edit

  • This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here. (USS A-6)
  • This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here. (USS Kenneth Whiting AV-14)
  • Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1914-1943 MS 294
  • Universal Ship Cancellation Society Log, July 2011
  • Gardiner, Robert, ed. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906-1921. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1985, ISBN 0-87021-907-3.
  • Hone, Thomas C., and Trent Hone. Battleline: The United States Navy 1919–1939. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 2006. ISBN 1-59114-378-0.
  • Layman, R.D., Before the Aircraft Carrier: The Development of Aviation Vessels 1849-1922, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1989, ISBN 0-87021-210-9.
  • Sweeney, Jerry K., ed. A Handbook of American Military History From the Revolutionary War to the Present, University of Nebraska Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0-8032-9337-3 and ISBN 0-8032-9337-2.
  • Tate, Jackson R., RADM, USN. "We Rode the Covered Wagon." United States Naval Institute Proceedings, October 1978.
  • Wadle, Ryan David. United States Navy Fleet Problems and the Development of Carrier Aviation. Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University, August 2005

External links edit

  • Video of early carrier landings aboard USS Langley (CV-1) ca. 1922 on YouTube
  • Photo of Kenneth Whiting with other officers and Amelia Earhart in Hawaii, 18 March 1937 January 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • dommagazine.com Photograph of Kenneth Whiting and other early aviators at the dedication of the Wright Brothers Memorial at Dayton, Ohio, 19 August 1940
  • earlyaviators.com Photographs of Kenneth Whiting and other early aviators at the dedication of the Wright Brothers Memorial at Dayton, Ohio, 19 August 1940
  • Larchmont Times 1943 obituary of Kenneth Whiting with photograph January 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • Photo of Kenneth Whiting
  • Kenneth Whiting Papers, 1901-1943 MS 294 held by Special Collections & Archives, Nimitz Library at the United States Naval Academy

kenneth, whiting, canadian, kayaker, whiting, united, states, navy, ship, july, 1881, april, 1943, united, states, navy, officer, pioneer, submarines, best, known, lengthy, career, pioneering, naval, aviator, during, world, commanded, first, american, military. For the Canadian kayaker see Ken Whiting For the United States Navy ship see USS Kenneth Whiting AV 14 Kenneth Whiting July 22 1881 April 24 1943 was a United States Navy officer who was a pioneer in submarines and is best known for his lengthy career as a pioneering naval aviator During World War I he commanded the first American military force to arrive in Europe for combat After the war he was instrumental in development of the aircraft carrier in the United States where he sometimes is known as the U S Navy s father of the aircraft carrier He was involved in some way in the design or construction of five of the first six U S Navy aircraft carriers and served as acting commanding officer of the first carrier to enter U S Navy service and as executive officer of the first two American carriers In the earliest days of the U S Navy s development of an aircraft carrier force he led many shipboard innovations still in use aboard carriers today Kenneth WhitingCommander Kenneth Whiting aboard the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga CV 3 during his 1927 1929 tour as her executive officer Born 1881 07 22 July 22 1881Stockbridge Massachusetts USDiedApril 24 1943 1943 04 24 aged 61 Bethesda Maryland USBuriedsea off Execution Rocks in Long Island SoundAllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1905 1943RankCaptainCommands heldUSS Shark SS 8 USS Porpoise SS 7 USS Tarpon SS 14 USS G 1 SS 20 1st Naval Air Unit Naval Air Station 14 Naval Air Station 15 Naval Air Station Norfolk USS Langley CV 1 USS Saratoga CV 3 Aircraft Squadrons Battle Fleet Fleet Air Base Pearl Harbor Patrol Wing 2 Naval Air Station New YorkBattles warsWorld War I Atlantic U boat Campaign World War IIAwardsNavy Cross Legion of Honor Chevalier France 1 Victory Medal 2 American Defense Service Medal 3 Contents 1 Birth and early career 2 Submarine service 3 Naval aviation 3 1 World War I 3 2 Interwar aircraft carrier advocacy 3 3 USS Langley CV 1 3 4 Later duties 3 5 World War II 4 Death 5 Commemoration 6 Awards amp Decorations 7 Photo gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksBirth and early career editWhiting was born in Stockbridge Massachusetts on July 22 1881 but moved to Larchmont New York at an early age Larchmont remained his residence for the rest of his life 4 He was appointed as a naval cadet on September 7 1900 and became a midshipman from New York at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland in 1901 After graduating from the Naval Academy on January 30 1905 5 he reported aboard the armored cruiser USS West Virginia After serving the requisite sea duty he was commissioned as an ensign on either January 31 1907 6 or February 25 1908 according to different sources 7 In June 1907 Whiting detached from West Virginia and transferred to the gunboat USS Concord in the United States Asiatic Fleet He transferred again to the steamer USS Supply in May 1908 8 Submarine service editAfter a brief stint aboard Concord again from August to October 1908 9 Whiting volunteered for submarine duty 10 and was reassigned to command of the submarine USS Shark at Naval Station Cavite in the Philippine Islands to oversee her fitting out He then assumed command of the submarine USS Porpoise at Cavite on November 20 1908 11 On April 15 1909 Whiting took Porpoise out for what his crew of six thought would be a routine run After Porpoise leveled off in Manila Bay at a depth of 20 feet 6 1 meters Whiting informed his crew that he was convinced that a man could escape from a submarine through a torpedo tube and that he intended to test the idea on himself He squeezed into Porpoise s 18 inch 460 mm tube and clung to the crossbar which stiffened the outer torpedo tube door as the crew closed the inner door When the crew opened the outer door and seawater rushed in Whiting hung onto the crossbar which drew his elbows out of the tube s mouth and then muscled his way out using his hands and arms After 77 seconds he was free of the submarine and swam to the surface Porpoise soon surfaced and recovered him Reluctant to speak about the incident in public in Porpoise s log that day Whiting simply commented Whiting went through the torpedo tube boat lying in water in normal condition as an experiment he nevertheless informed his flotilla commander Lieutenant Guy W S Castle who submitted a report on how the feat had been accomplished 12 In September 1910 Whiting detached from Porpoise He next took command of the Atlantic Fleet submarine USS Tarpon In January 1911 he reported to the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in Newport News Virginia to fit out the new submarine USS Seal which was renamed G 1 later that year He became the first commanding officer of G 1 when she was commissioned on October 28 1912 13 Naval aviation editIn 1910 Whiting applied for flight training by Glenn Curtiss and talked his friend from the submarine service Theodore G Ellyson into applying as well Ellyson was accepted and went on to become Naval Aviator No 1 in 1911 but Whiting was not and continued his submarine duties 14 On June 29 1914 however Whiting finally began his career in naval aviation the field in which he was to make his name as a true pioneer when he reported to the Wright Company at Dayton Ohio to learn to fly 15 The last naval officer to take flight training from Orville Wright personally 16 Whiting was designated Naval Aviator No 16 on September 6 1914 17 Whiting then became officer in charge of the Naval Aeronautic Station at Pensacola Florida He and fellow naval aviator Henry C Mustin worked together on seaplane designs and filed a patent application for the design of a hydroaeroplane on October 27 1916 18 In November 1916 he transferred to the armored cruiser USS Washington renamed USS Seattle on December 1 1916 and took command of a unit of seaplanes attached to the ship 19 Whiting would later become a member of the Early Birds of Aviation an organization founded in 1928 and dedicated to the history of pilots who learned to fly before December 17 1916 World War I edit The United States entered World War I on April 6 1917 and Whiting was selected to command the 1st Naval Air Unit or First Aeronautic Detachment and assigned to the collier USS Neptune in May 1917 The unit s seven officers and 122 enlisted men crossed the Atlantic Ocean to France aboard Neptune and the collier USS Jupiter to become the first American military unit to debark in Europe for combat with Jupiter arriving at Pauillac on June 5 1917 and Neptune at St Nazaire on June 8 1917 20 21 22 With only vague guidance and at first no aircraft Whiting set about establishing a European presence for U S Navy aviation 23 In June 1917 he selected Dunkirk as the site for a U S Navy air base 24 laying the groundwork for the establishment in 1918 of the U S Navy s Northern Bombing Group 25 He also instructed French pilots On June 1 or July 20 1918 according to different sources Whiting by now promoted to lieutenant commander took command of Naval Air Stations 14 and 15 at RNAS Killingholme England 26 27 For his World War I service Whiting was awarded the Navy Cross for exceptionally meritorious service in a duty of great responsibility 28 and France awarded him the Legion of Honor Chevalier 29 Interwar aircraft carrier advocacy edit Whiting sometimes is referred to as the U S Navy s father of the aircraft carrier He had begun agitating for the U S Navy development of what were then called plane carriers in the spring of 1916 30 and as early as March 1917 he had proposed to United States Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels that the Navy acquire a ship with an aircraft catapult and a flight deck prompting the first serious U S Navy consideration of the acquisition of any kind of aviation ship since the American Civil War of 1861 1865 31 The United States Department of the Navy rejected his proposal on June 20 1917 32 In the years between World War I and World War II however Whiting would be instrumental in the construction of five of the U S Navy s first six aircraft carriers and serve as executive officer of its first two 33 He also served as acting commanding officer of its first carrier at a time when the United States was experimenting with many aspects of the operation of aircraft carriers and their aircraft Returning to the United States after World War I Whiting was assigned to the Chief of Naval Operations Office of Naval Aviation in Washington D C in 1919 34 Testifying along with other leading naval aviators including Henry C Mustin and John Henry Towers before the General Board of the United States Navy about the need for U S Navy aircraft carriers Whiting was partially responsible for the General Board s April 1919 recommendation that the collier USS Jupiter be converted into the U S Navy s first aircraft carrier On July 11 1919 the United States Congress authorized Jupiter s conversion into the carrier which later would be named USS Langley CV 1 35 36 37 Later in 1919 after the battleship USS Texas BB 35 experimented successfully with the use of aircraft to spot her gunfire and found that the aircraft spotters allowed her greater accuracy Whiting testified before the General Board attesting that aircraft spotting could increase the accuracy of ship gunnery by up to 200 percent 38 The success of the experiments led the Navy to embark floatplanes aboard all of its battleships and cruisers 39 On September 1 1921 Whiting transferred to the Navy s newly established Bureau of Aeronautics 40 There he continued his advocacy for an American aircraft carrier force In January 1922 he said The Langley when commissioned will provide our Navy with an experimental carrier which while not ideal will be sufficiently serviceable to conduct any experiment required for the design of future carriers and for the development of naval aerial tactics and for the development of the various types of aircraft for these last are also lacking in our Navy due to concentrating on anti submarine work during the War i e World War I That carriers will be successful and an absolute necessity to any well equipped navy in the future there is not the slightest doubt in my mind We are asking this Congress for the first properly designed carrier It will take from three to four years to build it Will they give it to us 41 The properly designed carriers Whiting wanted first began to appear in 1927 with the commissioning of USS Saratoga CV 3 and USS Lexington CV 2 USS Langley CV 1 edit Whiting reported aboard Langley on March 20 1922 the day of her commissioning as her first executive officer also serving on an acting basis as her first commanding officer and thus becoming the first person to command a U S Navy aircraft carrier 42 Langley was far too slow to keep up with the battle fleet 43 and her main purpose was to serve as a laboratory for the exploration of the new naval warfare discipline of aircraft carrier operations with her personnel and those of her embarked air squadrons experimenting to discover what practices worked best 44 Flying a Vought VE 7 Lieutenant Virgil C Griffin made the first takeoff from an American carrier from Langley on October 17 1922 and Lieutenant Commander Godfrey Chevalier made the first landing on October 26 1922 in an Aeromarine 39B 45 On November 18 1922 Whiting himself made the world s first catapult launch of an aircraft from an aircraft carrier while aboard Langley piloting a Naval Aircraft Factory PT 46 47 while Langley was at anchor in Virginia s York River 48 Whiting was credited with establishing many basic tenets of carrier aviation largely worked out during his first Langley tour He established the first pilot ready rooms aboard Langley 49 He had a hand cranked movie camera film every landing on the carrier to aid in the evaluation of landing techniques 50 and had a darkroom and photography laboratory installed on board to allow the landing films to be developed at sea 51 Langley s pilots had no signaling system with which shipboard personnel could assist them in landing 52 so when not flying himself Whiting observed all landings from the aft port corner of Langley s flight deck 53 where he was visible to pilots in critical touchdown attitudes when the nose of the aircraft might obscure their view straight ahead as they approached the ship to land Pilots found Whiting s body language helpful and suggested an experienced pilot be assigned to occupy that position as a landing signal officer or landing safety officer LSO using signals to guide them to safe landings In an advanced form the LSO concept survives aboard aircraft carriers to this day 54 Whiting also was influential in the U S Navy s decision to make pilot qualification a requirement for command of an aircraft carrier 55 Later duties edit In July 1924 Whiting returned to duty at the Bureau of Aeronautics to serve as its assistant chief Later he became head of the Aircraft Carriers Division 56 In September 1926 he reported to the Brown Boveri Electric Company in Camden New Jersey to oversee the construction of the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga CV 3 which was commissioned in 1927 as the second American aircraft carrier and the first one capable of operating with the battle fleet He became her first executive officer on November 16 1927 remaining in that position until May 1929 57 Whiting was promoted to captain on July 1 1929 He became aide and chief of staff to Commander Aircraft Squadrons Battle Fleet in September 1929 58 In August 1930 Whiting took command of Naval Air Station Norfolk at Norfolk Virginia In June 1932 he departed Norfolk for Newport Rhode Island where he attended the Naval War College and received instruction at the Naval Torpedo Station 59 He returned to USS Langley as her commanding officer on June 15 1933 leaving her in December 1933 to fit out the new aircraft carrier USS Ranger CV 4 at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company He left Ranger in 1934 to assist in developing plans for the new aircraft carriers USS Yorktown CV 5 and USS Enterprise CV 6 In June 1934 he returned to USS Saratoga to serve as her commanding officer 60 Whiting left Saratoga in July 1935 and next became Commander Aircraft Squadrons Battle Fleet serving simultaneously as commander of Fleet Air Base Pearl Harbor Territory of Hawaii In September 1937 he became commanding officer of Patrol Wing 2 remaining in that position until June 3 1938 61 On July 14 1939 Whiting reported for duty as General Inspector of Naval Aircraft Eastern Division in the Third Naval District at New York City He was still in this position when he was placed on the retirement list on June 30 1940 However instead of retiring he was retained on active duty 62 World War II edit After the United States entered World War II on December 7 1941 Whiting continued his general inspector duties until February 19 1943 when he took command of Naval Air Station New York in Brooklyn New York serving also as District Aviation Officer Third Naval District He held these posts until his death 63 Death editWhiting was suffering from pneumonia and hospitalized at the National Naval Medical Center 64 in Bethesda Maryland when he died of a heart attack on April 24 1943 Among the honorary pallbearers at his funeral in Larchmont New York on April 27 1943 were Undersecretary of the Navy James V Forrestal Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics Rear Admiral John S McCain Sr Rear Admiral George D Murray and Harry Frank Guggenheim 65 In accordance with Whiting s wishes his ashes were buried at sea off the Execution Rocks 66 in the deepest part of Long Island Sound 67 Commemoration editNaval Air Station Whiting Field near Milton in Santa Rosa County Florida is named for Whiting His widow Edna Andresen Whiting 68 was among 1 500 people who attended its commissioning on July 16 1943 69 A plaque there reads Whiting Field named in honor of Capt Kenneth Whiting U S Navy Pioneer in Submarines and Aviation Naval Aviator No 16 Father of the Aircraft Carrier in our Navy Died on Active Duty on April 24 1943 70 One U S Navy ship the seaplane tender USS Kenneth Whiting AV 14 has been named for Whiting Edna Andresen Whiting served as sponsor during the ship s launching ceremonies on December 15 1943 The ship served in the latter stages of World War II in 1944 1945 in the Korean War in 1952 1953 and then in the Cold War until 1958 71 Whiting was inducted into the Naval Aviation Hall of Honor at the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola Florida in 1984 Awards amp Decorations edit nbsp Navy Cross nbsp nbsp World War I Victory Medal with one bronze service star nbsp American Defense Service Medal nbsp American Campaign Medal nbsp World War II Victory Medal nbsp Legion of Honor KnightPhoto gallery edit nbsp Kenneth Whiting undergoing flight training at the Wright Company in Dayton Ohio in 1914 nbsp Kenneth Whiting is at far right in this photograph of five early American naval aviators at the Naval Aeronautic Station in Pensacola Florida nbsp Real Admiral Ernest J King USN and Captain Kenneth Whiting USN at French Frigate Shoals in the Hawaiian Islands in 1937 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Aviation portalNotes edit Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at http www history navy mil danfs k2 kenneth whiting htm Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Navsource org Kenneth Whiting Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at http www history navy mil danfs a1 a 6 htm Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 NavSource org Kenneth Whiting Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 NavSource org Kenneth Whiting Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Universal Ship Cancellation Society Log July 2011 p 21 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Layman p 116 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917 1919 Archived April 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine ResourceLibrary comn Review by Sherman N Mullin of Stalking the U Boat U S Naval Aviation in World War I by Geoffrey L Rossano American Military and Naval History USN Northern Bombing Group I Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917 1919 Archived April 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917 1919 Archived April 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at http www history navy mil danfs k2 kenneth whiting htm Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 NavSource org Kenneth Whiting Layman p 116 Layman R D Before the Aircraft Carrier The Development of Aviation Vessels 1849 1922 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1989 ISBN 0 87021 210 9 p 116 Universal Ship Cancellation Society Log July 2011 p 23 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Wadle p 13 Naval History and Heritage Command Naval Aviation Chronology 1917 1919 Archived April 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine Hone and Hone p 81 Hone and Hone pp 94 96 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Quote from Aircraft Caiiers Floating Homes For Naval Planes Literary Digest February 18 1922 at 1920 30 com The First Aircraft Carriers Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 p 121 Tate p 66 Naval History Blog U S Naval Institute U S Naval History and Heritage Command Navy s First Carrier Commissioned 20 March 1922 20 March 2011 12 01 a m Sweeny p 150 NavSource org Kenneth Whiting DCMilitary com This Week in History 17 November 2011 Archived from the original on July 30 2012 Retrieved March 16 2012 Tate pp 62 69 Tate p 68 Tate pp 62 69 Tate p 68 Tate p 68 Tate p 68 Tate pp 62 69 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Larchmont Times obituary for Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Larchmont Times obituary for Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved March 16 2012 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at http www history navy mil danfs k2 kenneth whiting htm Larchmont Times obituary of Kenneth Whiting April 1943 Archived January 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine https www flickr com photos 26519181 N06 4377931374 Flickr NAS WHiting Field Milton FL Kemper Memorial Park Profiles Captain Kenneth Whiting US Navy 98 Park Avenue Larchmont Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at http www history navy mil danfs k2 kenneth whiting htmReferences editThis article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here USS A 6 This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here USS Kenneth Whiting AV 14 Nimitz Library Special Collections and Archives Guide to the Kenneth Whiting Papers 1914 1943 MS 294 Universal Ship Cancellation Society Log July 2011 Gardiner Robert ed Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1985 ISBN 0 87021 907 3 Hone Thomas C and Trent Hone Battleline The United States Navy 1919 1939 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 2006 ISBN 1 59114 378 0 Layman R D Before the Aircraft Carrier The Development of Aviation Vessels 1849 1922 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1989 ISBN 0 87021 210 9 Sweeney Jerry K ed A Handbook of American Military History From the Revolutionary War to the Present University of Nebraska Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 8032 9337 3 and ISBN 0 8032 9337 2 Tate Jackson R RADM USN We Rode the Covered Wagon United States Naval Institute Proceedings October 1978 Wadle Ryan David United States Navy Fleet Problems and the Development of Carrier Aviation Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A amp M University August 2005External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kenneth Whiting Video of early carrier landings aboard USS Langley CV 1 ca 1922 on YouTube Photo of Kenneth Whiting with other officers and Amelia Earhart in Hawaii 18 March 1937 Archived January 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine dommagazine com Photograph of Kenneth Whiting and other early aviators at the dedication of the Wright Brothers Memorial at Dayton Ohio 19 August 1940 earlyaviators com Photographs of Kenneth Whiting and other early aviators at the dedication of the Wright Brothers Memorial at Dayton Ohio 19 August 1940 Larchmont Times 1943 obituary of Kenneth Whiting with photograph Archived January 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Photo of Kenneth Whiting Kenneth Whiting Papers 1901 1943 MS 294 held by Special Collections amp Archives Nimitz Library at the United States Naval Academy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kenneth Whiting amp oldid 1218514142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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