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Richmond K. Turner

Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner (May 27, 1885 – February 12, 1961), commonly known as Kelly Turner, was an admiral of the United States Navy during the Second World War, where he commanded the Amphibious Force in the Pacific theater. Turner was also responsible for the creation of the Underwater Demolition Teams (UDT) in 1942 that were an early precursor to the United States Navy SEALs.

Richmond K. Turner
Birth nameRichmond Kelly Turner
Nickname(s)Fighting Admiral
Born(1885-05-27)May 27, 1885
Portland, Oregon, US
DiedFebruary 12, 1961(1961-02-12) (aged 75)
Monterey, California, US
Buried
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1904–1947
Rank Admiral
Commands held
Battles/wars
Awards

Early life and career edit

Richmond Turner was born in Portland, Oregon on May 27, 1885, to Enoch and Laura Frances (née Kelly) Turner. His father alternated between being a rancher and farmer, and working as a printer in both Portland (for The Oregonian with his older brother Thomas) and Stockton, California (where he owned a small print shop). The young Richmond spent most of his childhood in and around Stockton, with a brief stop in Santa Ana, and he graduated from Stockton High School in 1904.[1]

He was appointed to the Naval Academy from California's sixth district, his name put forward by Congressman James C. Needham, in 1904. He graduated on June 5, 1908 and served in several ships over the next four years. Among his classmates were several future admirals including: Harry A. Badt, Paul H. Bastedo, John R. Beardall, Abel T. Bidwell, Joseph J. Broshek, Arthur S. Carpender, Jules James, Walter K. Kilpatrick, James L. Kauffman, Thomas C. Kinkaid, Willis A. Lee Jr., William R. Munroe, William R. Purnell, Francis W. Rockwell, and John F. Shafroth Jr..[2]

On August 3, 1910, he married Harriet "Hattie" Sterling in Stockton.[3]

In 1913, Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Turner briefly held command of the destroyer USS Stewart. After receiving instruction in ordnance engineering and serving on board the gunboat Marietta, he was assigned to the battleships Pennsylvania, Michigan and Mississippi during 1916–19. From 1919 to 1922, Lieutenant Commander Turner was an ordnance officer at the Naval Gun Factory in Washington, D.C. He then was gunnery officer of the battleship California, fleet gunnery officer on the Staff of Commander Scouting Fleet and commanding officer of the destroyer Mervine.

After his promotion to the rank of commander in 1925, Turner served with the Bureau of Ordnance at the Navy Department. In 1927, he received flight training at Pensacola, Florida, was designated as a naval aviator, and a year later became commanding officer of the seaplane tender Jason and commander, Aircraft Squadrons, Asiatic Fleet. He had further aviation-related assignments into the 1930s and was executive officer of the aircraft carrier Saratoga in 1933–34. Captain Turner attended the Naval War College and served on that institution's staff in 1935–38 as head of the Strategy faculty.

Turner's last single ship command was the heavy cruiser Astoria, on a diplomatic mission to Japan in 1939. During his service with that vessel, Astoria, the body of deceased Japanese Ambassador to the United States, Hiroshi Saito was returned to Japan. Saito died of tuberculosis in February 1939. Following World War II, Turner received Order of the Sacred Treasure, 3rd Class by the Emperor of Japan.[4]

Turner was Director of War Plans in Washington, D.C., in 1940–41 and was promoted to rear admiral January 1941.[3]

Responsibility for Pearl Harbor edit

As Director of War Plans in the office of Chief of Naval Operations, Captain Turner became the Naval Member of the Joint Planning Committee of the Joint Board. Turner and Colonel Joseph T. McNarney, Air Corps, U.S. Army wrote "Study of the Immediate Problems concerning Involvement in War" in late December 1940. This led to Plan D, a strong offensive war in the Atlantic and a defensive war in the Pacific. This evolved into U.S. war plan "Rainbow Five".[3]

On November 25, 1941, Turner drafted a dispatch to the Commander in Chief of the Asiatic Fleet for release by the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), which contained the words: "I consider it probable that this next Japanese aggression may cause an outbreak of hostilities between the U.S. and Japan." CNO Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark took this message to President Roosevelt, who in relaying it to his High Commissioner to the Philippines softened the judgment words "probable" to "possible" and "may" to "might." Roosevelt also added the bad guess: "Advance against Thailand seems the most probable."

The Commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, was highly aware of the threat of surprise Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor. The final and most important warning was sent from Washington to Pearl Harbor and other Pacific outposts on November 27, 1941. It was specifically designated as a "war warning."[5]

Turner made the decision not to send Kimmel details of the intercepted Japanese diplomatic communications although they pointed strongly to an imminent air or sea attack on the Pacific Fleet's base at Pearl Harbor. Kimmel testified after the war that had he known of these communications, he would have maintained a much higher level of alert, and the fleet would not have been taken by surprise by the Japanese attack. As historian of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Professor Gordon Prange, wrote in Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History that was correct, even allowing for Kimmel's desire to exculpate himself: "If Turner thought a Japanese raid on Hawaii ... to be a 50-percent chance, it was his clear duty to say so plainly in his directive to Kimmel ... He won the battle for dominance of War Plans over Intelligence, and had to abide by the consequences. If his estimates had enabled the U.S. to fend off ... the Japanese threat at Pearl Harbor, Turner would deserve the appreciation of a grateful nation. By the same token, he could not justly avoid his share of the blame for failure."[6]

Vice Admiral Homer N. Wallin wrote a much more comprehensive analysis of the reasons for the U.S. defeat at Pearl Harbor.[7] See also Rear Admiral Edwin T. Layton, Kimmel's chief intelligence officer, and his book, And I Was There.[8] "To anyone who is familiar with the mutinous conditions provoked by Turner's interference in the intelligence process . . .throughout 1941, (Turner's) barefaced denial of any responsibility for its consequences was as outrageous as it was untrue." Page 142.

Admiral Turner testified to the Roberts Commission on January 19, 1942, the Admiral Thomas C. Hart Inquiry on the April 3rd and 4th, 1944, the Navy Court of Inquiry headed by Admiral Orin G. Murfin on September 15, 1944 and the Joint Congressional Committee Investigating Pearl Harbor in 1946.[9]

World War II edit

 
Quote,"Deliver for D-Day!"
 
Turner with Marine Major General Vandegrift during the planning of Operation Watchtower in July–August 1942.

In December 1941, Turner was appointed assistant chief of staff to the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet (a new position created after Pearl Harbor for Admiral Ernest King) and served until June 1942. He was then sent to the Pacific to take command of the Amphibious Force, South Pacific Force. Over the next three years, he held a variety of senior Amphibious Force commands as a rear admiral and vice admiral. He helped plan and execute amphibious operations against enemy positions in the south, central and western Pacific. He would have commanded the amphibious component of the invasion of Japan.

For the Guadalcanal Campaign, Rear Admiral Turner was Commander, Amphibious Force South Pacific (ComPhibForSoPac), also known as Task Force 62 which included 9 Groups, including Landing Force, Major General Alexander Vandegrift and Screening Group, Rear Admiral Victor Crutchley, Royal Navy. He successfully fought the five-month campaign to victory which included the galling defeat at Savo Island.

For the assault on the Russell Islands, Rear Admiral Turner, ComPhibForSoPac, was named as the Commander of the Joint Force designated Task Force 61, with the Commanding General 43rd Infantry Division, Major General John H. Hester, U.S. Army, being the Commander Landing Force. For the assault on the New Georgia Groups of Islands, Rear Admiral Turner, ComPhibForSoPac, was named as the Commander Task Force 31 which included New Georgia Occupation Force, Major General Hester.[10]

For the assault on Tarawa and Makin, Rear Admiral Turner was named as the Commander, Assault Force Task Force 51, which included 10 Groups, including Northern Attack Force for Makin and Southern Attack Force for Tarawa, Rear Admiral Harry W. Hill.[11]

At Tarawa: "Rear Admiral Turner, the Task Force Commander and Immediate Senior in Command, was well over the horizon and busy with the problems of Makin. Vice Admiral Spruance, the Commander Central Pacific Force, was present at Tarawa in the Indianapolis, but with that quality which endeared him to all his subordinates, did not undertake to kibitz on the minute-by-minute performance of the local Task Force or Task Group Commanders. To Rear Admiral Harry Hill belongs full credit for a great and hard-fought victory at Tarawa."[12]

For the assault on the Marshall Islands, Roi-Namur and Kwajalein, Rear Admiral Turner was the Commander, Joint Expeditionary Force, Task Force 51, which included 3 Task Forces and 9 Task Groups.[13]

 
Vice Admiral Turner

As a result of his leadership in those many amphibious assaults, Turner was promoted to vice admiral on March 7, 1944.[14]

For the assaults on Tinian, Guam and Saipan, Vice Admiral Turner was the Commander, Joint Expeditionary Force, Task Force 51, which included the Northern and Southern Task Forces, Expeditionary Task Force, Lt. General Holland Smith and 6 Task Groups.[15]

For the assault on Iwo Jima, Vice Admiral Turner was the Commander, Joint Expeditionary Force, Task Force 50, which included the Attack Force, Rear Admiral Hill, and Expeditionary Task Force, Lt. General Smith.[16]

At the Battle of Okinawa Turner commanded Task Force 51 which included the Northern Attack Force, Rear Admiral Lawrence Fairfax Reifsnider, the Southern Attack Force, Rear Admiral Hill, Expeditionary Troops, Lt. General Simon Bolivar Buckner Jr., Western Island Attack Group, Rear Admiral Ingolf N. Kiland, Amphibious Support Force Rear Admiral William H. P. Blandy and Gunfire and Covering Force, Rear Admiral Morton Deyo. At the end of the Battle of Okinawa the Amphibious Forces under Admiral Turner's command were manned by 657,000 officers and men.[17]

On May 24, 1945, Richmond Kelly Turner was promoted to full admiral.[18] Had the Pacific war continued, he would have commanded the amphibious component of the invasion of Japan. Under Admiral Turner's command, there were to be 2,700 ships and craft in the Kyushu operation. There had been 1,213 ships and craft under his command for the Okinawa operation, 435 for the Marianas operation and 51 at Guadalcanal.[19]

 
General Douglas MacArthur signs as Supreme Allied Commander during formal surrender ceremonies on the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. Behind General MacArthur are Lieutenant General Jonathan Wainwright and Lieutenant General Arthur Percival. Admiral Tuner (hands folded) is standing in the row of officers. To his right is Admiral John Henry Towers and to his left is Admiral William Halsey.

Turner was present during the Japanese surrender on board the USS Missouri (BB-63) on September 2, 1945.

Later life edit

 
Turner's headstone at Golden Gate National Cemetery

After World War II, Admiral Turner served on the Navy Department's General Board and was U.S. Naval Representative on the United Nations Military Staff Committee. He retired from active duty in July 1947.

Admiral Turner died in Monterey, California, on February 12, 1961. He is buried in Golden Gate National Cemetery in San Bruno, California, alongside his wife and Admirals Chester Nimitz, Raymond A. Spruance, and Charles A. Lockwood, an arrangement made by all of them while living.

Personal life edit

He was the brother of the socialist and pacifist writer John Kenneth Turner.[20]

Awards edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     

Legacy edit

Personality edit

Admiral Turner was known in his surrounding by his complicated personality and furious temper. Nicknamed "Terrible Turner," many of his subordinates and colleagues recognized his command abilities, but on the other hand criticized his manners, heavy drinking and pedantry.[21] When Admiral Chester Nimitz accepted Turner as commander of his assault force, Nimitz dryly said of the assignment that Turner was "brilliant, caustic, arrogant, and tactless – just the man for the job".[22]

Future Marine general Robert E. Hogaboom, who served as his assistant chief of staff for operations, describes him as:

The greatness of Admiral Kelly Turner was in that Kelly Turner worked his plans out in minute detail himself, right down to the last position of every amphibious vessel; where they would be, when they should be there, what they were to do. I knew him personally and I know that he was a fighting man. He was tough ... he was not always fair, but he insisted on his people doing what they were supposed to do.[21][23]

General Nathan Twining, who served as chief of staff of the Allied air forces in South Pacific during World War II, described Turner as:

A loud, strident, arrogant person who enjoyed settling all matters by simply raising his voice and roaring like a bull captain in the old navy. ... [His] peers understood this and valued him for what he was, a good and determined leader with a fine mind – when he chose to use it.[24]

Honors and depictions edit

The Leahy-class destroyer leader (later classified guided missile cruiser) USS Richmond K. Turner (DLG-20/CG-20) in service from 1964 to 1995 was named in honor of Admiral Turner.

Turner appears in To the Shores of Iwo Jima, a documentary short film depicting the American assault on the Japanese-held island of Iwo Jima and the massive battle that raged on that key island in the Allied advance on Japan.

Turner was portrayed by actor Stuart Randall in the film The Gallant Hours.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dyer 1972, pp. 3–9.
  2. ^ Lucky Bag. Nimitz Library U. S. Naval Academy. First Class, United States Naval Academy. 1908.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ a b c Dyer 1972, p. 154.
  4. ^ Calloway 1958, p. A181.
  5. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 177.
  6. ^ Prange, Goldstein & Dillon 1986, pp. 292–295.
  7. ^ Wallin 1968, pp. 41–56.
  8. ^ Layton, Pineau & Costello 1985, pp. 92–142.
  9. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 1117, Chapter XXV: End of the War and United Nations Organization Duty.
  10. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 460, Chapter XIII: Polishing Skills in the Russells.
  11. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 524, Chapter XIV: Planning and Paring the Japanese Toenails in New Georgia.
  12. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 683–684, Chapter 18: That Real Toughie—Tarawa.
  13. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 754, Chapter XIX: At Long Last "The Perfect One": The Marshalls.
  14. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 848, Chapter XX: Roi-Namur and the Frosting on the Cake—Eniwetok.
  15. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 875, Chapter XXI: The Nut Cracker: Saipan—Tinian—Guam.
  16. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 997, Chapter XXIII: Iwo Jima: Death at Its Best.
  17. ^ Dyer 1972, pp. 1072, 1105, Chapter XXIV: Okinawa and Four Stars.
  18. ^ Dyer 1972, pp. 1105, Chapter XXIV: Okinawa and Four Stars.
  19. ^ Dyer 1972, p. 1108, Chapter XXIV: Okinawa and Four Stars.
  20. ^ "Author Dies". The Daily Herald. Provo, Utah. August 1, 1948. Retrieved March 25, 2019 – via newspapers.com. (subscription required)
  21. ^ a b Simmons 1989, p. 8.
  22. ^ Tuohy 2007, p. 100.
  23. ^ Frank 1993, p. 26.
  24. ^ Lundstrom 2006, p. 326.
  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Naval History and Heritage Command.

Bibliography edit

  • Calloway, James R. (1958). Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the 88th Congress (PDF) (Report). Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. p. A181. Retrieved April 9, 2017.
  • Dyer, George Carroll (1972). The Amphibians Came to Conquer: The Story of Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner. Introduction by Rear Admiral Ernest M. Eller, USN (Ret). Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. LCCN 71603853. OCLC 562640558. Retrieved November 5, 2020 – via HyperWar Foundation.
  • Frank, Benis M. (Fall 1993). "Gen Hogaboom Dies; WWII Vet Was HQ Chief of Staff" (PDF). Fortitudine. Vol. XXIII, no. 2. Washington, D.C.: USMC History and Museums Division. pp. 26–28. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  • Layton, Edwin T.; Pineau, Roger; Costello, John (1985). And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway Breaking the Secrets. William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0688048838. OCLC 12553925. OL 2538028M. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
  • Lundstrom, John B. (2006). Black Shoe Carrier Admiral: Frank Jack Fletcher at Coral Sea, Midway, and Guadalcanal. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 9781612512204. OCLC 839304590.
  • Prange, Gordon W.; Goldstein, Donald M.; Dillon, Katherine V. (1986). Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780070506688. OCLC 12188871. OL 7296274M.
  • Simmons, Edwin H. (Fall 1989). "Alabama's Holland M. Smith" (PDF). Fortitudine. Vol. XIX, no. 2. Washington, D.C.: USMC History and Museums Division. pp. 3–9. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
  • Tuohy, William (2007). America's Fighting Admirals: Winning the War at Sea in World War II. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-2985-6. OCLC 255482313. OL 8011866M. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
  • Wallin, Homer N. (1968). Pearl Harbor: Why, How, Fleet Salvage and Final Appraisal. Introduction by Rear Admiral Ernest M. Eller, USN (Ret). Washington, D.C.: Naval History Division. LCCN 68-60091. OCLC 557592263. Retrieved November 5, 2020 – via HyperWar Foundation.

Further reading edit

  • Hoyt, Edwin Palmer (1970). How They Won the War in the Pacific: Nimitz and His Admirals. New York: Weybright and Talley. ISBN 9780762772858. OCLC 726620681.

External links edit

  • "Admiral Richmond K. Turner, USN (1885–1961)". Photography Collections – US People. Naval History and Heritage Command, Department of the Navy. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
  • To the Shores of Iwo Jima (1945 documentary short film) at IMDb  

richmond, turner, admiral, richmond, kelly, turner, 1885, february, 1961, commonly, known, kelly, turner, admiral, united, states, navy, during, second, world, where, commanded, amphibious, force, pacific, theater, turner, also, responsible, creation, underwat. Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner May 27 1885 February 12 1961 commonly known as Kelly Turner was an admiral of the United States Navy during the Second World War where he commanded the Amphibious Force in the Pacific theater Turner was also responsible for the creation of the Underwater Demolition Teams UDT in 1942 that were an early precursor to the United States Navy SEALs Richmond K TurnerBirth nameRichmond Kelly TurnerNickname s Fighting AdmiralBorn 1885 05 27 May 27 1885Portland Oregon USDiedFebruary 12 1961 1961 02 12 aged 75 Monterey California USBuriedGolden Gate National CemeterySan Bruno CaliforniaAllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branch United States NavyYears of service1904 1947RankAdmiralCommands heldUSS Mervine DD 322 USS Jason AC 12 Commander Aircraft Squadrons Asiatic Fleet USS Saratoga CV 3 USS Astoria CA 34 Director of the War Plans Division Assistant Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief Commander Fifth Amphibious Force Commander Amphibious Forces U S Pacific Fleet ComPhibPac Battles warsWorld War II Guadalcanal Campaign Battle of Savo Island Solomon Islands campaign Mariana and Palau Islands campaignAwardsNavy Cross Navy Distinguished Service Medal 4 Army Distinguished Service Medal Order of the Sacred Treasure 3rd Class Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Responsibility for Pearl Harbor 3 World War II 4 Later life 5 Personal life 6 Awards 7 Legacy 7 1 Personality 7 2 Honors and depictions 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and career editRichmond Turner was born in Portland Oregon on May 27 1885 to Enoch and Laura Frances nee Kelly Turner His father alternated between being a rancher and farmer and working as a printer in both Portland for The Oregonian with his older brother Thomas and Stockton California where he owned a small print shop The young Richmond spent most of his childhood in and around Stockton with a brief stop in Santa Ana and he graduated from Stockton High School in 1904 1 He was appointed to the Naval Academy from California s sixth district his name put forward by Congressman James C Needham in 1904 He graduated on June 5 1908 and served in several ships over the next four years Among his classmates were several future admirals including Harry A Badt Paul H Bastedo John R Beardall Abel T Bidwell Joseph J Broshek Arthur S Carpender Jules James Walter K Kilpatrick James L Kauffman Thomas C Kinkaid Willis A Lee Jr William R Munroe William R Purnell Francis W Rockwell and John F Shafroth Jr 2 On August 3 1910 he married Harriet Hattie Sterling in Stockton 3 In 1913 Lieutenant Junior Grade Turner briefly held command of the destroyer USS Stewart After receiving instruction in ordnance engineering and serving on board the gunboat Marietta he was assigned to the battleships Pennsylvania Michigan and Mississippi during 1916 19 From 1919 to 1922 Lieutenant Commander Turner was an ordnance officer at the Naval Gun Factory in Washington D C He then was gunnery officer of the battleship California fleet gunnery officer on the Staff of Commander Scouting Fleet and commanding officer of the destroyer Mervine After his promotion to the rank of commander in 1925 Turner served with the Bureau of Ordnance at the Navy Department In 1927 he received flight training at Pensacola Florida was designated as a naval aviator and a year later became commanding officer of the seaplane tender Jason and commander Aircraft Squadrons Asiatic Fleet He had further aviation related assignments into the 1930s and was executive officer of the aircraft carrier Saratoga in 1933 34 Captain Turner attended the Naval War College and served on that institution s staff in 1935 38 as head of the Strategy faculty Turner s last single ship command was the heavy cruiser Astoria on a diplomatic mission to Japan in 1939 During his service with that vessel Astoria the body of deceased Japanese Ambassador to the United States Hiroshi Saito was returned to Japan Saito died of tuberculosis in February 1939 Following World War II Turner received Order of the Sacred Treasure 3rd Class by the Emperor of Japan 4 Turner was Director of War Plans in Washington D C in 1940 41 and was promoted to rear admiral January 1941 3 Responsibility for Pearl Harbor editAs Director of War Plans in the office of Chief of Naval Operations Captain Turner became the Naval Member of the Joint Planning Committee of the Joint Board Turner and Colonel Joseph T McNarney Air Corps U S Army wrote Study of the Immediate Problems concerning Involvement in War in late December 1940 This led to Plan D a strong offensive war in the Atlantic and a defensive war in the Pacific This evolved into U S war plan Rainbow Five 3 On November 25 1941 Turner drafted a dispatch to the Commander in Chief of the Asiatic Fleet for release by the Chief of Naval Operations CNO which contained the words I consider it probable that this next Japanese aggression may cause an outbreak of hostilities between the U S and Japan CNO Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark took this message to President Roosevelt who in relaying it to his High Commissioner to the Philippines softened the judgment words probable to possible and may to might Roosevelt also added the bad guess Advance against Thailand seems the most probable The Commander of the U S Pacific Fleet Admiral Husband E Kimmel was highly aware of the threat of surprise Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor The final and most important warning was sent from Washington to Pearl Harbor and other Pacific outposts on November 27 1941 It was specifically designated as a war warning 5 Turner made the decision not to send Kimmel details of the intercepted Japanese diplomatic communications although they pointed strongly to an imminent air or sea attack on the Pacific Fleet s base at Pearl Harbor Kimmel testified after the war that had he known of these communications he would have maintained a much higher level of alert and the fleet would not have been taken by surprise by the Japanese attack As historian of the attack on Pearl Harbor Professor Gordon Prange wrote in Pearl Harbor The Verdict of History that was correct even allowing for Kimmel s desire to exculpate himself If Turner thought a Japanese raid on Hawaii to be a 50 percent chance it was his clear duty to say so plainly in his directive to Kimmel He won the battle for dominance of War Plans over Intelligence and had to abide by the consequences If his estimates had enabled the U S to fend off the Japanese threat at Pearl Harbor Turner would deserve the appreciation of a grateful nation By the same token he could not justly avoid his share of the blame for failure 6 Vice Admiral Homer N Wallin wrote a much more comprehensive analysis of the reasons for the U S defeat at Pearl Harbor 7 See also Rear Admiral Edwin T Layton Kimmel s chief intelligence officer and his book And I Was There 8 To anyone who is familiar with the mutinous conditions provoked by Turner s interference in the intelligence process throughout 1941 Turner s barefaced denial of any responsibility for its consequences was as outrageous as it was untrue Page 142 Admiral Turner testified to the Roberts Commission on January 19 1942 the Admiral Thomas C Hart Inquiry on the April 3rd and 4th 1944 the Navy Court of Inquiry headed by Admiral Orin G Murfin on September 15 1944 and the Joint Congressional Committee Investigating Pearl Harbor in 1946 9 World War II edit nbsp Quote Deliver for D Day nbsp Turner with Marine Major General Vandegrift during the planning of Operation Watchtower in July August 1942 In December 1941 Turner was appointed assistant chief of staff to the Commander in Chief United States Fleet a new position created after Pearl Harbor for Admiral Ernest King and served until June 1942 He was then sent to the Pacific to take command of the Amphibious Force South Pacific Force Over the next three years he held a variety of senior Amphibious Force commands as a rear admiral and vice admiral He helped plan and execute amphibious operations against enemy positions in the south central and western Pacific He would have commanded the amphibious component of the invasion of Japan For the Guadalcanal Campaign Rear Admiral Turner was Commander Amphibious Force South Pacific ComPhibForSoPac also known as Task Force 62 which included 9 Groups including Landing Force Major General Alexander Vandegrift and Screening Group Rear Admiral Victor Crutchley Royal Navy He successfully fought the five month campaign to victory which included the galling defeat at Savo Island For the assault on the Russell Islands Rear Admiral Turner ComPhibForSoPac was named as the Commander of the Joint Force designated Task Force 61 with the Commanding General 43rd Infantry Division Major General John H Hester U S Army being the Commander Landing Force For the assault on the New Georgia Groups of Islands Rear Admiral Turner ComPhibForSoPac was named as the Commander Task Force 31 which included New Georgia Occupation Force Major General Hester 10 For the assault on Tarawa and Makin Rear Admiral Turner was named as the Commander Assault Force Task Force 51 which included 10 Groups including Northern Attack Force for Makin and Southern Attack Force for Tarawa Rear Admiral Harry W Hill 11 At Tarawa Rear Admiral Turner the Task Force Commander and Immediate Senior in Command was well over the horizon and busy with the problems of Makin Vice Admiral Spruance the Commander Central Pacific Force was present at Tarawa in the Indianapolis but with that quality which endeared him to all his subordinates did not undertake to kibitz on the minute by minute performance of the local Task Force or Task Group Commanders To Rear Admiral Harry Hill belongs full credit for a great and hard fought victory at Tarawa 12 For the assault on the Marshall Islands Roi Namur and Kwajalein Rear Admiral Turner was the Commander Joint Expeditionary Force Task Force 51 which included 3 Task Forces and 9 Task Groups 13 nbsp Vice Admiral Turner As a result of his leadership in those many amphibious assaults Turner was promoted to vice admiral on March 7 1944 14 For the assaults on Tinian Guam and Saipan Vice Admiral Turner was the Commander Joint Expeditionary Force Task Force 51 which included the Northern and Southern Task Forces Expeditionary Task Force Lt General Holland Smith and 6 Task Groups 15 For the assault on Iwo Jima Vice Admiral Turner was the Commander Joint Expeditionary Force Task Force 50 which included the Attack Force Rear Admiral Hill and Expeditionary Task Force Lt General Smith 16 At the Battle of Okinawa Turner commanded Task Force 51 which included the Northern Attack Force Rear Admiral Lawrence Fairfax Reifsnider the Southern Attack Force Rear Admiral Hill Expeditionary Troops Lt General Simon Bolivar Buckner Jr Western Island Attack Group Rear Admiral Ingolf N Kiland Amphibious Support Force Rear Admiral William H P Blandy and Gunfire and Covering Force Rear Admiral Morton Deyo At the end of the Battle of Okinawa the Amphibious Forces under Admiral Turner s command were manned by 657 000 officers and men 17 On May 24 1945 Richmond Kelly Turner was promoted to full admiral 18 Had the Pacific war continued he would have commanded the amphibious component of the invasion of Japan Under Admiral Turner s command there were to be 2 700 ships and craft in the Kyushu operation There had been 1 213 ships and craft under his command for the Okinawa operation 435 for the Marianas operation and 51 at Guadalcanal 19 nbsp General Douglas MacArthur signs as Supreme Allied Commander during formal surrender ceremonies on the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay Behind General MacArthur are Lieutenant General Jonathan Wainwright and Lieutenant General Arthur Percival Admiral Tuner hands folded is standing in the row of officers To his right is Admiral John Henry Towers and to his left is Admiral William Halsey Turner was present during the Japanese surrender on board the USS Missouri BB 63 on September 2 1945 Later life edit nbsp Turner s headstone at Golden Gate National Cemetery After World War II Admiral Turner served on the Navy Department s General Board and was U S Naval Representative on the United Nations Military Staff Committee He retired from active duty in July 1947 Admiral Turner died in Monterey California on February 12 1961 He is buried in Golden Gate National Cemetery in San Bruno California alongside his wife and Admirals Chester Nimitz Raymond A Spruance and Charles A Lockwood an arrangement made by all of them while living Personal life editHe was the brother of the socialist and pacifist writer John Kenneth Turner 20 Awards edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Naval Aviator Badge 1st Row Navy Cross Navy Distinguished Service Medal with three Gold Stars Army Distinguished Service Medal 2nd Row Navy Unit Commendation World War I Victory Medal with ATLANTIC FLEET clasp American Defense Service Medal with FLEET clasp 3rd Row American Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal with two silver 3 16 inch service stars World War II Victory Medal 4th Row Philippine Liberation Medal Companion of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom Order of the Sacred Treasure 3rd Class Japan Legacy editPersonality edit Admiral Turner was known in his surrounding by his complicated personality and furious temper Nicknamed Terrible Turner many of his subordinates and colleagues recognized his command abilities but on the other hand criticized his manners heavy drinking and pedantry 21 When Admiral Chester Nimitz accepted Turner as commander of his assault force Nimitz dryly said of the assignment that Turner was brilliant caustic arrogant and tactless just the man for the job 22 Future Marine general Robert E Hogaboom who served as his assistant chief of staff for operations describes him as The greatness of Admiral Kelly Turner was in that Kelly Turner worked his plans out in minute detail himself right down to the last position of every amphibious vessel where they would be when they should be there what they were to do I knew him personally and I know that he was a fighting man He was tough he was not always fair but he insisted on his people doing what they were supposed to do 21 23 General Nathan Twining who served as chief of staff of the Allied air forces in South Pacific during World War II described Turner as A loud strident arrogant person who enjoyed settling all matters by simply raising his voice and roaring like a bull captain in the old navy His peers understood this and valued him for what he was a good and determined leader with a fine mind when he chose to use it 24 Honors and depictions edit The Leahy class destroyer leader later classified guided missile cruiser USS Richmond K Turner DLG 20 CG 20 in service from 1964 to 1995 was named in honor of Admiral Turner Turner appears in To the Shores of Iwo Jima a documentary short film depicting the American assault on the Japanese held island of Iwo Jima and the massive battle that raged on that key island in the Allied advance on Japan Turner was portrayed by actor Stuart Randall in the film The Gallant Hours See also editGuadalcanal Campaign first major amphibious operationReferences edit Dyer 1972 pp 3 9 Lucky Bag Nimitz Library U S Naval Academy First Class United States Naval Academy 1908 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Dyer 1972 p 154 Calloway 1958 p A181 Dyer 1972 p 177 Prange Goldstein amp Dillon 1986 pp 292 295 Wallin 1968 pp 41 56 Layton Pineau amp Costello 1985 pp 92 142 Dyer 1972 p 1117 Chapter XXV End of the War and United Nations Organization Duty Dyer 1972 p 460 Chapter XIII Polishing Skills in the Russells Dyer 1972 p 524 Chapter XIV Planning and Paring the Japanese Toenails in New Georgia Dyer 1972 p 683 684 Chapter 18 That Real Toughie Tarawa Dyer 1972 p 754 Chapter XIX At Long Last The Perfect One The Marshalls Dyer 1972 p 848 Chapter XX Roi Namur and the Frosting on the Cake Eniwetok Dyer 1972 p 875 Chapter XXI The Nut Cracker Saipan Tinian Guam Dyer 1972 p 997 Chapter XXIII Iwo Jima Death at Its Best Dyer 1972 pp 1072 1105 Chapter XXIV Okinawa and Four Stars Dyer 1972 pp 1105 Chapter XXIV Okinawa and Four Stars Dyer 1972 p 1108 Chapter XXIV Okinawa and Four Stars Author Dies The Daily Herald Provo Utah August 1 1948 Retrieved March 25 2019 via newspapers com subscription required a b Simmons 1989 p 8 Tuohy 2007 p 100 Frank 1993 p 26 Lundstrom 2006 p 326 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Naval History and Heritage Command Bibliography edit Calloway James R 1958 Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates of the 88th Congress PDF Report Washington D C United States Government Printing Office p A181 Retrieved April 9 2017 Dyer George Carroll 1972 The Amphibians Came to Conquer The Story of Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner Introduction by Rear Admiral Ernest M Eller USN Ret Washington D C United States Government Printing Office LCCN 71603853 OCLC 562640558 Retrieved November 5 2020 via HyperWar Foundation Frank Benis M Fall 1993 Gen Hogaboom Dies WWII Vet Was HQ Chief of Staff PDF Fortitudine Vol XXIII no 2 Washington D C USMC History and Museums Division pp 26 28 Retrieved February 10 2018 Layton Edwin T Pineau Roger Costello John 1985 And I Was There Pearl Harbor and Midway Breaking the Secrets William Morrow amp Co ISBN 0688048838 OCLC 12553925 OL 2538028M Retrieved November 5 2020 Lundstrom John B 2006 Black Shoe Carrier Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher at Coral Sea Midway and Guadalcanal Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 9781612512204 OCLC 839304590 Prange Gordon W Goldstein Donald M Dillon Katherine V 1986 Pearl Harbor The Verdict of History McGraw Hill ISBN 9780070506688 OCLC 12188871 OL 7296274M Simmons Edwin H Fall 1989 Alabama s Holland M Smith PDF Fortitudine Vol XIX no 2 Washington D C USMC History and Museums Division pp 3 9 Retrieved November 5 2020 Tuohy William 2007 America s Fighting Admirals Winning the War at Sea in World War II St Paul Minnesota Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 2985 6 OCLC 255482313 OL 8011866M Retrieved November 5 2020 Wallin Homer N 1968 Pearl Harbor Why How Fleet Salvage and Final Appraisal Introduction by Rear Admiral Ernest M Eller USN Ret Washington D C Naval History Division LCCN 68 60091 OCLC 557592263 Retrieved November 5 2020 via HyperWar Foundation Further reading editHoyt Edwin Palmer 1970 How They Won the War in the Pacific Nimitz and His Admirals New York Weybright and Talley ISBN 9780762772858 OCLC 726620681 External links edit Admiral Richmond K Turner USN 1885 1961 Photography Collections US People Naval History and Heritage Command Department of the Navy Retrieved November 5 2020 To the Shores of Iwo Jima 1945 documentary short film at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richmond K Turner amp oldid 1217147720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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