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Theodore Stark Wilkinson

Theodore Stark "Ping" Wilkinson (December 22, 1888 – February 21, 1946) was a vice admiral of the United States Navy during World War II. He also received the Medal of Honor for his actions in Veracruz, Mexico.

Theodore Stark Wilkinson
Theodore Wilkinson in 1944
Nickname(s)"Ping"
Born(1888-12-22)December 22, 1888
Annapolis, Maryland, US
DiedFebruary 21, 1946(1946-02-21) (aged 57)
Norfolk, Virginia, US
Place of burial
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1905 – 1946
Rank Vice admiral
Battles/warsVeracruz, Mexico
World War I
World War II
AwardsMedal of Honor
Navy Distinguished Service Medal (3)
RelationsJames Wilkinson (great-grandfather)

Theodore Stark Wilkinson (uncle)
Ernest Wilkinson (father)
Gulie Bustick Wilkinson (mother)
Catherine Harlow (wife)
Ann Harlow Wilkinson (daughter)

Theodore Stark Wilkinson III (son)

Early life and career edit

 
Wilkinson as a midshipman at the United States Naval Academy

After attending St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire, where his writings for school publications evinced an early interest in naval and amphibious warfare,[1] Wilkinson entered the United States Naval Academy in 1905 and graduated first in the class of 1909. He served the two years of sea duty then required by law prior to commissioning, in the battleships USS Kansas (BB-21) and USS South Carolina (BB-26), before he received his ensign's commission on June 5, 1911. He enrolled at George Washington University, Washington, D.C., joining Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity, and was instructed under the auspices of the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance (BuOrd). Wilkinson reported to the battleship USS Florida (BB-30) on July 25, 1913, for sea duty. During his time in that dreadnought, Ens. Wilkinson led Florida's 2d Company in action during the landings on 21 and April 22, 1914, at Veracruz, Mexico. For his skillful and courageous leadership of that unit of the battleship's landing force and his exhibition of "eminent and conspicuous" conduct, he received the Medal of Honor.

World War I and interwar years edit

On August 4, he was transferred to the armored cruiser USS Tennessee (ACR-10), and two days later sailed eastward in her across the Atlantic. Tennessee and USS North Carolina (ACR-12) were ordered to European waters to evacuate Americans trapped on the continent by the outbreak of World War I. On September 3, he became an assistant to the naval attaché at Paris and a month later left that post to join North Carolina in the Mediterranean. Subsequently, the young officer had tours of sea duty: first as aide, to Commander, 2d Division, Atlantic Fleet, and then as aide to the commander of the 7th Division.

From July 1916 to July 1919, Wilkinson served with distinction as the head of the Experimental Section, Bureau of Ordnance, where he developed ordnance materials and devices, most notable being a noxious gas filler for shells and an "exceptionally satisfactory smoke screen". Additionally, he was deemed largely responsible for the successful design of a depth charge and for the development of the firing mechanism of the Mark VI mine used in the North Sea Mine Barrage.

Following that tour ashore—for which he received a letter of commendation—Wilkinson went to sea, first serving as gunnery officer in the battleship Kansas and later as fire control officer in USS Pennsylvania (BB-38). In 1921 and 1922, Wilkinson commanded, in succession, the destroyers USS Osborne (DD-295), USS Goff (DD-247), and USS Taylor (DD-94), before he returned to BuOrd's experimental section.

After commanding the destroyer USS King (DD-242) from January 1925 to December 1926, Wilkinson headed the Records Section of the Bureau of Navigation (BuNav) Officer Personnel Division. In June 1930, he became fleet gunnery officer and aide to Commander, Scouting Fleet (later, Commander, Scouting Force), Rear Admiral A. L. Willard. Detached from that duty in December 1931, he soon assumed the duties of secretary to the Navy's General Board. While in that assignment, Wilkinson had additional duty during the arms limitation talks at Geneva in 1933 and in London in 1934.

From September 1934 to June 1936, Wilkinson served as executive officer of USS Indianapolis (CA-35). Over the next three years, he headed the Planning Division of BuNav and then returned to Indianapolis, this time in a staff capacity, as Chief of Staff to Commander, Scouting Force. In January 1941, he fleeted up to command the battleship USS Mississippi (BB-41).

World War II edit

 
Wilkinson, second from left, with Brigadier General Leonard F. Wing, Rear Admiral Richmond K. Turner, and Major General John H. Hester aboard Turner's flagship during the New Georgia Campaign.

Detached from that duty and promoted to rear admiral, Wilkinson was assigned as director of the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) on October 15. His new responsibilities inevitably embroiled him in the subsequent controversy over whether the US Pacific Fleet Commander at Pearl Harbor was sufficiently warned of the danger of a Japanese attack before December 7 – an issue on which Wilkinson testified for three days before a joint congressional committee in December 1945.

According to his testimony and that of others, ONI was responsible for collecting and evaluating intelligence, but R. Adm. Richmond Kelly Turner, Director of War Plans, had sought and received the authority in 1940 to control information sent to the fleet on "enemy intentions" and "the strategic picture."[2] Exercising this authority, Turner had prepared messages to fleet commanders on November 24 that "a surprise aggressive movement on the Philippines or Guam is a distinct possibility," and on November 27 stating that "this is a war warning…an aggressive move by Japan is expected within the next few days…indicates an amphibious expedition against either the Philippines, Thai or Kra Peninsula or possibly Borneo…execute appropriate defensive deployment." Wilkinson had followed these messages up on December 2 with a message to the fleet commanders reporting that Japanese consuls had been instructed to destroy their codes—a standard precaution for hostilities. No further warnings were sent to the US fleet until just before the attack on December 7, when hostilities had become even more clearly imminent from overnight decryption of Japanese "Purple code" intercepts.

When asked for his opinion at the time about Japanese intentions, Turner said that he had always thought that there was a 50-50 chance that they would attack Pearl Harbor at the outset. The congressional committee noted that he was "the only officer in Washington in the higher echelons who thought so." Wilkinson, in contrast, admitted that he had believed it was more likely that Japan would strike first somewhere in the southwest Pacific and avoid an immediate direct confrontation with the US – an opinion which the committee report found to have been widely shared by senior US officers before the attack.[3]

South Pacific Campaign edit

From ONI, Wilkinson was assigned briefly as Commander, Battleship Division 2, Pacific Fleet, in August 1942, then as Deputy Commander, South Pacific, under Admiral William Halsey and General Douglas MacArthur as theater commander beginning in January 1943. Halsey was designated Third Fleet Commander in March, and Wilkinson became Commander of the I Marine Amphibious Corps (later III Amphibious Corps) in July 1943.

In those positions, he is credited by naval historian Samuel Eliot Morison with developing the US "leapfrogging" strategy designed to seize control of the Southwest Pacific islands occupied by Japan. Rather than attack Japanese bases and fortifications frontally, the strategy was to "hit them where they ain't," by occupying positions behind their forward outposts and cutting their supply lines. The strategy was so successful that Japanese war czar Tojo before his death told General MacArthur that it was one of the three principal factors that defeated Japan.[4] (The other two factors were US submarine effectiveness and long-distance US carrier operations.)

Pursuing this strategy, Wilkinson earned the Distinguished Service Medal (DSM) for commanding the amphibious forces in the assaults on New Georgia, Vella Lavella, and the Treasury Islands; and established a key position on the west coast of Bougainville. He was promoted to vice admiral in 1944, and won a gold star in lieu of a second DSM for his leadership in the assaults that took Peleliu and Angaur in the Palaus, and Ulithi in the Carolines.

Subsequently, Wilkinson earned another gold star in lieu of a third DSM, for commanding Task Force 79 (TF 79) in action in the Philippines between October 1, 1944, and January 18, 1945—operations that included the landings conducted by the Southern Attack Force on Leyte in October 1944 and at Lingayen in January 1945.

Ordered to the Navy Department in September 1945 for temporary duty, Vice Admiral Wilkinson became a member of the Joint Strategic Survey Committee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in January 1946. He was serving in that capacity when he lost his life on February 21, 1946, in a tragic ferry accident at Hampton Roads, in which he was able to save his wife Catherine from drowning, but was unable to escape himself.[5]

He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery and his grave can be found in section 2, Lot 3645.

Decorations edit

Medal of Honor citation edit

Rank and organization: Ensign, U.S. Navy. Born: December 22, 1888, Annapolis, Md. Appointed from: Louisiana. G.O. No.: 177, December 4, 1915. Other Navy award: Distinguished Service Medal with gold stars in lieu of 2 additional DSM's.

Citation:

For distinguished conduct in battle, engagements of Vera Cruz, 21 and April 22, 1914. Ens. Wilkinson was in both days' fighting at the head of his company and was eminent and conspicuous in his conduct, leading his men with skill and courage.

Ribbon bar edit

Vice Admiral Theodore Stark Wilkinson´s ribbon bar:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     

Namesake edit

In 1952, the destroyer leader USS Wilkinson (DL-5) was named in his honor.

See also edit

References edit

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
  • . Medal of Honor citations. United States Army Center of Military History. August 3, 2009. Archived from the original on March 20, 2009. Retrieved July 1, 2010.


  1. ^ B., Edmonds, John (1950). St. Paul's School in the Second World War. Alumni Association of St. Paul's School. OCLC 924853056.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Joint Committee of the US Congress, Hearings on the Investigation of the Pearl Harbor Attack," Part IV (Dec. 14-21, 1945), pp. 1913-15, 1926, 2030-31
  3. ^ Joint Committee Report, July 20, 1946, p.234
  4. ^ Samuel E. Morison, "History of the United States Naval Operations in World War II, Volume VI: Breaking the Bismarck's Barrier, 22 July 1942-1 May 1944"; 1950, Little, Brown, p. 225-27
  5. ^ "More detail about drowning accident. WIlkinson".

theodore, stark, wilkinson, this, article, about, world, navy, admiral, representative, politician, theodore, stark, ping, wilkinson, december, 1888, february, 1946, vice, admiral, united, states, navy, during, world, also, received, medal, honor, actions, ver. This article is about the World War II U S Navy admiral For the U S Representative see Theodore Stark Wilkinson politician Theodore Stark Ping Wilkinson December 22 1888 February 21 1946 was a vice admiral of the United States Navy during World War II He also received the Medal of Honor for his actions in Veracruz Mexico Theodore Stark WilkinsonTheodore Wilkinson in 1944Nickname s Ping Born 1888 12 22 December 22 1888Annapolis Maryland USDiedFebruary 21 1946 1946 02 21 aged 57 Norfolk Virginia USPlace of burialArlington National CemeteryAllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branch United States NavyYears of service1905 1946RankVice admiralBattles warsVeracruz MexicoWorld War IWorld War IIAwardsMedal of HonorNavy Distinguished Service Medal 3 RelationsJames Wilkinson great grandfather Theodore Stark Wilkinson uncle Ernest Wilkinson father Gulie Bustick Wilkinson mother Catherine Harlow wife Ann Harlow Wilkinson daughter Theodore Stark Wilkinson III son Contents 1 Early life and career 2 World War I and interwar years 3 World War II 3 1 South Pacific Campaign 4 Decorations 4 1 Medal of Honor citation 4 2 Ribbon bar 5 Namesake 6 See also 7 ReferencesEarly life and career edit nbsp Wilkinson as a midshipman at the United States Naval Academy After attending St Paul s School in Concord New Hampshire where his writings for school publications evinced an early interest in naval and amphibious warfare 1 Wilkinson entered the United States Naval Academy in 1905 and graduated first in the class of 1909 He served the two years of sea duty then required by law prior to commissioning in the battleships USS Kansas BB 21 and USS South Carolina BB 26 before he received his ensign s commission on June 5 1911 He enrolled at George Washington University Washington D C joining Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity and was instructed under the auspices of the Navy s Bureau of Ordnance BuOrd Wilkinson reported to the battleship USS Florida BB 30 on July 25 1913 for sea duty During his time in that dreadnought Ens Wilkinson led Florida s 2d Company in action during the landings on 21 and April 22 1914 at Veracruz Mexico For his skillful and courageous leadership of that unit of the battleship s landing force and his exhibition of eminent and conspicuous conduct he received the Medal of Honor World War I and interwar years editOn August 4 he was transferred to the armored cruiser USS Tennessee ACR 10 and two days later sailed eastward in her across the Atlantic Tennessee and USS North Carolina ACR 12 were ordered to European waters to evacuate Americans trapped on the continent by the outbreak of World War I On September 3 he became an assistant to the naval attache at Paris and a month later left that post to join North Carolina in the Mediterranean Subsequently the young officer had tours of sea duty first as aide to Commander 2d Division Atlantic Fleet and then as aide to the commander of the 7th Division From July 1916 to July 1919 Wilkinson served with distinction as the head of the Experimental Section Bureau of Ordnance where he developed ordnance materials and devices most notable being a noxious gas filler for shells and an exceptionally satisfactory smoke screen Additionally he was deemed largely responsible for the successful design of a depth charge and for the development of the firing mechanism of the Mark VI mine used in the North Sea Mine Barrage Following that tour ashore for which he received a letter of commendation Wilkinson went to sea first serving as gunnery officer in the battleship Kansas and later as fire control officer in USS Pennsylvania BB 38 In 1921 and 1922 Wilkinson commanded in succession the destroyers USS Osborne DD 295 USS Goff DD 247 and USS Taylor DD 94 before he returned to BuOrd s experimental section After commanding the destroyer USS King DD 242 from January 1925 to December 1926 Wilkinson headed the Records Section of the Bureau of Navigation BuNav Officer Personnel Division In June 1930 he became fleet gunnery officer and aide to Commander Scouting Fleet later Commander Scouting Force Rear Admiral A L Willard Detached from that duty in December 1931 he soon assumed the duties of secretary to the Navy s General Board While in that assignment Wilkinson had additional duty during the arms limitation talks at Geneva in 1933 and in London in 1934 From September 1934 to June 1936 Wilkinson served as executive officer of USS Indianapolis CA 35 Over the next three years he headed the Planning Division of BuNav and then returned to Indianapolis this time in a staff capacity as Chief of Staff to Commander Scouting Force In January 1941 he fleeted up to command the battleship USS Mississippi BB 41 World War II edit nbsp Wilkinson second from left with Brigadier General Leonard F Wing Rear Admiral Richmond K Turner and Major General John H Hester aboard Turner s flagship during the New Georgia Campaign Detached from that duty and promoted to rear admiral Wilkinson was assigned as director of the Office of Naval Intelligence ONI on October 15 His new responsibilities inevitably embroiled him in the subsequent controversy over whether the US Pacific Fleet Commander at Pearl Harbor was sufficiently warned of the danger of a Japanese attack before December 7 an issue on which Wilkinson testified for three days before a joint congressional committee in December 1945 According to his testimony and that of others ONI was responsible for collecting and evaluating intelligence but R Adm Richmond Kelly Turner Director of War Plans had sought and received the authority in 1940 to control information sent to the fleet on enemy intentions and the strategic picture 2 Exercising this authority Turner had prepared messages to fleet commanders on November 24 that a surprise aggressive movement on the Philippines or Guam is a distinct possibility and on November 27 stating that this is a war warning an aggressive move by Japan is expected within the next few days indicates an amphibious expedition against either the Philippines Thai or Kra Peninsula or possibly Borneo execute appropriate defensive deployment Wilkinson had followed these messages up on December 2 with a message to the fleet commanders reporting that Japanese consuls had been instructed to destroy their codes a standard precaution for hostilities No further warnings were sent to the US fleet until just before the attack on December 7 when hostilities had become even more clearly imminent from overnight decryption of Japanese Purple code intercepts When asked for his opinion at the time about Japanese intentions Turner said that he had always thought that there was a 50 50 chance that they would attack Pearl Harbor at the outset The congressional committee noted that he was the only officer in Washington in the higher echelons who thought so Wilkinson in contrast admitted that he had believed it was more likely that Japan would strike first somewhere in the southwest Pacific and avoid an immediate direct confrontation with the US an opinion which the committee report found to have been widely shared by senior US officers before the attack 3 South Pacific Campaign edit From ONI Wilkinson was assigned briefly as Commander Battleship Division 2 Pacific Fleet in August 1942 then as Deputy Commander South Pacific under Admiral William Halsey and General Douglas MacArthur as theater commander beginning in January 1943 Halsey was designated Third Fleet Commander in March and Wilkinson became Commander of the I Marine Amphibious Corps later III Amphibious Corps in July 1943 In those positions he is credited by naval historian Samuel Eliot Morison with developing the US leapfrogging strategy designed to seize control of the Southwest Pacific islands occupied by Japan Rather than attack Japanese bases and fortifications frontally the strategy was to hit them where they ain t by occupying positions behind their forward outposts and cutting their supply lines The strategy was so successful that Japanese war czar Tojo before his death told General MacArthur that it was one of the three principal factors that defeated Japan 4 The other two factors were US submarine effectiveness and long distance US carrier operations Pursuing this strategy Wilkinson earned the Distinguished Service Medal DSM for commanding the amphibious forces in the assaults on New Georgia Vella Lavella and the Treasury Islands and established a key position on the west coast of Bougainville He was promoted to vice admiral in 1944 and won a gold star in lieu of a second DSM for his leadership in the assaults that took Peleliu and Angaur in the Palaus and Ulithi in the Carolines Subsequently Wilkinson earned another gold star in lieu of a third DSM for commanding Task Force 79 TF 79 in action in the Philippines between October 1 1944 and January 18 1945 operations that included the landings conducted by the Southern Attack Force on Leyte in October 1944 and at Lingayen in January 1945 Ordered to the Navy Department in September 1945 for temporary duty Vice Admiral Wilkinson became a member of the Joint Strategic Survey Committee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in January 1946 He was serving in that capacity when he lost his life on February 21 1946 in a tragic ferry accident at Hampton Roads in which he was able to save his wife Catherine from drowning but was unable to escape himself 5 He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery and his grave can be found in section 2 Lot 3645 Decorations editMedal of Honor citation edit Rank and organization Ensign U S Navy Born December 22 1888 Annapolis Md Appointed from Louisiana G O No 177 December 4 1915 Other Navy award Distinguished Service Medal with gold stars in lieu of 2 additional DSM s Citation For distinguished conduct in battle engagements of Vera Cruz 21 and April 22 1914 Ens Wilkinson was in both days fighting at the head of his company and was eminent and conspicuous in his conduct leading his men with skill and courage Ribbon bar edit Vice Admiral Theodore Stark Wilkinson s ribbon bar nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1st Row Medal of Honor 2nd Row Navy Distinguished Service Medal with two gold stars Mexican Service Medal World War I Victory Medal with Escort Clasp 3rd Row American Defense Service Medal with A device American Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal with four campaign stars 4th Row World War II Victory Medal Companion of the Order of the Bath Philippine Liberation MedalNamesake editIn 1952 the destroyer leader USS Wilkinson DL 5 was named in his honor See also edit nbsp Biography portal List of Medal of Honor recipients Veracruz References editThis article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Mexican American War Medal of Honor recipients Medal of Honor citations United States Army Center of Military History August 3 2009 Archived from the original on March 20 2009 Retrieved July 1 2010 B Edmonds John 1950 St Paul s School in the Second World War Alumni Association of St Paul s School OCLC 924853056 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Joint Committee of the US Congress Hearings on the Investigation of the Pearl Harbor Attack Part IV Dec 14 21 1945 pp 1913 15 1926 2030 31 Joint Committee Report July 20 1946 p 234 Samuel E Morison History of the United States Naval Operations in World War II Volume VI Breaking the Bismarck s Barrier 22 July 1942 1 May 1944 1950 Little Brown p 225 27 More detail about drowning accident WIlkinson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theodore Stark Wilkinson amp oldid 1207236817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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