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William D. Leahy

William Daniel Leahy (/ˈlhiˌ ˈl.i/) (May 6, 1875 – July 20, 1959) was an American naval officer who served as the most senior United States military officer on active duty during World War II. He held multiple titles and was at the center of all major military decisions of the U.S. during World War II. As a fleet admiral, he was the first U.S. military flag officer ever to hold a five-star rank in the U.S. Armed Forces. He has been described by historian Phillips O'Brien as the "second most powerful man in the world" for his influence over U.S. foreign and military policy throughout the war.

William D. Leahy
Leahy c. 1945
Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief
In office
July 20, 1942 – March 21, 1949
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Harry S. Truman
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOmar Bradley as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
United States Ambassador to France
In office
January 8, 1941 – May 1, 1942
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byWilliam Christian Bullitt Jr.
Succeeded byJefferson Caffery
Governor of Puerto Rico
In office
September 11, 1939 – November 28, 1940
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byJosé E. Colom (acting)
Succeeded byJosé Miguel Gallardo (acting)
Chief of Naval Operations
In office
January 2, 1937 – August 1, 1939
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byWilliam Harrison Standley
Succeeded byHarold Rainsford Stark
Personal details
Born
William Daniel Leahy

(1875-05-06)May 6, 1875
Hampton, Iowa, U.S.
DiedJuly 20, 1959(1959-07-20) (aged 84)
Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Navy
Years of service1893–1959
Rank Fleet Admiral
Commands
Battles/wars
Awards

An 1897 graduate of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, Leahy saw service in the Spanish–American War, the Philippine–American War, Boxer Rebellion in China, the Banana Wars and World War I. As Chief of Naval Operations from 1937 to 1939, he was the senior officer in the United States Navy, overseeing the preparations for war. After retiring from the Navy, he was appointed in 1939 by his close friend President Franklin D. Roosevelt as the governor of Puerto Rico. In his most controversial role, he served as the U.S. Ambassador to France from 1940 to 1942, but had limited success in keeping the Vichy government free of German control.

Leahy was recalled to active duty as the personal Chief of Staff to President Roosevelt in 1942 and served in that position through the rest of World War II. He was the first de facto Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and presided over the American delegation to the Combined Chiefs of Staff of the U.S. and Great Britain. He was a major decision-maker during the war and was second only to the President in authority and influence. He served Roosevelt's successor Harry S. Truman, helping shape U.S. postwar foreign policy until finally retiring in 1949. From 1942 until his retirement, he was the highest-ranking active-duty member of the U.S. military, reporting only to the President.

Early life and education

 
As a naval cadet

William Daniel Leahy was born in Hampton, Iowa, on May 6, 1875, the first of eight children of Michael Arthur Leahy, a lawyer and American Civil War veteran who was elected to the Wisconsin Legislature in 1872, and his wife Rose Mary née Hamilton. He had five younger brothers and a sister. Both his parents were born in the United States but his grandparents were immigrants from Ireland, his paternal grandparents having arrived in the United States in 1836. In 1882, the family moved to Ashland, Wisconsin, where Leahy attended high school. His nose was broken in an American football game and his family lacked the money to get it fixed, so it remained crooked for the rest of his life.[1][2]

Leahy wanted to attend the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, but this required an appointment from his local Congressman, Thomas Lynch.[3] Lynch had no appointments to West Point to offer, but he offered Leahy an appointment to the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, which was much less popular among boys in the Midwestern United States. Leahy passed the entrance examinations and was admitted as a naval cadet in May 1893.[1][4]

Leahy learned how to sail on a sailing ship, the USS Constellation on a summer cruise to Europe, although the vessel only made it as far as the Azores before breaking down.[4] He graduated 35th out of 47 in the class of 1897.[5][6][7] His class was the most successful ever: five of its members would reach four-star rank while on active duty: Leahy, Thomas C. Hart, Arthur J. Hepburn, Orin G. Murfin and Harry E. Yarnell. As of 2022, no other class had had more than four.[8]

Naval service

Spanish-American War

Until 1912 naval cadets graduating from Annapolis had to complete two years' duty at sea and pass examinations before they could be commissioned as ensigns.[9] Leahy was assigned to the battleship USS Oregon, which was then at Vancouver, British Columbia for celebrations of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.[10] He was on board when she made a dash through the Strait of Magellan, and around South America in the spring of 1898 to participate in the Spanish–American War.[11] The Oregon took part in the blockade and bombardment of Santiago and shelled the small town of Guantánamo, which Leahy felt was "unnecessary and cruel".[12] In the Battle of Santiago on July 3,[11] Leahy was in command of the ship's forward turret.[13] This was the only naval battle Leahy witnessed in person.[14]

Seeking further action, Leahy volunteered to serve on the gunboat USS Castine, which was bound for the war in the Pacific, traveling via the Mediterranean Sea and the Suez Canal, but he got only as far as Ceylon when he received orders to report to Annapolis for his final ensign's examinations. He was therefore left behind, and had to return to the United States on the USS Buffalo. He reached Annapolis in June 1899.[13] He passed his examinations, and was commissioned as an ensign on July 1, 1899.[6] After few weeks' leave, spent with his parents in Wisconsin, and a few months service on the cruiser USS Philadelphia at the Mare Island Navy Yard, he joined the monitor USS Nevada on October 12, 1899. A week later it set sail for the Philippines. It arrived in Manila on November 24, and Leahy rejoined the crew of the Castine five days later.[15]

China and Philippine–American Wars

On December 17, 1899, Castine sailed for Nagasaki, but it developed engine trouble on February 12 and stopped in Shanghai to make repairs. While it was there the Boxer Rebellion broke out in China, and it was retained in Shanghai to help British, French and Japanese forces guard the city,[16] although Leahy did not like their chances if the 4,500 Chinese troops in the vicinity joined the uprising, as they had in the Battle of Tientsin.[17] On August 28, the Castine was ordered to Amoy help protect American interests there against the possibility of a Japanese coup.[18] The Castine returned to the Philippines, arriving back in Manila on September 16, 1900.[19][20]

 
With wife Louise and son William Harrington Leahy at Mare Island, California, in October 1905

The Philippine–American War was still ongoing, and the Castine supported American operations on Marinduque and Iloilo.[21] Unlike most Americans, Leahy was appalled by American brutality and the widespread use of torture.[21][22] Still an ensign, he was given his first command, the gunboat USS Mariveles, a refitted ex-Spanish vessel. It had a crew of 23. His period in command ended when the Mariveles lost one of its propellers, and had to be laid up for repairs. He was then reassigned to the USS Glacier, a stores ship which was engaged in bringing supplies from Australia to the Philippines. While in the Philippines he passed the examinations required for promotion to lieutenant, junior grade, was promoted to that rank on July 1, 1902. He made his final trip to the Philippines in September 1902,and returned to the United States later that year.[6][23]

Sea duty alternated with duty ashore. Leahy was assigned to the training ship USS Pensacola in San Francisco,[24] where he was promoted to lieutenant on December 31, 1903.[6] He met and courted Louise Tennent Harrington, whose older sister Mary was engaged to Albert P. Niblack, an officer of the Annapolis class of 1880 under whom Leahy had served. Leahy married Louise on February 3, 1904.[24][25][26] Louise subsequently convinced him to convert from Roman Catholicism and become an Episcopalian.[27]

Leahy helped commission the cruiser USS Tacoma but swapped assignments with an officer on the USS Boston so that he could remain in San Francisco with Louise, who was pregnant. Over the next two years the Boston cruised back and forth between San Francisco and Panama, where the Panama Canal was under construction. He was in Acapulco when their son and only child, William Harrington Leahy, was born on October 27, 1904, and did not see his son until five months later.[24][25][28] However, he was present for the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. His family had to leave their house in the face of the resulting fires. It survived undamaged, although they had to live in a hotel for several months before they could return.[27]

 
President William H. Taft reviewing a parade in San Francisco, California, October 14, 1911. Left to right: Rear Admiral Chauncey Thomas Jr., Leahy, Lillian Nordica, Archibald Butt and President Taft.

On February 22, 1907,[29] Leahy returned to Annapolis as instructor in the department of physics and chemistry.[30] He also coached the academy rifle team.[31] After two years ashore, he received orders on August 14, 1909, to return to San Francisco and sea duty as navigator of the armored cruiser USS California, commanded by Captain Henry T. Mayo,[29] in whom Leahy found a patron and a role model. In September, the California was one of eight ships that paid an official visit to Japan, where Leahy saw Admiral Heihachirō Tōgō. Mayo switched Leahy's assignment from navigator to gunnery officer, a change Leahy came to see as a wise one. [32][33]

Leahy was promoted to lieutenant commander on September 15, 1909,[6] and in January 1911, the commander-in-chief of the Pacific Fleet, Rear Admiral Chauncey Thomas Jr., chose him as his fleet gunnery officer.[29] In October, the California returned to San Francisco for a fleet review in honor of President William Howard Taft, and Leahy served as Taft's temporary naval aide for four days.[34][33]

Banana Wars

Rear Admiral William H. H. Southerland succeeded Thomas as commander of the Pacific Fleet on April 21, 1912. The California sailed to Manila and then to Japan before returning to San Francisco on August 15. A few weeks later, Southerland received orders to proceed to Nicaragua and be prepared to deploy a landing force for the United States occupation of Nicaragua.[35] In addition to his duties as gunnery officer, Leahy became the chief of staff of the expeditionary force and the commander of the small garrison at Corinto, Nicaragua.[36] He came under fire while repeatedly escorting reinforcements and supplies over the railroad line to León. Privately, he thought that the United States was backing the wrong side, propping up a conservative elite who were exploiting the Nicaraguan people.[37]

In October 1912, Leahy came ashore in Washington, D.C., as assistant director of gunnery exercises and engineering competitions. Then, in 1913, Mayo had him assigned to the Bureau of Navigation as a detail officer.[38] Mayo and then his replacement, Rear Admiral William Fullam, was reassigned, leaving Leahy in charge of one of the Navy's most sensitive offices. In this role he was in charge of all officer assignments. He also established a close friendship with the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin D. Roosevelt. Leahy's wife Louise enjoyed the social milieu of Washington, and socialized with Addie Daniels, the wife of Josephus Daniels, the Secretary of the Navy.[39]

 
Leahy (left) with Major C. S. Hill, USMC, on the deck of the USS California in August 1912

As Leahy's three-year tour of shore duty approached its end in 1915, he hoped to command the new destroyer tender USS Melville but Daniels had the assignment changed to command of the Secretary of the Navy's dispatch gunboat, the USS Dolphin. Leahy assumed command of the Dolphin on September 18, 1915. The ship took part in the United States occupation of Haiti, where Leahy again acted as chief of staff, this time to Rear Admiral William B. Caperton. In May 1916, Dolphin participated in the United States occupation of the Dominican Republic.[40] During the summer, Roosevelt used it as his family yacht, cruising down the Hudson River from the Roosevelt family estate in Hyde Park, New York, and along the coast to his holiday house on Campobello Island.[41] Leahy was promoted to commander on August 29, 1916.[6]

World War I

Following the United States entry into World War I In April 1917, Dolphin was sent to the United States Virgin Islands to assert America's control there. There was a rumor that a Danish-flagged freighter in the vicinity, the Nordskov, was a German merchant raider in disguise, and Dolphin was sent to investigate. If it had been, Leahy would have been outgunned, but an inspection determined that the rumors were false. In July 1917, Leahy became the executive officer of USS Nevada. It was the Navy's newest battleship, but it was not sent to Europe due to teething troubles with what was then a radical new design and a shortage of fuel oil in Britain.[41]

In April 1918 Leahy assumed command of a troop transport the USS Princess Matoika. Shortly before it was due to depart for France, Leahy was summoned to Washington, D.C., by the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), Admiral William S. Benson, who offered him the position of the Navy's director of gunnery. Leahy told him that he wanted to remain on the Princess Matoika. A compromise was reached; Leahy was permitted to cross the Atlantic once before becoming director of gunnery. Traveling in convoy, the Princess Matoika reached Brest on May 23, 1918, and disembarked its troops.[41] Leahy was awarded the Navy Cross "for distinguished service in the line of his profession as Commanding Officer of the USS Princess Matoika, engaged in the important, exacting and hazardous duty of transporting and escorting troops and supplies to European ports through waters infested with enemy submarines and mines during World War I."[42]

Leahy, who was promoted to captain on July 1, 1918,[6] was soon on his way back to Europe, to confer with representatives of the Royal Navy and discuss their gunnery practices. He reached London later that month, where he reported to the U.S. Navy commander in Europe, Vice Admiral William S. Sims, who had been a critic of the U.S. Navy's gunnery in the Spanish-American War.[43] Leahy met with his British counterpart, Captain Frederic Dreyer, and the chief gunnery officer of the Anglo-American Grand Fleet, Captain Ernle Chatfield.[44] Leahy was attached to the staff of Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman, the commander of the American division of the Grand Fleet, and was able to view a gunnery exercise from the British battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth.[43] On the way home he visited Paris, where he was appalled at the German use of a long-range gun to bombard the city, which he considered an indiscriminate targeting of civilians and militarily useless. He embarked for home on the SS Leviathan at Brest on August 12, 1918.[44]

Sea duty between the wars

 
Leahy shakes hands with Admiral Joseph M. Reeves (left) on assuming command of the Battle Force in June 1936

In February 1921, Leahy sailed for Europe, where he assumed command of the cruiser USS Chattanooga on April 2. In May he was ordered to take command the cruiser USS St. Louis, the flagship of the naval detachment in Turkish waters during the Greco-Turkish War. He was able to spend a couple of weeks in the French countryside with Louise, who spoke fluent French, before taking the Orient Express to Constantinople, where he reported to the American commander there, Rear Admiral Mark L. Bristol, on May 30.[45] Leahy had the role of safeguarding American interests in Turkey. He had to play the diplomat, attending parties and receptions, and organizing American events. He reveled in this assignment.[46]

The next step in a successful naval career would normally have been to attend the Naval War College. Leahy submitted repeated requests but was never sent.[47] At the end of 1921, he was given command of the minelayer USS Shawmut and concurrent command of Mine Squadron One. He then returned to Washington, D.C., where he served as director of Officer Personnel in the Bureau of Navigation from 1923 to 1926.[48] After three years of shore duty, he was given command of the battleship USS New Mexico. In biennial competitions in gunnery, engineering and battle efficiency, the New Mexico won all three in 1927–1928.[49]

Flag officer

On October 14, 1927, he reached flag rank, the first member of his cadet class to do so, and returned to Washington as the Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance. The following year he bought a town house on Florida Avenue near Dupont Circle for $20,000 (equivalent to $320,000 in 2021).[50] He also had assets that he had acquired through his marriage to Louise: stocks in the Colusa County Bank and agricultural land in the Sacramento Valley in California.[51] But in the wake of the Wall Street Crash of 1929, President Herbert Hoover determined to effect cuts in the Navy's budget, and his representative, Rear Admiral William V. Pratt, negotiated the London Naval Treaty that limited naval construction. The list of canceled ships included two aircraft carriers, three cruisers, a destroyer and six submarines. Leahy was in charge of implementing these cuts, and he was appalled at the human toll; some 5,000 workers lost their jobs, many of them highly skilled shipyard workers who faced long-term unemployment during the Great Depression.[52][53]

 
Leahy and Admiral William H. Standley shake hands after Leahy was sworn in as the Chief of Naval Operations in Washington, D.C., in January, 1937

Admiral Charles F. Hughes elected to retire rather than enforce the cuts, and he was replaced by Pratt. Pratt and Leahy soon clashed over cuts to shipbuilding, and Pratt attempted to have Leahy reassigned as chief of staff of the Pacific Fleet. Leahy had the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation block this, but decided that it would be in his best interest to get away from Pratt, and he secured command of the destroyers of the Scouting Force on the West Coast.[52][53] Leahy's dislike of Hoover was intensified by his dire personal circumstances. He could not find a tenant for the Florida Avenue property at a rent that would pay for its upkeep;[54] the price of food had fallen so much that his land in the Sacramento Valley could not generate a profit, and was seized by the government to recover unpaid taxes;[55] and a run in January 1933 caused the Colusa County Bank to close its doors, taking with it Leahy's life savings, and leaving him with a large debt that he would not pay off until 1941.[56]

Leahy's old friend Franklin Roosevelt was inaugurated as president on March 2, 1933, and he nominated Leahy as the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation.[57] On May 6, 1933, Leahy and Louise boarded a train back to Washington, D.C..[58] As bureau chief, Leahy handled personnel matters with care and consideration. When his successor as the Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance, Rear Admiral Edgar B. Larimer, suffered a mental breakdown and was hospitalized, Leahy ensured that he was kept on the active list until he reached retirement age, thereby safeguarding his pension. When two midshipmen at Annapolis, John Hyland and Victor Krulak, faced expulsion for failing to reach the required minimum height of 5 feet 6 inches (168 cm), Leahy waived the regulations to permit them to graduate with the class of 1934, and both went on to have distinguished careers.[57]

 
Discussing naval expansion with the President in Washington, D.C., on January 5, 1938. Left to right: Carl Vinson, Edward T. Taylor, William B. Umstead, Charles Edison and Leahy

Leahy formed a good working relationship with the new Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Henry L. Roosevelt, an Annapolis graduate and distant cousin of the President whom Leahy considered a close personal friend,[57] but he clashed with the new CNO, Admiral William H. Standley, who sought to assert the power of the CNO over the bureau chiefs. In this he was opposed by Leahy and the Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics, Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, who enlisted the aid of Henry Roosevelt and the Secretary of the Navy, Claude A. Swanson, to block it.[59] In 1936, the commander-in-chief United States Fleet (CINCUS), Admiral Joseph M. Reeves recommended Leahy for the position of Commander Battleships Battle Force, with the rank of vice admiral. Standley was opposed to this,[59] but was unable to persuade Swanson or the President, who invited Leahy to a private chat at the White House before proceeding to take up his new posting.[60]

Leahy assumed his new command on July 13, 1935.[61] In October Roosevelt came out to California for the California Pacific International Exposition. Leahy treated him to the largest fleet maneuver the U.S. Navy had ever carried out, with 129 warships, including 12 battleships, participating, which the President observed from the deck of the cruiser USS Houston.[62] On March 30, 1936, Leahy was promoted to the temporary rank of admiral and hoisted his four-star flag on the battleship USS California as Commander Battle Force.[63][64][65] One of his last acts in this post was a symbolic one: he transferred his flag to the aircraft carrier USS Ranger as a sign of his conviction that aircraft were now an integral part of sea power.[66]

Chief of Naval Operations

In December 1935, Swanson told Leahy in confidence that he would be appointed the next CNO if Roosevelt won the 1936 presidential election.[62] Roosevelt won the election with a landslide victory,[67] and on November 10, 1936, it was announced that he would succeed Standley as CNO on January 1, 1937.[68] As CNO, Leahy was content to let the bureau chiefs function as they always had, with the CNO acting as a primus inter pares.[69][70] On the other hand, Swanson was chronically ill, and Henry Roosevelt died on February 22, 1936.[71] Charles Edison became the new assistant secretary, but he lacked experience in naval affairs.[72]

 
Appearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington, D.C., on March 22, 1939, in support of military aid Latin American Republics. Left to right: George C. Marshall, Leahy, Key Pittman and Sumner Welles

Leahy began representing the Navy in cabinet meetings.[73] He met with the President frequently; during his tenure as CNO, Roosevelt had 52 meetings with him, compared with 12 with his Army counterpart, General Malin Craig, none of which were private lunches. Moreover, meetings between Leahy and Roosevelt were sometimes on matters unrelated to the Navy, and frequently went on for hours. At one private lunch on April 15, 1937, Leahy and Roosevelt debated whether new battleships should have 16-inch or (cheaper) 14-inch guns. Leahy ultimately persuaded the President that the new North Carolina-class battleships should have 16-inch guns. On May 22, Leahy accompanied the President and dignitaries including John Nance Garner, Harry Hopkins, James F. Byrnes, Morris Sheppard, Edwin C. Johnson, Claude Pepper and Sam Rayburn on a cruise on the presidential yacht USS Potomac to watch a baseball game between congressmen and the press.[74][75]

The most important issue confronting the administration was how to respond to the Japanese invasion of China. The commander-in-chief of the Asiatic Fleet, Admiral Harry Yarnell, asked for four additional cruisers to help evacuate American citizens from the Shanghai International Settlement, but the Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, thought this would be too provocative. Leahy went to Hyde Park to take the matter up with Roosevelt. The request was turned down: American isolationist sentiment was too strong to countenance the risk of being drawn into the conflict; Yarnell could use merchant ships, if he could find them. Leahy accepted this presidential decision, as he always did, even when he strongly disagreed.[74][76] Leahy wrote in his diary that a Japanese threat to bomb the civilian population in China was "evidence, and a conclusive one, that the old accepted rules of warfare are no longer in effect."[77]

On December 12, Leahy was informed of the USS Panay incident, in which an American gunboat on the Yangtze River had been sunk by Japanese aircraft. He met with Hull to craft a response, and discussed the matter with Roosevelt on December 14.[78] Leahy saw the Panay incident as a test of American resolve. He wanted to answer it with a show of force, with economic sanctions and a naval blockade of Japan. But among Roosevelt's advisors, he was the only one willing to countenance such a drastic step. Roosevelt agreed with him, but in an election year he felt he could not afford to antagonize the pacifists and isolationists. The Japanese apology therefore was accepted.[79]

 
Roosevelt presents Leahy with the Navy Distinguished Service Medal on July 28, 1939

The Panay incident did prompt Roosevelt and Leahy to press ahead with plans for an ambitious shipbuilding program. On January 5, Roosevelt, Leahy and Edison met with Congressman Carl Vinson to draw up a strategy for obtaining Congressional approval for a 20 percent increase in all classes of warships. The resulting Second Vinson Act was approved in May 1938, and provided for four more Iowa-class battleships, along with cruisers with a total displacement of 60,000 long tons (61,000 t) and destroyers with a total displacement of 30,000 long tons (30,000 t). Leahy had not thought it worthwhile to build more aircraft carriers, but five were added to what became the Two-Ocean Navy Act, together with five Montana-class battleships. Leahy also pushed for the construction of 24 Cimarron class oilers, which would be needed to project American sea power across the vastness of the Pacific.[80][81] Before retiring as CNO, Leahy joined his wife Louise when she sponsored the first of these, the USS Cimarron, which was commissioned on March 20, 1939.[82]

Roosevelt threw a surprise party for Leahy on July 28, 1939, during which he presented him with the Navy Distinguished Service Medal.[83] According to Leahy, Roosevelt said: "Bill, if we have a war, you're going to be right back here helping me run it."[84] To make this easier, Vinson and David I. Walsh were asked to expedite legislation to keep Leahy on the active list for another two years. On August 1, 1939 Leahy formally handed the position of CNO over to Admiral Harold Stark.[83]

Government service

Governor of Puerto Rico

 
As governor of Puerto Rico in 1939

From September 1939 to November 1940, Leahy served as Governor of Puerto Rico after Roosevelt removed Blanton Winship for his role in the Ponce massacre. Winship had aligned himself with the Coalición, a pro-American electoral alliance that represented the interests of the island's wealthy elite and American sugar corporations. Roosevelt gave Leahy both military and social objectives to carry out: on the military side, he had to develop and upgrade base installations there; on the social side, he had to alleviate the extreme poverty and inequality that afflicted the island. To tackle these problems, Leahy was given an additional $10 million (equivalent to $307 million in 2021) and extraordinary latitude in spending it. Leahy was named as the head of the Puerto Rican office of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which gave him control over New Deal funding. In October 1939, he also became the head of the Puerto Rico Cement Corporation in order to help it secure a $700,000 loan (equivalent to $13,000,000 in 2021) from the Federal government's Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC), and in December he became the head of the Puerto Rican branch of the RFC. His power was enhanced by his direct access to the President and the Secretary of the interior, Harold L. Ickes.[85]

Although given the unflattering sobriquet Almirante Lija ("Admiral Sandpaper") by locals, based on his surname, Leahy was regarded as one of the most lenient American governors of the several who served Puerto Rico in the first half of the 20th century.[86] He took an open stance of not intervening directly in local politics, although he remained involved in Federal politics, doing what he could to support Roosevelt's 1940 reelection. He attempted to understand and respect local customs, and initiated various major public works projects. Although his priority was developing Puerto Rico as a military base, over half the WPA funds were spent on public works such as roads and improving sanitation. He regulated prices and production in the coffee industry, and had ships traveling between the United States and the Panama Canal, where major upgrade works were being undertaken, stop over in Puerto Rico when they needed repairs or supplies. In December 1939 he met with Roosevelt and secured an additional $100 million in WPA funding (equivalent to $1,500 million in 2021) for public works, which allowed him to hire another 20,000 workers. By awarding lucrative government contracts and appointing officials based on Roosevelt's preferences rather than those of the local elite, he soon earned the enmity of the Coalición.[87]

 
Conferring with Puerto Rican officials. Left to right: Rafael Martínez Nadal, Santiago Iglesias, Leahy, standing; Fernando Geigel, Alfonso Valdez, Bolivar Pagan, and Luis Obergh.

Leahy oversaw the development of military bases and stations across the island.[88] At the time of his appointment as governor, the only naval installations were a radio station and a hydrographic office. On October 30, 1939, a fixed fee contract was awarded for construction of the Naval Air Station Isla Grande. Subsequently the scope of activity was widened to include the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station. The naval air station was intended to support two squadrons of seaplanes and a carrier air group. The 340-acre (140 ha) Isla Grande site included an existing Pan Am airstrip and a quarantine station, but most of it was mangrove swamp and tidal mud flats. The site was built up with fill dredged up from the San Antonio and Martín Peña Channels. The existing airstrip was realigned to conform to the prevailing winds, lengthened, widened, and surfaced with asphalt. A secondary runway was also built, along with a new quarantine station and hospital. Construction work on the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station commenced in 1941 under another fixed fee contract and the base was commissioned on July 15, 1943.[89]

Between January 1 and November 1, 1940, Leahy met with Roosevelt six times. One of the most important was a lunch on October 6, 1940. Admiral James O. Richardson, the CINCUS, had been ordered to keep the Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor at the conclusion of exercises there to act as a deterrent to the Japanese. Richardson protested; Pearl Harbor, he argued, was unsuitable as a base: it could not provide the needs of the fleet for an extended stay, which would affect its readiness, and was too vulnerable to a surprise attack. Leahy agreed with Richardson, but knew better than to press the matter with Roosevelt when the President's mind was made up. On February 1, 1941, Richardson was recalled and replaced as CINCUS by Admiral Husband Kimmel.[88][90][91]

Ambassador to France

The Fall of France in June 1940 came as a shock to many Americans;[92] Henry L. Stimson and McGeorge Bundy described it as "the most shocking single event of the war".[93] American security had been underwritten by Britain and France, allowing the United States to have a comparatively low amount of defense spending, and planning was based on the assumption that France would be a bulwark against Germany, as it had been in World War I, and that the United States would have ample time to mobilize industry and create armies. Now, with France gone, Germany could directly threaten the United States.[94] On November 18, 1940, Leahy was appointed United States Ambassador to France.[95] In his message asking Leahy to accept the position, Roosevelt explained:

We are confronting [the message said] an increasingly serious situation in France because of the possibility that one element in the present French Government may persuade Marshal Petain to enter into agreements with Germany which will facilitate the efforts of the Axis powers against Great Britain. There is even the possibility that France may actually engage in the war against Great Britain and in particular that the French fleet maybe utilized under the control of Germany.

We need in France at this time an Ambassador who can gain the confidence of Marshal Petain who at the present moment is the one powerful element in the French Government who is standing firm against selling out to Germany. I feel that you are the best man available for this mission. You can talk to Marshal Petain in language which he would understand and the position which you have held in our own Navy would undoubtedly give you great influence with the higher officers of the French Navy who are now hostile to Great Britain.[95]

 
Leahy pays a farewell call on French Chief of State Marshal Philippe Pétain on April 27, 1942

Leahy sailed from Puerto Rico on November 28, and arrived in New York on December 2, from whence he immediately flew to Washington, D.C., to confer with Roosevelt, who told him that he needed to gain the confidence of the French head of state, Marshal Philippe Pétain, and the Commander-in-Chief of the French Navy, Admiral François Darlan.[96] "My major task", Leahy later recalled "was to keep the French on our side in so far as possible".[96] The United States would give Britain all the help it could short of actually joining the war, and Leahy would convince Pétain and Darlan that it was in France's best interest that Germany be defeated.[97] He departed Norfolk, Virginia, on December 17 on the cruiser USS Tuscaloosa, and reached Lisbon, Portugal, on December 30. He then traveled overland by train and car to Vichy,[98][99] where he presented his letter of credence to Pétain on January 9, 1941.[100][101]

The United States had some levers with which to influence the French. It supplied food and medical aid to the Vichy French regime in French North Africa, hoping in return to moderate its collaboration with the Axis Powers. After six months of negotiations, the British agreed to permit medical supplies to be shipped through the British blockade under Red Cross supervision.[102] Food was another matter; it was estimated that 22 million French people did not get enough to eat. The British believed that Germany would seize up to 58 percent of France's food crops, but Darlan blamed the British naval blockade, arguing that the critical shortage was not of food but of fuel for its distribution, and he threatened to use the French Navy to break the blockade.[103][104]

Leahy advised Roosevelt that the shipment of supplies to France would improve America's standing and stiffen Pétain's resolve to resist German demands,[105] In his opinion, the "British blockade action which prevents the delivery of necessary foodstuffs to the inhabitants of unoccupied France is of the same order of stupidity as many other British policies in the present war."[106] He also hoped that aid to French North Africa would strengthen the hand of General Maxime Weygand there. Roosevelt compelled the British to accept the shipment of medicine and food intended for children, along with thousands of tons of fuel for their distribution.[107]

American aid proved insufficient to buy French support. In May 1941, Darlan agreed to the Paris Protocols, which granted Germany access to French military bases in Syria, Tunisia, and French West Africa,[108] and in July the French granted Japan access to bases in French Indochina, which directly threatened the American position in the Philippines.[109] Although no German bombers had the range to bomb the United States from bases in Senegal, if they could deploy from Senegal to Vichy-held Martinique, they could do so from there.[110] Weygand, the main American hope for a change in French policy, was recalled on November 18,[111] despite Leahy's warnings that this could prompt a cession of American aid.[112] On December 7, 1941, Leahy received news of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. This was followed, on December 11, by the German declaration of war against the United States.[113] With the United States now in the war, Leahy thought that this would strengthen his hand with the Vichy government,[114] but Charles de Gaulle's capture of Saint Pierre and Miquelon later that month discredited American assurances that French colonies would not be seized.[115]

By this time Leahy was convinced that the United States was backing the wrong side, and he urged Roosevelt to use this as a pretext for recalling him to the United States.[116] This was finally prompted by the formation of a new government in Vichy under the pro-Axis Pierre Laval on April 18. Meanwhile, on April 9, Leahy's wife Louise underwent a hysterectomy. While recovering from the operation, she suffered an embolism and died on April 21. Leahy called on Pétain to say farewell on April 27. He arrived back in New York on the Swedish-registered ocean liner SS Drottningholm on June 1. He arranged for a funeral service for Louise at the St. Thomas Episcopal Church, where they had been members for many years, and watched her burial in Arlington National Cemetery on June 3, 1942.[117][118][119]

Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief

Organization and role

Waging a two-ocean war as part of a coalition revealed serious deficiencies in the organization of the American high command when it came to formulating grand strategy: meetings of the senior officers of the Army and Navy with each other and with the President were irregular and infrequent, and there was no joint planning staff or secretariat to record decisions taken.[120] Under the Constitution of the United States, the President was the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy.[121] At a meeting with Roosevelt on February 24, 1942, the Chief of Staff of the United States Army, General George C. Marshall, urged Roosevelt to appoint a chief of staff of the armed forces to provide unity of command, and he suggested Leahy for the role.[122] Leahy had lunch with Roosevelt on July 7, during which this was discussed.[123] On July 21, Leahy was recalled to active duty. He resigned as Ambassador to France and was appointed Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy.[124] In announcing the appointment, Roosevelt described Leahy's role as an advisory one rather than that of a supreme commander.[125]

 
Joint Chiefs of Staff lunches were held every Wednesday. Left to right: General Henry H. Arnold, Chief of U.S. Army Air Forces; Leahy; Admiral Ernest J. King, Chief of Naval Operations and Commander in Chief, U.S. Fleet; and General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army.

Leahy attended his first meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) on July 28. The other members were Marshall; King,[126] who was now both CNO and Commander in Chief, U.S. Fleet (now abbreviated as COMINCH);[127][128] and Lieutenant General Henry H. Arnold, the Chief of U.S. Army Air Forces.[129] Henceforth, the JCS held regular meetings at noon on Wednesdays, which usually commenced with a light lunch.[129] Leahy served as the de facto chairman. He drew up the agenda for the JCS meetings, presided over them, and signed off on all the major papers and decisions.[130] He considered that this was due to his seniority and not by virtue of his position.[131] He had a small personal staff of two military aides-de-camp and two or three secretaries.[132] JCS meetings were held in the Public Health Service Building, where Leahy had an office.[133] After some renovations were made, he was also given an office in the East Wing of the White House on September 7, 1942;[132] the other two main offices there were occupied by Hopkins and Byrnes.[134] Roosevelt had the Map Room constructed in the White House where large maps showed the progress of the war. Only Leahy and Hopkins had unrestricted access to the Map Room; everyone else had to be accompanied by Leahy or Hopkins or given special permission to enter.[135]

Two days after his first JCS meeting, there was a meeting of the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS), which Leahy also chaired.[129][136] In these meetings the JCS met with the leaders of the British Joint Staff Mission: Field Marshal Sir John Dill, Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham, Air Marshal Douglas Evill and Lieutenant General Gordon Macready. CCS meetings were held every Friday.[130] The main agendum item at his first JCS and CCS meetings was Operation Gymnast, a proposed invasion of French North Africa. Marshall and King were opposed to it on the grounds that it would divert resources necessary for Operation Roundup, a landing in northern France, but after listening to their arguments, Leahy informed them Roosevelt was adamant that it was vital American forces take the field against Germany in 1942, and that Gymnast was to proceed.[129][136] Roosevelt gave his formal assent on July 25. Marshall and King considered this to be tentative, but Leahy informed them that the decision was final.[129][136]

Leahy usually arrived at his White House office sometime between 08:30 and 08:45 each day and went over copies of dispatches and reports. For convenience, the documents were color coded: pink for incoming dispatches from the theater; yellow for outgoing ones; green for JCS papers; white for CCS ones; and blue for papers from the Joint Staff Planners. Leahy would select the papers to be brought to the President's attention, and would meet with him each morning in the Oval Office or the Map Room.[137] This included high-grade Ultra intelligence. Control of the flow of information gave Leahy an additional source of power and influence beyond his personal relationship with the President.[138]

Grand strategy

When Roosevelt went away, Leahy went with him.[137] Leahy missed the Casablanca Conference in January 1943; after setting out with Roosevelt, Hopkins and Rear Admiral Ross McIntire, Leahy developed bronchitis and had to remain in Trinidad. But he was present at all the other inter-Allied conferences that the President attended.[139] Leahy's support of Roosevelt's decision to invade French North Africa did not mean that he bought into the British Mediterranean strategy. He joined Marshall and King in their advocacy of a cross-Channel operation in 1944. At the first conference he attended, the Third Washington Conference, in May 1943 he clashed with the British chiefs of staff over their reluctance to undertake operations to reopen the overland route to China, which Leahy considered vital to both the war against Japan and the postwar era. Leahy eventually extracted a promise from the British to undertake Operation Anakim, an offensive to recapture Burma, in 1943.[140][141][142] Leahy sided with Hopkins and Major General Claire Chennault in supporting a bombing offensive against Japan from bases in China despite Marshall's prescient warnings that this could not be sustained without adequate ground troops to protect the air bases. Marshall was proven correct when a Japanese offensive overran Chennault's bases.[143]

 
The Combined Chiefs of Staff meet in the U.S. Public Health Service Building in Washington, D.C., in October 1943. British officers, on the left side of the table, are (front to back): Wilfrid Patterson, Sir John Dill, Vivian Dykes, Gordon Macready and Douglas Evill . U.S. officers, at the right side and head of the table, are (front to back): Ernest J. King, William D. Leahy, John R. Deane, George C. Marshall, Joseph T. McNarney and an unidentified colonel

On November 12, 1943, Roosevelt, Hopkins, Leahy, King and Marshall set off together from Hampton Roads on the battleship USS Iowa. Roosevelt occupied the captain's cabin, and Leahy the one for an embarked admiral; Marshall, the next most senior officer, had the chief of staff's cabin. The President had his own mess, where he dined with Hopkins, Leahy, McIntire, and Roosevelt's aides, Rear Admiral Wilson Brown and Major General Edwin "Pa" Watson; the other senior officers took their meals with the ships' officers. They reached Mers-el-Kebir on November 20, from whence they flew to Tunis and then Cairo.[144] Roosevelt stayed at the American Ambassador's compound in Cairo. Space was limited, so he took only Leahy and Hopkins with him. Discussions with the British in Cairo were mainly concerned with Burma and China, about which they had much less interest than the Americans.[145]

They then flew on to Tehran, Iran, for talks with Stalin.[145] Roosevelt was slated to stay at the American legation there, but Stalin offered to put Roosevelt up at the Soviet compound. He was allowed to bring two people with him, so he chose Leahy and Hopkins.[146] The conference reached agreement with the Soviets on the cross-Channel operation (Operation Overlord) and an invasion of Southern France (Operation Anvil). When General Sir Alan Brooke began to back away from the commitment, Leahy finally lost his patience and demanded to know under what circumstances he would be willing to undertake Overlord. In the end, the British, as Leahy put it, "fell into line".[147]

Although the conservative Leahy regarded Hopkins as a "pinko", the two men worked well together, and Leahy became quite fond of Hopkins. Both men were completely devoted to the President, and Leahy saw something of himself in the idealistic Hopkins.[148][149] Over time, Leahy gradually replaced Hopkins as Roosevelt's most trusted advisor, becoming, in the words of historian Phillips O'Brien, "the second most powerful man in the world".[150] The main reason for this was the precarious state of Hopkins's health. Hopkins was diagnosed with stomach cancer, and in December 1937, doctors removed three quarters of his stomach. Although his cancer did not return, he suffered a series of ailments, including malnutrition and hepatitis B contracted from blood transfusions. His drinking and smoking did not help. For a time he received injections of blood plasma, and seemed to improve, but by late 1943 his health was clearly declining.[151] He married Louise Gill Macy in the Oval office on July 30, 1942.[152] For a time she lived in the White House with Hopkins, but she prevailed on him to move out in December 1943. He was therefore no longer at Roosevelt's beck and call as often.[153]

Leahy spent D-Day, June 6, 1944, in his home town of Hampton, Iowa. This well-publicized "sentimental journey" was part of the deception efforts surrounding the Allied invasion of Europe. The idea was to lull any German agents in the United States into believing that the operation would not take place while such an important officer was out of the capital.[154] The following month, he accompanied President Roosevelt to the Pacific Strategy Conference in Hawaii at which Roosevelt met Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, the commander in chief of the Pacific Ocean Areas, and General Douglas MacArthur, the commander in chief of the Southwest Pacific Area. This was unnecessary; the two commanders could have sent representatives to Washington, but Roosevelt saw it as offering good photo opportunities in an election year.[155]

 
Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin at the Yalta conference in February 1945. Leahy stands behind Roosevelt.

Roosevelt, Leahy and presidential speech writer Samuel Rosenman (instead of Hopkins) set out from Washington in Roosevelt's personal railcar, the Ferdinand Magellan, on July 13. They went to Hyde Park, where Roosevelt showed Leahy around his Presidential Library, then to Chicago, where Roosevelt conferred with leaders of the Democratic Party over the choice of Harry S. Truman as his vice presidential running mate in the 1944 election.[155] In San Diego they boarded the cruiser USS Baltimore, which took them to Hawaii, where Nimitz briefed them on a proposed invasion of the island of Formosa, King's preferred target, but also spoke favorably of MacArthur's alternative of liberating the Philippines. Leahy hoped that this would facilitate a naval and air blockade that would make an invasion of Japan unnecessary.[155] No decision was taken at this time, and the JCS continued debating the issue for months before authorizing the liberation of Luzon on October 3.[156]

Hopkins was not present at the Second Quebec Conference in September 1944 either, continuing Leahy's transformation into a White House advisor. He did not attend the political sessions at Quebec, but at this level political and military issues were indistinguishable. For example, the JCS examined a proposal for a British fleet to participate in the Pacific War, a military proposal with a political objective.[157] King was unenthusiastic about the idea; the U.S. Navy was performing well against the Japanese, and the addition of British forces would complicate command and logistics arrangements. Leahy and Marshall pressed for the British offer to be accepted, and in the end it was, with the proviso that the British Pacific Fleet would be self-supporting.[158]

Another debate concerned the American occupation zone in Germany. The United States was allocated the southern part of Germany, which meant that its lines of communications would run through France, where Leahy was concerned about the prospect of a postwar Communist takeover. Roosevelt and Churchill reached a compromise, whereby the ports of Bremen and Bremerhaven would be given to the Americans, along with the right of transit through the British Zone.[159]

Leahy was advanced to the newly-created rank of Fleet Admiral on December 15, 1944, making him the most senior of the seven men who received five-star rank that month.[160][161][162] He accompanied President Roosevelt to the Yalta Conference in February 1945. The cruiser USS Quincy took them to Malta, where Leahy chaired a CCS meeting to discuss the war against Germany, and then the President's personal aircraft, the Sacred Cow, flew them to Yalta.[163] At Yalta, Roosevelt met Churchill and Stalin to decide how Europe was to be reorganized after the impending surrender of Germany.[164]

On April 12, 1945, Roosevelt died. Leahy attended the ceremonies and the memorial service for his friend, which was held in the East Room of the White House.[165]

Atomic bomb

On April 13, Leahy gave the regular morning briefing on the progress of the war to Truman, who had become President on Roosevelt's death. This was followed by a short meeting with the Joint Chiefs, the Secretary of War, Henry Stimson, and the Secretary of the Navy, James Forrestal. Afterwards, Leahy offered to resign, but Truman decided to retain him as chief of staff.[166] On June 18, the Joint Chiefs, along with Stimson and Forrestal, met with Truman at the White House to discuss Operation Olympic, the planned invasion of Kyushu. Truman chaired the meeting. Marshall and King strongly favored the operation, and all the others voiced their support except Leahy, who feared that it would result in high casualties. He questioned Marshall's casualty estimates, which were based on the Luzon campaign, which took place on a large land mass where there was ample room for maneuver, rather than the Okinawa campaign, which took place on an island where lack of maneuver room resulted in frontal assaults and high casualties.[167]

According to Truman's Memoirs: Year of Decisions, Leahy was present in 1945 when Truman was given advice by Vannevar Bush about the Manhattan Project:

The next day Jimmy Byrnes, who until shortly before had been Director of War Mobilization for President Roosevelt, came to see me, and even he told me few details though with great solemnity he said that we were perfecting an explosive great enough to destroy the whole world. It was later, when Vannevar Bush, head of the Office of Scientific Research and Development, came to the White House, that I was given a scientist's version of the atomic bomb.

Admiral Leahy was with me when Dr. Bush told me this astonishing fact.

"That is the biggest fool thing we have ever done," he observed in his sturdy, salty manner. "The bomb will never go off, and I speak as an expert in explosives."[168]

After the bomb was tested, Truman consulted with Byrnes, Stimson, Leahy, Marshall, Arnold and Dwight D. Eisenhower, the commander of United States Forces, European Theater. The consensus was that the atomic bomb should be used.[169] In his memoirs, Leahy wrote:

Once it had been tested, President Truman faced the decision as to whether to use it. He did not like the idea, but he was persuaded that it would shorten the war against Japan and save American lives. It is my opinion that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender because of the effective sea blockade and the successful bombing with conventional weapons ... My own feeling was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I was not taught to make wars in that fashion, and that wars cannot be won by destroying women and children.[170]

Historian Barton J. Bernstein noted that Leahy did not oppose its use at the time:

Nor is there solid evidence that any high-ranking American military leader, other than General George C. Marshall on one occasion, expressed moral objections before Hiroshima to the use of the atomic bomb on Japanese cities. Nor, before Hiroshima, did any other top military leader — Admiral William Leahy, Admiral Ernest King, or General Henry Arnold – ever raise a political or military objection to the use of the A-bomb on Japanese cities or argue explicitly that it would be unnecessary. Only after the war would Leahy utter moral and political objections...[171]

Truman administration

In July 1945, Leahy accompanied Truman to the Potsdam Conference where Truman met with Stalin and the new British Prime Minister Clement Attlee to make decisions about the governance of occupied Germany.[172] Hopkins was too ill to make the journey.[173] Leahy was disappointed in the outcome of these conferences. He considered that both Truman and Stalin had suffered defeats, with proposals that would have ensured a lasting peace in Europe being watered down or turned down. He recognized that the Soviet Union was a dominant power in Europe, and that the British Empire was in terminal decline, underscored by the mid-conference replacement of Churchill by Attlee.[174]

 
Sitting (from left): Clement Attlee, Harry S. Truman, Joseph Stalin; behind: William D. Leahy, Ernest Bevin, James F. Byrnes and Vyacheslav Molotov.

On January 24, 1946, Leahy was appointed to the interim National Intelligence Authority (NIA), which oversaw activities of the nascent Central Intelligence Group.[175] The following year the National Security Act of 1947 replaced these organizations with the National Security Council and the Central Intelligence Agency respectively, ending Leahy's involvement.[176] He continued to chair meetings of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and he rejected war plans that he felt placed too much emphasis on the first use of nuclear weapons.[177] Like many naval officers, he was opposed to the unification of the War and Navy departments into the Department of Defense, fearing that the Navy would lose its naval aviation and the Marine Corps. Nor did he agree with formalizing the role of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.[178]

Leahy was involved in the preparation of two speeches that marked the onset of the Cold War: Truman's Navy Day address on October 27, 1945,[179][180] and Churchill's "Iron Curtain" speech on March 5, 1946.[181][182] The former was written by Leahy and Rosenman, and reflected Leahy's ideas about the fundamental goals of U.S. foreign policy;[179] the latter was written by Churchill, but in consultation with Leahy, who was the only one of the "American military men" referred to in the speech with whom Churchill discussed the speech.[181] But Leahy's non-interventionist stance on U.S. involvement in the Greek Civil War and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict were increasingly out of step with the policies of the Truman administration.[183] On September 20, 1948, columnist Constantine Brown published allegations that White House advisors Clark Clifford and David K. Niles were urging Truman to get rid of Leahy, whom they regarded, Brown said, as an "old-fashioned reactionary".[184]

On the day after Truman won the presidential election on November 2, 1948, Leahy asked to be retired in January. In December, doctors diagnosed Leahy with a partial blockage of the kidneys. On December 28, he met with Truman as chief of staff for the last time.[185] Truman officially accepted his resignation as his chief of staff on March 2, 1949, although as an officer with five-star rank, Leahy technically remained on active service as an advisor to the Secretary of the Navy.[186]

The following year, Leahy published his war memoirs, I Was There. His unemotional, unexciting and unenlightening style did his publisher no favors.[187] Orville Prescott the book reviewer for The New York Times wrote: "As the personal confidant of President Roosevelt and President Truman, Admiral Leahy ought to have a good story to tell. Unfortunately, he hasn't... its stiff official manner, its elaborate discretion, its desperate need of editing and its lack of any exciting new information make it dull and dusty fare... writes in a prose style as rigid as a naval cadet standing at attention in his review."[188] The book sold poorly, and when Leahy subsequently proposed a book about his time in Puerto Rico, the publisher turned it down.[187]

Death and legacy

 
Grave at Arlington National Cemetery

Leahy died at the U.S. Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, on July 20, 1959, at the age of eighty-four. At the time of his death, he was the oldest officer on active duty in the history of the U.S. Navy. He was given an Armed Forces military funeral. His body was viewed at the Bethlehem Chapel at the Washington National Cathedral from noon on July 22 until noon on July 23. A funeral service was then held in the cathedral at 14:00, followed by the burial in Arlington National Cemetery.[189] Honorary pallbearers were Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Admiral Thomas C. Hart, Admiral Charles P. Snyder, Admiral Louis E. Denfeld, Admiral Arthur W. Radford, Vice Admiral Edward L. Cochrane, and Rear Admiral Henry Williams, all retired from service. Active military servicemen who were honorary pallbearers were Admiral Jerauld Wright, Admiral Robert L. Dennison, Rear Admiral Joseph H. Wellings, and close friend, William D. Hassett.[189]

Leahy's papers are in the Naval History and Heritage Command and the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.; some personal correspondence is held by the Wisconsin Historical Society.[190][191] The DLG-16, the lead ship of the Leahy-class cruisers, was named in his honor.[192]

Dates of rank

  United States Naval Academy naval cadet – Class of 1897, 35th of class of 47

Ensign Lieutenant Junior Grade Lieutenant Lieutenant Commander Commander
O-1 O-2 O-3 O-4 O-5
         
July 1, 1899 [6] July 1, 1902 [6] December 31, 1903 [6] September 15, 1909 [6] August 29, 1916 [6]
Captain Rear Admiral Vice Admiral Admiral Fleet Admiral
O-6 O-8 O-9 O-10 Special Grade
         
July 1, 1918 [6] October 14, 1927 [6] July 13, 1935 [6] January 2, 1937 [6] December 15, 1944 [6]

Decorations and awards

 
       
     
 
 
 
 
     
     
Source: [6]
  • Leahy was invested as an Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Military Division of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath on November 21, 1945.[193]

Bibliography

  • Leahy, William D. (1950). I Was There: The Personal Story of the Chief of Staff to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman: Based on His Notes and Diaries Made at the Time. New York: Whittlesey House. OCLC 702607509. Retrieved May 11, 2022.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Borneman 2012, pp. 13–14.
  2. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 5–7.
  3. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 10.
  4. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 7–8.
  5. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 9–10.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Leahy, William Daniel". Naval History & Heritage Command. Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  7. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 27.
  8. ^ "Naval Academy Class of '78 Shines with Four 4 Stars". United States Naval Academy. January 19, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  9. ^ "USNA Timeline :: History of USNA". United States Naval Academy. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  10. ^ Borneman 2012, p. 18.
  11. ^ a b Borneman 2012, pp. 23–25.
  12. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 44.
  13. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, p. 14.
  14. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 25.
  15. ^ Thomas 1973, pp. 50–51.
  16. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 56.
  17. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 65.
  18. ^ Thomas 1973, pp. 71–73.
  19. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 15–19.
  20. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 81.
  21. ^ a b Thomas 1973, pp. 87–93.
  22. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 20.
  23. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 19–23.
  24. ^ a b c Borneman 2012, pp. 66–67.
  25. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 24–26.
  26. ^ "Vice Admiral .Albert Parker Niblack, U. S. Navy, Deceased" (PDF). Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  27. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 26–27.
  28. ^ "Burial Detail: Leahy, William H. – ANC Explorer". Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved October 4, 2022.
  29. ^ a b c Thomas 1973, p. 98.
  30. ^ Adams 1985, p. 26.
  31. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 32.
  32. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 32–34.
  33. ^ a b Borneman 2012, pp. 68–69.
  34. ^ Thomas 1973, p. 99.
  35. ^ Thomas 1973, pp. 108–109.
  36. ^ Mobley 2019, p. 47.
  37. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 36–37.
  38. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 38–39.
  39. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 40–44.
  40. ^ Thomas 1973, pp. 127–128.
  41. ^ a b c O'Brien 2019, pp. 46–48.
  42. ^ "William Leahy – Recipient". Military Times. Retrieved May 12, 2022.
  43. ^ a b Adams 1985, pp. 36–37.
  44. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 49–51.
  45. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 40–42.
  46. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 56–60.
  47. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 45–46.
  48. ^ Borneman 2012, pp. 107–108.
  49. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 67–68.
  50. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 58–61.
  51. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 68–69.
  52. ^ a b Adams 1985, pp. 64–66.
  53. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 70–72.
  54. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 73.
  55. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 79.
  56. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 82.
  57. ^ a b c O'Brien 2019, pp. 84–87.
  58. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 70–71.
  59. ^ a b Borneman 2012, pp. 153–155.
  60. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 93–94.
  61. ^ Adams 1985, p. 83.
  62. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, p. 95.
  63. ^ Borneman 2012, p. 156.
  64. ^ Adams 1985, p. 86.
  65. ^ "Leahy Takes Post Today. Vice-Admiral Will Assume Battle Force Command, Succeeding Laning". The Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. March 30, 1936. Retrieved May 14, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
  66. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 97.
  67. ^ Borneman 2012, pp. 166–167.
  68. ^ "Leahy Will Direct Naval Operations". The New York Times. November 11, 1936. p. 53. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  69. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 109.
  70. ^ Adams 1985, p. 90.
  71. ^ "Henry Roosevelt is Dead in Capital". The New York Times. February 23, 1936. p. 1. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  72. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 100.
  73. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 106.
  74. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 104–106.
  75. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 94–95.
  76. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 97–98.
  77. ^ Adams 1985, p. 99.
  78. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 112–114.
  79. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 20–21.
  80. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 114–116.
  81. ^ Rogers, J. David. "Development of the World's Fastest Battleships" (PDF). Missouri University of Science and Technology. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
  82. ^ "Cimarron II (AO". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  83. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 129–130.
  84. ^ Leahy 1950, p. 12.
  85. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 131–133.
  86. ^ Alexander 2007, p. 52.
  87. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 133–134.
  88. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 139–142.
  89. ^ U.S. Navy Department 1947, pp. 5–9.
  90. ^ McClain 1984, p. 35.
  91. ^ Adams 1985, p. 132.
  92. ^ Neiberg 2021, pp. 1–2.
  93. ^ Stimson & Bundy 1971, p. 541.
  94. ^ Neiberg 2021, pp. 10–15.
  95. ^ a b Holmes 1974, p. 2.
  96. ^ a b Leahy 1950, p. 8.
  97. ^ Holmes 1974, p. 41.
  98. ^ Holmes 1974, pp. 45–46.
  99. ^ Neiberg 2021, p. 98.
  100. ^ Holmes 1974, pp. 49–50.
  101. ^ "Leahy Confers With Petain". The New York Times. January 10, 1941. p. 4. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  102. ^ Holmes 1974, p. 53.
  103. ^ Neiberg 2021, p. 102.
  104. ^ Holmes 1974, pp. 57–59.
  105. ^ Holmes 1974, pp. 61–62.
  106. ^ Holmes 1974, pp. 95–98.
  107. ^ Neiberg 2021, p. 104.
  108. ^ Neiberg 2021, pp. 120–122.
  109. ^ Neiberg 2021, pp. 130–131.
  110. ^ Neiberg 2021, pp. 136–137.
  111. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 169.
  112. ^ Holmes 1974, pp. 184–188.
  113. ^ Holmes 1974, p. 194.
  114. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 170–171.
  115. ^ Neiberg 2021, pp. 137–139.
  116. ^ Neiberg 2021, p. 147.
  117. ^ Leahy 1950, pp. 111–116.
  118. ^ Borneman 2012, pp. 267–269.
  119. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 177.
  120. ^ Miles 1999, pp. 60–63.
  121. ^ Leahy 1950, p. 118.
  122. ^ Miles 1999, pp. 66–67.
  123. ^ Leahy 1950, pp. 119–120.
  124. ^ Hamilton, Thomas J. (July 26, 1942). "President Praises Leahy's Vichy Role". The New York Times. p. 17. Retrieved May 18, 2022.
  125. ^ Kluckhohn, Frank L. (July 26, 1942). "Leahy's Role in the War: Real Importance of Admiral's Task as Aide to the President May Appear Later". The New York Times. p. 84. Retrieved May 18, 2022.
  126. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 191.
  127. ^ Miles 1999, pp. 67–68.
  128. ^ Adams 1985, p. 182.
  129. ^ a b c d e O'Brien 2019, pp. 191–192.
  130. ^ a b Leahy 1950, p. 126.
  131. ^ Miles 1999, p. 168.
  132. ^ a b Miles 1999, p. 140.
  133. ^ Leahy 1950, pp. 121–122.
  134. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 187.
  135. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 181.
  136. ^ a b c Miles 1999, pp. 90–92.
  137. ^ a b Leahy 1950, pp. 121–123.
  138. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 73–78.
  139. ^ Adams 1985, p. 201.
  140. ^ Hayes 1982, pp. 261–263.
  141. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 222–229.
  142. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 115–118.
  143. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 113–115.
  144. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 224–227.
  145. ^ a b McClain 1984, pp. 122–125.
  146. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 257.
  147. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 129–130.
  148. ^ McClain 1984, p. 73.
  149. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 246.
  150. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 220.
  151. ^ Costigliola 2008, pp. 695–696.
  152. ^ "Hopkins Marries In White House – He Weds Mrs. Louise G. Macy Before Fireplace in Oval Study". The New York Times. July 30, 1942. p. 17. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  153. ^ Costigliola 2008, p. 695-696.
  154. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 277.
  155. ^ a b c O'Brien 2019, pp. 287–290.
  156. ^ Hayes 1982, pp. 621–624.
  157. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 180–181.
  158. ^ Hayes 1982, pp. 630–638.
  159. ^ McClain 1984, pp. 182–185.
  160. ^ "Five Star Officers". Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
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  162. ^ Adams 1985, p. 265.
  163. ^ Adams 1985, pp. 267–271.
  164. ^ Leahy 1950, pp. 374–379.
  165. ^ Leahy 1950, pp. 400–403.
  166. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 329–331.
  167. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 341–345.
  168. ^ Truman 1955, p. 11.
  169. ^ Bernstein 1987, p. 378.
  170. ^ Leahy 1950, p. 513.
  171. ^ Bernstein 1987, pp. 386–387.
  172. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 348–350.
  173. ^ Leahy 1950, p. 447.
  174. ^ Leahy 1950, p. 497.
  175. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 376–377, 390–391.
  176. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 418.
  177. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 424–426.
  178. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 391–392.
  179. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, pp. 367–371.
  180. ^ "Text of President's Navy Day Speech in Central Park on the Aims of U.S. Foreign Policy". The New York Times. October 28, 1945. p. 33. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
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  182. ^ "Winston Churchill's Iron Curtain Speech—March 5, 1946". The National WWII Museum – New Orleans. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
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  184. ^ O'Brien 2019, p. 432.
  185. ^ O'Brien 2019, pp. 434–436.
  186. ^ Naval History and Heritage Command 2015, p. 19.
  187. ^ a b O'Brien 2019, p. 441.
  188. ^ Prescott, Orville (March 20, 1950). "Books of the Times". The New York Times. p. 19. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  189. ^ a b Mossman & Stark 1971, pp. 143–148.
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  193. ^ "Photo of the Earl of Halifax, British Ambassador to the U.S., and various U. S. Military leaders". Harry S. Truman Library and Museum. Retrieved June 10, 2022.

References

  • Adams, Henry H. (1985). Witness to Power: The Life of Fleet Admiral William D. Leahy. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-338-0. OCLC 464550175.
  • Alexander, David (2007). The Building: A Biography of the Pentagon. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI. ISBN 978-0-7603-2087-7. OCLC 701237862.
  • Bernstein, Barton J. (1987). "Ike and Hiroshima: Did he oppose it?". The Journal of Strategic Studies. 10 (3): 377–389. doi:10.1080/01402398708437307.
  • Borneman, Walter (2012). The Admirals: The Five-Star Admirals Who Won the War at Sea. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-09783-3. OCLC 805654962.
  • Costigliola, Frank (2008). "Broken Circle: The Isolation of Franklin D. Roosevelt in World War II". Diplomatic History. 32 (5): 677–718. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2008.00725.x. JSTOR 24915955.
  • Hayes, Grace P. (1982). The History of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in World War II. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-269-7. OCLC 7795125.
  • Holmes, Janes Houghton (February 18, 1974). Admiral Leahy in Vichy France (PhD thesis). Washington, D.C.: The George Washington University – via ProQuest.
  • McClain, Linda (August 1984). The Role of Admiral W. D. Leahy in U.S. Foreign Policy (PhD thesis). Charlottesville, Virginia: University of Virginia – via ProQuest.
  • Miles, Paul L. Jr. (June 1999). American Strategy in World War II: The Role of William D. Leahy (PhD thesis). Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University – via ProQuest.
  • Mobley, Scott (2019). "By the Force of Our Arms: William D. Leahy and the U.S. Intervention in Nicaragua, 1912" (PDF). Federal History (11): 39–59. ISSN 2163-8144. Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  • Mossman, B.; Stark, M. W. (1971). The Last Salute: Civil and Military Funeral, 1921–1969 (PDF). Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Army. OCLC 596887. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  • Naval History and Heritage Command (2015). United States Navy Office of the Chief of Naval Operations: 100th Anniversary (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Naval History and Heritage Command. ISBN 978-0-16-092779-9. OCLC 920468160. Retrieved May 12, 2022.
  • Neiberg, Michael S. (2021). When France Fell: The Vichy Crisis and the Fate of the Anglo-American Alliance. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-25856-3. OCLC 1288343540.
  • O'Brien, Phillips (2019). The Second Most Powerful Man in the World: The Life of Admiral William D. Leahy, Roosevelt's Chief of Staff. New York: Dutton Caliber, an imprint of Penguin Random House. ISBN 978-0-399-58482-4. OCLC 1260671230.
  • Stimson, Henry L.; Bundy, McGeorge (1971). On Active Service in Peace and War. New York: Octagon Books. ISBN 978-0-374-97627-9. OCLC 833688612.
  • Thomas, Gerald E. (1973). William D. Leahy and America's Imperial Years, 1893-1917 (PDF) (PhD thesis). Yale University. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  • Truman, Harry S. (1955). Memoirs of Harry S. Truman. Vol. I: Year of Decisions. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company. OCLC 20899832.
  • U.S. Navy Department (1947). Building the Navy's Bases in World War II. History of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Civil Engineer Corps 1940–1946. Vol. II. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. OCLC 1023942.

Further reading

  • Beruff, Jorge Rodríguez (2002). Las memorias de Leahy: los relatos del almirante William D. Leahy sobre su gobernación de Puerto Rico (1939–1940) [Leahy's Memoirs: Admiral William D. Leahy's Account of His Governorship of Puerto Rico (1939–1940)] (in Spanish and English). San Juan, Puerto Rico: Autor. ISBN 978-1-881730-09-5. OCLC 253353884.
  • Hall, George M. (1994). The Fifth Star: High Command in an Era of Global War. Westport: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-94802-3. OCLC 28891203.
  • Langer, William L. (1947). Our Vichy Gamble. New York: Knopf. OCLC 906119423.
Military offices
Preceded by Chief of Naval Operations
1937–1939
Succeeded by
New office Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief
1942–1949
Succeeded byas Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Puerto Rico
September 11, 1939 – November 28, 1940
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to France
1941–1942
Vacant
Title next held by
Jefferson Caffery in 1944

william, leahy, william, daniel, leahy, 1875, july, 1959, american, naval, officer, served, most, senior, united, states, military, officer, active, duty, during, world, held, multiple, titles, center, major, military, decisions, during, world, fleet, admiral,. William Daniel Leahy ˈ l eɪ h i ˌ ˈ l eɪ i May 6 1875 July 20 1959 was an American naval officer who served as the most senior United States military officer on active duty during World War II He held multiple titles and was at the center of all major military decisions of the U S during World War II As a fleet admiral he was the first U S military flag officer ever to hold a five star rank in the U S Armed Forces He has been described by historian Phillips O Brien as the second most powerful man in the world for his influence over U S foreign and military policy throughout the war Fleet AdmiralWilliam D LeahyLeahy c 1945Chief of Staff to the Commander in ChiefIn office July 20 1942 March 21 1949PresidentFranklin D RooseveltHarry S TrumanPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOmar Bradley as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of StaffUnited States Ambassador to FranceIn office January 8 1941 May 1 1942PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byWilliam Christian Bullitt Jr Succeeded byJefferson CafferyGovernor of Puerto RicoIn office September 11 1939 November 28 1940PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byJose E Colom acting Succeeded byJose Miguel Gallardo acting Chief of Naval OperationsIn office January 2 1937 August 1 1939PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byWilliam Harrison StandleySucceeded byHarold Rainsford StarkPersonal detailsBornWilliam Daniel Leahy 1875 05 06 May 6 1875Hampton Iowa U S DiedJuly 20 1959 1959 07 20 aged 84 Bethesda Maryland U S Military serviceBranch serviceUnited States NavyYears of service1893 1959RankFleet AdmiralCommandsChief of Staff to the Commander in ChiefChief of Naval OperationsBattleships Battle ForceUSS New MexicoUSS ShawmutUSS St LouisUSS ChattanoogaUSS Princess MatoikaUSS DolphinUSS MarivelesBattles warsSpanish American War Philippine American War Boxer Rebellion World War I Occupation of Haiti Occupation of the Dominican Republic Occupation of Haiti Greco Turkish War World War IIAwardsNavy Cross Navy Distinguished Service Medal 3 An 1897 graduate of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis Maryland Leahy saw service in the Spanish American War the Philippine American War Boxer Rebellion in China the Banana Wars and World War I As Chief of Naval Operations from 1937 to 1939 he was the senior officer in the United States Navy overseeing the preparations for war After retiring from the Navy he was appointed in 1939 by his close friend President Franklin D Roosevelt as the governor of Puerto Rico In his most controversial role he served as the U S Ambassador to France from 1940 to 1942 but had limited success in keeping the Vichy government free of German control Leahy was recalled to active duty as the personal Chief of Staff to President Roosevelt in 1942 and served in that position through the rest of World War II He was the first de facto Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and presided over the American delegation to the Combined Chiefs of Staff of the U S and Great Britain He was a major decision maker during the war and was second only to the President in authority and influence He served Roosevelt s successor Harry S Truman helping shape U S postwar foreign policy until finally retiring in 1949 From 1942 until his retirement he was the highest ranking active duty member of the U S military reporting only to the President Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Naval service 2 1 Spanish American War 2 2 China and Philippine American Wars 2 3 Banana Wars 2 4 World War I 2 5 Sea duty between the wars 2 6 Flag officer 2 7 Chief of Naval Operations 3 Government service 3 1 Governor of Puerto Rico 3 2 Ambassador to France 4 Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief 4 1 Organization and role 4 2 Grand strategy 4 3 Atomic bomb 4 4 Truman administration 5 Death and legacy 6 Dates of rank 7 Decorations and awards 8 Bibliography 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further readingEarly life and education Edit As a naval cadet William Daniel Leahy was born in Hampton Iowa on May 6 1875 the first of eight children of Michael Arthur Leahy a lawyer and American Civil War veteran who was elected to the Wisconsin Legislature in 1872 and his wife Rose Mary nee Hamilton He had five younger brothers and a sister Both his parents were born in the United States but his grandparents were immigrants from Ireland his paternal grandparents having arrived in the United States in 1836 In 1882 the family moved to Ashland Wisconsin where Leahy attended high school His nose was broken in an American football game and his family lacked the money to get it fixed so it remained crooked for the rest of his life 1 2 Leahy wanted to attend the United States Military Academy at West Point New York but this required an appointment from his local Congressman Thomas Lynch 3 Lynch had no appointments to West Point to offer but he offered Leahy an appointment to the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland which was much less popular among boys in the Midwestern United States Leahy passed the entrance examinations and was admitted as a naval cadet in May 1893 1 4 Leahy learned how to sail on a sailing ship the USS Constellation on a summer cruise to Europe although the vessel only made it as far as the Azores before breaking down 4 He graduated 35th out of 47 in the class of 1897 5 6 7 His class was the most successful ever five of its members would reach four star rank while on active duty Leahy Thomas C Hart Arthur J Hepburn Orin G Murfin and Harry E Yarnell As of 2022 update no other class had had more than four 8 Naval service EditSpanish American War Edit Until 1912 naval cadets graduating from Annapolis had to complete two years duty at sea and pass examinations before they could be commissioned as ensigns 9 Leahy was assigned to the battleship USS Oregon which was then at Vancouver British Columbia for celebrations of Queen Victoria s Diamond Jubilee 10 He was on board when she made a dash through the Strait of Magellan and around South America in the spring of 1898 to participate in the Spanish American War 11 The Oregon took part in the blockade and bombardment of Santiago and shelled the small town of Guantanamo which Leahy felt was unnecessary and cruel 12 In the Battle of Santiago on July 3 11 Leahy was in command of the ship s forward turret 13 This was the only naval battle Leahy witnessed in person 14 Seeking further action Leahy volunteered to serve on the gunboat USS Castine which was bound for the war in the Pacific traveling via the Mediterranean Sea and the Suez Canal but he got only as far as Ceylon when he received orders to report to Annapolis for his final ensign s examinations He was therefore left behind and had to return to the United States on the USS Buffalo He reached Annapolis in June 1899 13 He passed his examinations and was commissioned as an ensign on July 1 1899 6 After few weeks leave spent with his parents in Wisconsin and a few months service on the cruiser USS Philadelphia at the Mare Island Navy Yard he joined the monitor USS Nevada on October 12 1899 A week later it set sail for the Philippines It arrived in Manila on November 24 and Leahy rejoined the crew of the Castine five days later 15 China and Philippine American Wars Edit On December 17 1899 Castine sailed for Nagasaki but it developed engine trouble on February 12 and stopped in Shanghai to make repairs While it was there the Boxer Rebellion broke out in China and it was retained in Shanghai to help British French and Japanese forces guard the city 16 although Leahy did not like their chances if the 4 500 Chinese troops in the vicinity joined the uprising as they had in the Battle of Tientsin 17 On August 28 the Castine was ordered to Amoy help protect American interests there against the possibility of a Japanese coup 18 The Castine returned to the Philippines arriving back in Manila on September 16 1900 19 20 With wife Louise and son William Harrington Leahy at Mare Island California in October 1905 The Philippine American War was still ongoing and the Castine supported American operations on Marinduque and Iloilo 21 Unlike most Americans Leahy was appalled by American brutality and the widespread use of torture 21 22 Still an ensign he was given his first command the gunboat USS Mariveles a refitted ex Spanish vessel It had a crew of 23 His period in command ended when the Mariveles lost one of its propellers and had to be laid up for repairs He was then reassigned to the USS Glacier a stores ship which was engaged in bringing supplies from Australia to the Philippines While in the Philippines he passed the examinations required for promotion to lieutenant junior grade was promoted to that rank on July 1 1902 He made his final trip to the Philippines in September 1902 and returned to the United States later that year 6 23 Sea duty alternated with duty ashore Leahy was assigned to the training ship USS Pensacola in San Francisco 24 where he was promoted to lieutenant on December 31 1903 6 He met and courted Louise Tennent Harrington whose older sister Mary was engaged to Albert P Niblack an officer of the Annapolis class of 1880 under whom Leahy had served Leahy married Louise on February 3 1904 24 25 26 Louise subsequently convinced him to convert from Roman Catholicism and become an Episcopalian 27 Leahy helped commission the cruiser USS Tacoma but swapped assignments with an officer on the USS Boston so that he could remain in San Francisco with Louise who was pregnant Over the next two years the Boston cruised back and forth between San Francisco and Panama where the Panama Canal was under construction He was in Acapulco when their son and only child William Harrington Leahy was born on October 27 1904 and did not see his son until five months later 24 25 28 However he was present for the 1906 San Francisco earthquake His family had to leave their house in the face of the resulting fires It survived undamaged although they had to live in a hotel for several months before they could return 27 President William H Taft reviewing a parade in San Francisco California October 14 1911 Left to right Rear Admiral Chauncey Thomas Jr Leahy Lillian Nordica Archibald Butt and President Taft On February 22 1907 29 Leahy returned to Annapolis as instructor in the department of physics and chemistry 30 He also coached the academy rifle team 31 After two years ashore he received orders on August 14 1909 to return to San Francisco and sea duty as navigator of the armored cruiser USS California commanded by Captain Henry T Mayo 29 in whom Leahy found a patron and a role model In September the California was one of eight ships that paid an official visit to Japan where Leahy saw Admiral Heihachirō Tōgō Mayo switched Leahy s assignment from navigator to gunnery officer a change Leahy came to see as a wise one 32 33 Leahy was promoted to lieutenant commander on September 15 1909 6 and in January 1911 the commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet Rear Admiral Chauncey Thomas Jr chose him as his fleet gunnery officer 29 In October the California returned to San Francisco for a fleet review in honor of President William Howard Taft and Leahy served as Taft s temporary naval aide for four days 34 33 Banana Wars Edit Rear Admiral William H H Southerland succeeded Thomas as commander of the Pacific Fleet on April 21 1912 The California sailed to Manila and then to Japan before returning to San Francisco on August 15 A few weeks later Southerland received orders to proceed to Nicaragua and be prepared to deploy a landing force for the United States occupation of Nicaragua 35 In addition to his duties as gunnery officer Leahy became the chief of staff of the expeditionary force and the commander of the small garrison at Corinto Nicaragua 36 He came under fire while repeatedly escorting reinforcements and supplies over the railroad line to Leon Privately he thought that the United States was backing the wrong side propping up a conservative elite who were exploiting the Nicaraguan people 37 In October 1912 Leahy came ashore in Washington D C as assistant director of gunnery exercises and engineering competitions Then in 1913 Mayo had him assigned to the Bureau of Navigation as a detail officer 38 Mayo and then his replacement Rear Admiral William Fullam was reassigned leaving Leahy in charge of one of the Navy s most sensitive offices In this role he was in charge of all officer assignments He also established a close friendship with the Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D Roosevelt Leahy s wife Louise enjoyed the social milieu of Washington and socialized with Addie Daniels the wife of Josephus Daniels the Secretary of the Navy 39 Leahy left with Major C S Hill USMC on the deck of the USS California in August 1912 As Leahy s three year tour of shore duty approached its end in 1915 he hoped to command the new destroyer tender USS Melville but Daniels had the assignment changed to command of the Secretary of the Navy s dispatch gunboat the USS Dolphin Leahy assumed command of the Dolphin on September 18 1915 The ship took part in the United States occupation of Haiti where Leahy again acted as chief of staff this time to Rear Admiral William B Caperton In May 1916 Dolphin participated in the United States occupation of the Dominican Republic 40 During the summer Roosevelt used it as his family yacht cruising down the Hudson River from the Roosevelt family estate in Hyde Park New York and along the coast to his holiday house on Campobello Island 41 Leahy was promoted to commander on August 29 1916 6 World War I Edit Following the United States entry into World War I In April 1917 Dolphin was sent to the United States Virgin Islands to assert America s control there There was a rumor that a Danish flagged freighter in the vicinity the Nordskov was a German merchant raider in disguise and Dolphin was sent to investigate If it had been Leahy would have been outgunned but an inspection determined that the rumors were false In July 1917 Leahy became the executive officer of USS Nevada It was the Navy s newest battleship but it was not sent to Europe due to teething troubles with what was then a radical new design and a shortage of fuel oil in Britain 41 In April 1918 Leahy assumed command of a troop transport the USS Princess Matoika Shortly before it was due to depart for France Leahy was summoned to Washington D C by the Chief of Naval Operations CNO Admiral William S Benson who offered him the position of the Navy s director of gunnery Leahy told him that he wanted to remain on the Princess Matoika A compromise was reached Leahy was permitted to cross the Atlantic once before becoming director of gunnery Traveling in convoy the Princess Matoika reached Brest on May 23 1918 and disembarked its troops 41 Leahy was awarded the Navy Cross for distinguished service in the line of his profession as Commanding Officer of the USS Princess Matoika engaged in the important exacting and hazardous duty of transporting and escorting troops and supplies to European ports through waters infested with enemy submarines and mines during World War I 42 Leahy who was promoted to captain on July 1 1918 6 was soon on his way back to Europe to confer with representatives of the Royal Navy and discuss their gunnery practices He reached London later that month where he reported to the U S Navy commander in Europe Vice Admiral William S Sims who had been a critic of the U S Navy s gunnery in the Spanish American War 43 Leahy met with his British counterpart Captain Frederic Dreyer and the chief gunnery officer of the Anglo American Grand Fleet Captain Ernle Chatfield 44 Leahy was attached to the staff of Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman the commander of the American division of the Grand Fleet and was able to view a gunnery exercise from the British battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth 43 On the way home he visited Paris where he was appalled at the German use of a long range gun to bombard the city which he considered an indiscriminate targeting of civilians and militarily useless He embarked for home on the SS Leviathan at Brest on August 12 1918 44 Sea duty between the wars Edit Leahy shakes hands with Admiral Joseph M Reeves left on assuming command of the Battle Force in June 1936 In February 1921 Leahy sailed for Europe where he assumed command of the cruiser USS Chattanooga on April 2 In May he was ordered to take command the cruiser USS St Louis the flagship of the naval detachment in Turkish waters during the Greco Turkish War He was able to spend a couple of weeks in the French countryside with Louise who spoke fluent French before taking the Orient Express to Constantinople where he reported to the American commander there Rear Admiral Mark L Bristol on May 30 45 Leahy had the role of safeguarding American interests in Turkey He had to play the diplomat attending parties and receptions and organizing American events He reveled in this assignment 46 The next step in a successful naval career would normally have been to attend the Naval War College Leahy submitted repeated requests but was never sent 47 At the end of 1921 he was given command of the minelayer USS Shawmut and concurrent command of Mine Squadron One He then returned to Washington D C where he served as director of Officer Personnel in the Bureau of Navigation from 1923 to 1926 48 After three years of shore duty he was given command of the battleship USS New Mexico In biennial competitions in gunnery engineering and battle efficiency the New Mexico won all three in 1927 1928 49 Flag officer Edit On October 14 1927 he reached flag rank the first member of his cadet class to do so and returned to Washington as the Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance The following year he bought a town house on Florida Avenue near Dupont Circle for 20 000 equivalent to 320 000 in 2021 50 He also had assets that he had acquired through his marriage to Louise stocks in the Colusa County Bank and agricultural land in the Sacramento Valley in California 51 But in the wake of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 President Herbert Hoover determined to effect cuts in the Navy s budget and his representative Rear Admiral William V Pratt negotiated the London Naval Treaty that limited naval construction The list of canceled ships included two aircraft carriers three cruisers a destroyer and six submarines Leahy was in charge of implementing these cuts and he was appalled at the human toll some 5 000 workers lost their jobs many of them highly skilled shipyard workers who faced long term unemployment during the Great Depression 52 53 Leahy and Admiral William H Standley shake hands after Leahy was sworn in as the Chief of Naval Operations in Washington D C in January 1937 Admiral Charles F Hughes elected to retire rather than enforce the cuts and he was replaced by Pratt Pratt and Leahy soon clashed over cuts to shipbuilding and Pratt attempted to have Leahy reassigned as chief of staff of the Pacific Fleet Leahy had the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation block this but decided that it would be in his best interest to get away from Pratt and he secured command of the destroyers of the Scouting Force on the West Coast 52 53 Leahy s dislike of Hoover was intensified by his dire personal circumstances He could not find a tenant for the Florida Avenue property at a rent that would pay for its upkeep 54 the price of food had fallen so much that his land in the Sacramento Valley could not generate a profit and was seized by the government to recover unpaid taxes 55 and a run in January 1933 caused the Colusa County Bank to close its doors taking with it Leahy s life savings and leaving him with a large debt that he would not pay off until 1941 56 Leahy s old friend Franklin Roosevelt was inaugurated as president on March 2 1933 and he nominated Leahy as the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation 57 On May 6 1933 Leahy and Louise boarded a train back to Washington D C 58 As bureau chief Leahy handled personnel matters with care and consideration When his successor as the Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance Rear Admiral Edgar B Larimer suffered a mental breakdown and was hospitalized Leahy ensured that he was kept on the active list until he reached retirement age thereby safeguarding his pension When two midshipmen at Annapolis John Hyland and Victor Krulak faced expulsion for failing to reach the required minimum height of 5 feet 6 inches 168 cm Leahy waived the regulations to permit them to graduate with the class of 1934 and both went on to have distinguished careers 57 Discussing naval expansion with the President in Washington D C on January 5 1938 Left to right Carl Vinson Edward T Taylor William B Umstead Charles Edison and Leahy Leahy formed a good working relationship with the new Assistant Secretary of the Navy Henry L Roosevelt an Annapolis graduate and distant cousin of the President whom Leahy considered a close personal friend 57 but he clashed with the new CNO Admiral William H Standley who sought to assert the power of the CNO over the bureau chiefs In this he was opposed by Leahy and the Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics Rear Admiral Ernest J King who enlisted the aid of Henry Roosevelt and the Secretary of the Navy Claude A Swanson to block it 59 In 1936 the commander in chief United States Fleet CINCUS Admiral Joseph M Reeves recommended Leahy for the position of Commander Battleships Battle Force with the rank of vice admiral Standley was opposed to this 59 but was unable to persuade Swanson or the President who invited Leahy to a private chat at the White House before proceeding to take up his new posting 60 Leahy assumed his new command on July 13 1935 61 In October Roosevelt came out to California for the California Pacific International Exposition Leahy treated him to the largest fleet maneuver the U S Navy had ever carried out with 129 warships including 12 battleships participating which the President observed from the deck of the cruiser USS Houston 62 On March 30 1936 Leahy was promoted to the temporary rank of admiral and hoisted his four star flag on the battleship USS California as Commander Battle Force 63 64 65 One of his last acts in this post was a symbolic one he transferred his flag to the aircraft carrier USS Ranger as a sign of his conviction that aircraft were now an integral part of sea power 66 Chief of Naval Operations Edit In December 1935 Swanson told Leahy in confidence that he would be appointed the next CNO if Roosevelt won the 1936 presidential election 62 Roosevelt won the election with a landslide victory 67 and on November 10 1936 it was announced that he would succeed Standley as CNO on January 1 1937 68 As CNO Leahy was content to let the bureau chiefs function as they always had with the CNO acting as a primus inter pares 69 70 On the other hand Swanson was chronically ill and Henry Roosevelt died on February 22 1936 71 Charles Edison became the new assistant secretary but he lacked experience in naval affairs 72 Appearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington D C on March 22 1939 in support of military aid Latin American Republics Left to right George C Marshall Leahy Key Pittman and Sumner Welles Leahy began representing the Navy in cabinet meetings 73 He met with the President frequently during his tenure as CNO Roosevelt had 52 meetings with him compared with 12 with his Army counterpart General Malin Craig none of which were private lunches Moreover meetings between Leahy and Roosevelt were sometimes on matters unrelated to the Navy and frequently went on for hours At one private lunch on April 15 1937 Leahy and Roosevelt debated whether new battleships should have 16 inch or cheaper 14 inch guns Leahy ultimately persuaded the President that the new North Carolina class battleships should have 16 inch guns On May 22 Leahy accompanied the President and dignitaries including John Nance Garner Harry Hopkins James F Byrnes Morris Sheppard Edwin C Johnson Claude Pepper and Sam Rayburn on a cruise on the presidential yacht USS Potomac to watch a baseball game between congressmen and the press 74 75 The most important issue confronting the administration was how to respond to the Japanese invasion of China The commander in chief of the Asiatic Fleet Admiral Harry Yarnell asked for four additional cruisers to help evacuate American citizens from the Shanghai International Settlement but the Secretary of State Cordell Hull thought this would be too provocative Leahy went to Hyde Park to take the matter up with Roosevelt The request was turned down American isolationist sentiment was too strong to countenance the risk of being drawn into the conflict Yarnell could use merchant ships if he could find them Leahy accepted this presidential decision as he always did even when he strongly disagreed 74 76 Leahy wrote in his diary that a Japanese threat to bomb the civilian population in China was evidence and a conclusive one that the old accepted rules of warfare are no longer in effect 77 On December 12 Leahy was informed of the USS Panay incident in which an American gunboat on the Yangtze River had been sunk by Japanese aircraft He met with Hull to craft a response and discussed the matter with Roosevelt on December 14 78 Leahy saw the Panay incident as a test of American resolve He wanted to answer it with a show of force with economic sanctions and a naval blockade of Japan But among Roosevelt s advisors he was the only one willing to countenance such a drastic step Roosevelt agreed with him but in an election year he felt he could not afford to antagonize the pacifists and isolationists The Japanese apology therefore was accepted 79 Roosevelt presents Leahy with the Navy Distinguished Service Medal on July 28 1939 The Panay incident did prompt Roosevelt and Leahy to press ahead with plans for an ambitious shipbuilding program On January 5 Roosevelt Leahy and Edison met with Congressman Carl Vinson to draw up a strategy for obtaining Congressional approval for a 20 percent increase in all classes of warships The resulting Second Vinson Act was approved in May 1938 and provided for four more Iowa class battleships along with cruisers with a total displacement of 60 000 long tons 61 000 t and destroyers with a total displacement of 30 000 long tons 30 000 t Leahy had not thought it worthwhile to build more aircraft carriers but five were added to what became the Two Ocean Navy Act together with five Montana class battleships Leahy also pushed for the construction of 24 Cimarron class oilers which would be needed to project American sea power across the vastness of the Pacific 80 81 Before retiring as CNO Leahy joined his wife Louise when she sponsored the first of these the USS Cimarron which was commissioned on March 20 1939 82 Roosevelt threw a surprise party for Leahy on July 28 1939 during which he presented him with the Navy Distinguished Service Medal 83 According to Leahy Roosevelt said Bill if we have a war you re going to be right back here helping me run it 84 To make this easier Vinson and David I Walsh were asked to expedite legislation to keep Leahy on the active list for another two years On August 1 1939 Leahy formally handed the position of CNO over to Admiral Harold Stark 83 Government service EditGovernor of Puerto Rico Edit As governor of Puerto Rico in 1939From September 1939 to November 1940 Leahy served as Governor of Puerto Rico after Roosevelt removed Blanton Winship for his role in the Ponce massacre Winship had aligned himself with the Coalicion a pro American electoral alliance that represented the interests of the island s wealthy elite and American sugar corporations Roosevelt gave Leahy both military and social objectives to carry out on the military side he had to develop and upgrade base installations there on the social side he had to alleviate the extreme poverty and inequality that afflicted the island To tackle these problems Leahy was given an additional 10 million equivalent to 307 million in 2021 and extraordinary latitude in spending it Leahy was named as the head of the Puerto Rican office of the Works Progress Administration WPA which gave him control over New Deal funding In October 1939 he also became the head of the Puerto Rico Cement Corporation in order to help it secure a 700 000 loan equivalent to 13 000 000 in 2021 from the Federal government s Reconstruction Finance Corporation RFC and in December he became the head of the Puerto Rican branch of the RFC His power was enhanced by his direct access to the President and the Secretary of the interior Harold L Ickes 85 Although given the unflattering sobriquet Almirante Lija Admiral Sandpaper by locals based on his surname Leahy was regarded as one of the most lenient American governors of the several who served Puerto Rico in the first half of the 20th century 86 He took an open stance of not intervening directly in local politics although he remained involved in Federal politics doing what he could to support Roosevelt s 1940 reelection He attempted to understand and respect local customs and initiated various major public works projects Although his priority was developing Puerto Rico as a military base over half the WPA funds were spent on public works such as roads and improving sanitation He regulated prices and production in the coffee industry and had ships traveling between the United States and the Panama Canal where major upgrade works were being undertaken stop over in Puerto Rico when they needed repairs or supplies In December 1939 he met with Roosevelt and secured an additional 100 million in WPA funding equivalent to 1 500 million in 2021 for public works which allowed him to hire another 20 000 workers By awarding lucrative government contracts and appointing officials based on Roosevelt s preferences rather than those of the local elite he soon earned the enmity of the Coalicion 87 Conferring with Puerto Rican officials Left to right Rafael Martinez Nadal Santiago Iglesias Leahy standing Fernando Geigel Alfonso Valdez Bolivar Pagan and Luis Obergh Leahy oversaw the development of military bases and stations across the island 88 At the time of his appointment as governor the only naval installations were a radio station and a hydrographic office On October 30 1939 a fixed fee contract was awarded for construction of the Naval Air Station Isla Grande Subsequently the scope of activity was widened to include the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station The naval air station was intended to support two squadrons of seaplanes and a carrier air group The 340 acre 140 ha Isla Grande site included an existing Pan Am airstrip and a quarantine station but most of it was mangrove swamp and tidal mud flats The site was built up with fill dredged up from the San Antonio and Martin Pena Channels The existing airstrip was realigned to conform to the prevailing winds lengthened widened and surfaced with asphalt A secondary runway was also built along with a new quarantine station and hospital Construction work on the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station commenced in 1941 under another fixed fee contract and the base was commissioned on July 15 1943 89 Between January 1 and November 1 1940 Leahy met with Roosevelt six times One of the most important was a lunch on October 6 1940 Admiral James O Richardson the CINCUS had been ordered to keep the Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor at the conclusion of exercises there to act as a deterrent to the Japanese Richardson protested Pearl Harbor he argued was unsuitable as a base it could not provide the needs of the fleet for an extended stay which would affect its readiness and was too vulnerable to a surprise attack Leahy agreed with Richardson but knew better than to press the matter with Roosevelt when the President s mind was made up On February 1 1941 Richardson was recalled and replaced as CINCUS by Admiral Husband Kimmel 88 90 91 Ambassador to France EditThe Fall of France in June 1940 came as a shock to many Americans 92 Henry L Stimson and McGeorge Bundy described it as the most shocking single event of the war 93 American security had been underwritten by Britain and France allowing the United States to have a comparatively low amount of defense spending and planning was based on the assumption that France would be a bulwark against Germany as it had been in World War I and that the United States would have ample time to mobilize industry and create armies Now with France gone Germany could directly threaten the United States 94 On November 18 1940 Leahy was appointed United States Ambassador to France 95 In his message asking Leahy to accept the position Roosevelt explained We are confronting the message said an increasingly serious situation in France because of the possibility that one element in the present French Government may persuade Marshal Petain to enter into agreements with Germany which will facilitate the efforts of the Axis powers against Great Britain There is even the possibility that France may actually engage in the war against Great Britain and in particular that the French fleet maybe utilized under the control of Germany We need in France at this time an Ambassador who can gain the confidence of Marshal Petain who at the present moment is the one powerful element in the French Government who is standing firm against selling out to Germany I feel that you are the best man available for this mission You can talk to Marshal Petain in language which he would understand and the position which you have held in our own Navy would undoubtedly give you great influence with the higher officers of the French Navy who are now hostile to Great Britain 95 Leahy pays a farewell call on French Chief of State Marshal Philippe Petain on April 27 1942 Leahy sailed from Puerto Rico on November 28 and arrived in New York on December 2 from whence he immediately flew to Washington D C to confer with Roosevelt who told him that he needed to gain the confidence of the French head of state Marshal Philippe Petain and the Commander in Chief of the French Navy Admiral Francois Darlan 96 My major task Leahy later recalled was to keep the French on our side in so far as possible 96 The United States would give Britain all the help it could short of actually joining the war and Leahy would convince Petain and Darlan that it was in France s best interest that Germany be defeated 97 He departed Norfolk Virginia on December 17 on the cruiser USS Tuscaloosa and reached Lisbon Portugal on December 30 He then traveled overland by train and car to Vichy 98 99 where he presented his letter of credence to Petain on January 9 1941 100 101 The United States had some levers with which to influence the French It supplied food and medical aid to the Vichy French regime in French North Africa hoping in return to moderate its collaboration with the Axis Powers After six months of negotiations the British agreed to permit medical supplies to be shipped through the British blockade under Red Cross supervision 102 Food was another matter it was estimated that 22 million French people did not get enough to eat The British believed that Germany would seize up to 58 percent of France s food crops but Darlan blamed the British naval blockade arguing that the critical shortage was not of food but of fuel for its distribution and he threatened to use the French Navy to break the blockade 103 104 Leahy advised Roosevelt that the shipment of supplies to France would improve America s standing and stiffen Petain s resolve to resist German demands 105 In his opinion the British blockade action which prevents the delivery of necessary foodstuffs to the inhabitants of unoccupied France is of the same order of stupidity as many other British policies in the present war 106 He also hoped that aid to French North Africa would strengthen the hand of General Maxime Weygand there Roosevelt compelled the British to accept the shipment of medicine and food intended for children along with thousands of tons of fuel for their distribution 107 American aid proved insufficient to buy French support In May 1941 Darlan agreed to the Paris Protocols which granted Germany access to French military bases in Syria Tunisia and French West Africa 108 and in July the French granted Japan access to bases in French Indochina which directly threatened the American position in the Philippines 109 Although no German bombers had the range to bomb the United States from bases in Senegal if they could deploy from Senegal to Vichy held Martinique they could do so from there 110 Weygand the main American hope for a change in French policy was recalled on November 18 111 despite Leahy s warnings that this could prompt a cession of American aid 112 On December 7 1941 Leahy received news of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor This was followed on December 11 by the German declaration of war against the United States 113 With the United States now in the war Leahy thought that this would strengthen his hand with the Vichy government 114 but Charles de Gaulle s capture of Saint Pierre and Miquelon later that month discredited American assurances that French colonies would not be seized 115 By this time Leahy was convinced that the United States was backing the wrong side and he urged Roosevelt to use this as a pretext for recalling him to the United States 116 This was finally prompted by the formation of a new government in Vichy under the pro Axis Pierre Laval on April 18 Meanwhile on April 9 Leahy s wife Louise underwent a hysterectomy While recovering from the operation she suffered an embolism and died on April 21 Leahy called on Petain to say farewell on April 27 He arrived back in New York on the Swedish registered ocean liner SS Drottningholm on June 1 He arranged for a funeral service for Louise at the St Thomas Episcopal Church where they had been members for many years and watched her burial in Arlington National Cemetery on June 3 1942 117 118 119 Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief EditOrganization and role Edit Waging a two ocean war as part of a coalition revealed serious deficiencies in the organization of the American high command when it came to formulating grand strategy meetings of the senior officers of the Army and Navy with each other and with the President were irregular and infrequent and there was no joint planning staff or secretariat to record decisions taken 120 Under the Constitution of the United States the President was the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy 121 At a meeting with Roosevelt on February 24 1942 the Chief of Staff of the United States Army General George C Marshall urged Roosevelt to appoint a chief of staff of the armed forces to provide unity of command and he suggested Leahy for the role 122 Leahy had lunch with Roosevelt on July 7 during which this was discussed 123 On July 21 Leahy was recalled to active duty He resigned as Ambassador to France and was appointed Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy 124 In announcing the appointment Roosevelt described Leahy s role as an advisory one rather than that of a supreme commander 125 Joint Chiefs of Staff lunches were held every Wednesday Left to right General Henry H Arnold Chief of U S Army Air Forces Leahy Admiral Ernest J King Chief of Naval Operations and Commander in Chief U S Fleet and General George C Marshall Chief of Staff of the U S Army Leahy attended his first meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff JCS on July 28 The other members were Marshall King 126 who was now both CNO and Commander in Chief U S Fleet now abbreviated as COMINCH 127 128 and Lieutenant General Henry H Arnold the Chief of U S Army Air Forces 129 Henceforth the JCS held regular meetings at noon on Wednesdays which usually commenced with a light lunch 129 Leahy served as the de facto chairman He drew up the agenda for the JCS meetings presided over them and signed off on all the major papers and decisions 130 He considered that this was due to his seniority and not by virtue of his position 131 He had a small personal staff of two military aides de camp and two or three secretaries 132 JCS meetings were held in the Public Health Service Building where Leahy had an office 133 After some renovations were made he was also given an office in the East Wing of the White House on September 7 1942 132 the other two main offices there were occupied by Hopkins and Byrnes 134 Roosevelt had the Map Room constructed in the White House where large maps showed the progress of the war Only Leahy and Hopkins had unrestricted access to the Map Room everyone else had to be accompanied by Leahy or Hopkins or given special permission to enter 135 Two days after his first JCS meeting there was a meeting of the Combined Chiefs of Staff CCS which Leahy also chaired 129 136 In these meetings the JCS met with the leaders of the British Joint Staff Mission Field Marshal Sir John Dill Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham Air Marshal Douglas Evill and Lieutenant General Gordon Macready CCS meetings were held every Friday 130 The main agendum item at his first JCS and CCS meetings was Operation Gymnast a proposed invasion of French North Africa Marshall and King were opposed to it on the grounds that it would divert resources necessary for Operation Roundup a landing in northern France but after listening to their arguments Leahy informed them Roosevelt was adamant that it was vital American forces take the field against Germany in 1942 and that Gymnast was to proceed 129 136 Roosevelt gave his formal assent on July 25 Marshall and King considered this to be tentative but Leahy informed them that the decision was final 129 136 Leahy usually arrived at his White House office sometime between 08 30 and 08 45 each day and went over copies of dispatches and reports For convenience the documents were color coded pink for incoming dispatches from the theater yellow for outgoing ones green for JCS papers white for CCS ones and blue for papers from the Joint Staff Planners Leahy would select the papers to be brought to the President s attention and would meet with him each morning in the Oval Office or the Map Room 137 This included high grade Ultra intelligence Control of the flow of information gave Leahy an additional source of power and influence beyond his personal relationship with the President 138 Grand strategy Edit When Roosevelt went away Leahy went with him 137 Leahy missed the Casablanca Conference in January 1943 after setting out with Roosevelt Hopkins and Rear Admiral Ross McIntire Leahy developed bronchitis and had to remain in Trinidad But he was present at all the other inter Allied conferences that the President attended 139 Leahy s support of Roosevelt s decision to invade French North Africa did not mean that he bought into the British Mediterranean strategy He joined Marshall and King in their advocacy of a cross Channel operation in 1944 At the first conference he attended the Third Washington Conference in May 1943 he clashed with the British chiefs of staff over their reluctance to undertake operations to reopen the overland route to China which Leahy considered vital to both the war against Japan and the postwar era Leahy eventually extracted a promise from the British to undertake Operation Anakim an offensive to recapture Burma in 1943 140 141 142 Leahy sided with Hopkins and Major General Claire Chennault in supporting a bombing offensive against Japan from bases in China despite Marshall s prescient warnings that this could not be sustained without adequate ground troops to protect the air bases Marshall was proven correct when a Japanese offensive overran Chennault s bases 143 The Combined Chiefs of Staff meet in the U S Public Health Service Building in Washington D C in October 1943 British officers on the left side of the table are front to back Wilfrid Patterson Sir John Dill Vivian Dykes Gordon Macready and Douglas Evill U S officers at the right side and head of the table are front to back Ernest J King William D Leahy John R Deane George C Marshall Joseph T McNarney and an unidentified colonel On November 12 1943 Roosevelt Hopkins Leahy King and Marshall set off together from Hampton Roads on the battleship USS Iowa Roosevelt occupied the captain s cabin and Leahy the one for an embarked admiral Marshall the next most senior officer had the chief of staff s cabin The President had his own mess where he dined with Hopkins Leahy McIntire and Roosevelt s aides Rear Admiral Wilson Brown and Major General Edwin Pa Watson the other senior officers took their meals with the ships officers They reached Mers el Kebir on November 20 from whence they flew to Tunis and then Cairo 144 Roosevelt stayed at the American Ambassador s compound in Cairo Space was limited so he took only Leahy and Hopkins with him Discussions with the British in Cairo were mainly concerned with Burma and China about which they had much less interest than the Americans 145 They then flew on to Tehran Iran for talks with Stalin 145 Roosevelt was slated to stay at the American legation there but Stalin offered to put Roosevelt up at the Soviet compound He was allowed to bring two people with him so he chose Leahy and Hopkins 146 The conference reached agreement with the Soviets on the cross Channel operation Operation Overlord and an invasion of Southern France Operation Anvil When General Sir Alan Brooke began to back away from the commitment Leahy finally lost his patience and demanded to know under what circumstances he would be willing to undertake Overlord In the end the British as Leahy put it fell into line 147 Although the conservative Leahy regarded Hopkins as a pinko the two men worked well together and Leahy became quite fond of Hopkins Both men were completely devoted to the President and Leahy saw something of himself in the idealistic Hopkins 148 149 Over time Leahy gradually replaced Hopkins as Roosevelt s most trusted advisor becoming in the words of historian Phillips O Brien the second most powerful man in the world 150 The main reason for this was the precarious state of Hopkins s health Hopkins was diagnosed with stomach cancer and in December 1937 doctors removed three quarters of his stomach Although his cancer did not return he suffered a series of ailments including malnutrition and hepatitis B contracted from blood transfusions His drinking and smoking did not help For a time he received injections of blood plasma and seemed to improve but by late 1943 his health was clearly declining 151 He married Louise Gill Macy in the Oval office on July 30 1942 152 For a time she lived in the White House with Hopkins but she prevailed on him to move out in December 1943 He was therefore no longer at Roosevelt s beck and call as often 153 Leahy spent D Day June 6 1944 in his home town of Hampton Iowa This well publicized sentimental journey was part of the deception efforts surrounding the Allied invasion of Europe The idea was to lull any German agents in the United States into believing that the operation would not take place while such an important officer was out of the capital 154 The following month he accompanied President Roosevelt to the Pacific Strategy Conference in Hawaii at which Roosevelt met Admiral Chester W Nimitz the commander in chief of the Pacific Ocean Areas and General Douglas MacArthur the commander in chief of the Southwest Pacific Area This was unnecessary the two commanders could have sent representatives to Washington but Roosevelt saw it as offering good photo opportunities in an election year 155 Winston Churchill Franklin D Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin at the Yalta conference in February 1945 Leahy stands behind Roosevelt Roosevelt Leahy and presidential speech writer Samuel Rosenman instead of Hopkins set out from Washington in Roosevelt s personal railcar the Ferdinand Magellan on July 13 They went to Hyde Park where Roosevelt showed Leahy around his Presidential Library then to Chicago where Roosevelt conferred with leaders of the Democratic Party over the choice of Harry S Truman as his vice presidential running mate in the 1944 election 155 In San Diego they boarded the cruiser USS Baltimore which took them to Hawaii where Nimitz briefed them on a proposed invasion of the island of Formosa King s preferred target but also spoke favorably of MacArthur s alternative of liberating the Philippines Leahy hoped that this would facilitate a naval and air blockade that would make an invasion of Japan unnecessary 155 No decision was taken at this time and the JCS continued debating the issue for months before authorizing the liberation of Luzon on October 3 156 Hopkins was not present at the Second Quebec Conference in September 1944 either continuing Leahy s transformation into a White House advisor He did not attend the political sessions at Quebec but at this level political and military issues were indistinguishable For example the JCS examined a proposal for a British fleet to participate in the Pacific War a military proposal with a political objective 157 King was unenthusiastic about the idea the U S Navy was performing well against the Japanese and the addition of British forces would complicate command and logistics arrangements Leahy and Marshall pressed for the British offer to be accepted and in the end it was with the proviso that the British Pacific Fleet would be self supporting 158 Another debate concerned the American occupation zone in Germany The United States was allocated the southern part of Germany which meant that its lines of communications would run through France where Leahy was concerned about the prospect of a postwar Communist takeover Roosevelt and Churchill reached a compromise whereby the ports of Bremen and Bremerhaven would be given to the Americans along with the right of transit through the British Zone 159 Leahy was advanced to the newly created rank of Fleet Admiral on December 15 1944 making him the most senior of the seven men who received five star rank that month 160 161 162 He accompanied President Roosevelt to the Yalta Conference in February 1945 The cruiser USS Quincy took them to Malta where Leahy chaired a CCS meeting to discuss the war against Germany and then the President s personal aircraft the Sacred Cow flew them to Yalta 163 At Yalta Roosevelt met Churchill and Stalin to decide how Europe was to be reorganized after the impending surrender of Germany 164 On April 12 1945 Roosevelt died Leahy attended the ceremonies and the memorial service for his friend which was held in the East Room of the White House 165 Atomic bomb Edit On April 13 Leahy gave the regular morning briefing on the progress of the war to Truman who had become President on Roosevelt s death This was followed by a short meeting with the Joint Chiefs the Secretary of War Henry Stimson and the Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal Afterwards Leahy offered to resign but Truman decided to retain him as chief of staff 166 On June 18 the Joint Chiefs along with Stimson and Forrestal met with Truman at the White House to discuss Operation Olympic the planned invasion of Kyushu Truman chaired the meeting Marshall and King strongly favored the operation and all the others voiced their support except Leahy who feared that it would result in high casualties He questioned Marshall s casualty estimates which were based on the Luzon campaign which took place on a large land mass where there was ample room for maneuver rather than the Okinawa campaign which took place on an island where lack of maneuver room resulted in frontal assaults and high casualties 167 According to Truman s Memoirs Year of Decisions Leahy was present in 1945 when Truman was given advice by Vannevar Bush about the Manhattan Project The next day Jimmy Byrnes who until shortly before had been Director of War Mobilization for President Roosevelt came to see me and even he told me few details though with great solemnity he said that we were perfecting an explosive great enough to destroy the whole world It was later when Vannevar Bush head of the Office of Scientific Research and Development came to the White House that I was given a scientist s version of the atomic bomb Admiral Leahy was with me when Dr Bush told me this astonishing fact That is the biggest fool thing we have ever done he observed in his sturdy salty manner The bomb will never go off and I speak as an expert in explosives 168 After the bomb was tested Truman consulted with Byrnes Stimson Leahy Marshall Arnold and Dwight D Eisenhower the commander of United States Forces European Theater The consensus was that the atomic bomb should be used 169 In his memoirs Leahy wrote Once it had been tested President Truman faced the decision as to whether to use it He did not like the idea but he was persuaded that it would shorten the war against Japan and save American lives It is my opinion that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender because of the effective sea blockade and the successful bombing with conventional weapons My own feeling was that in being the first to use it we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages I was not taught to make wars in that fashion and that wars cannot be won by destroying women and children 170 Historian Barton J Bernstein noted that Leahy did not oppose its use at the time Nor is there solid evidence that any high ranking American military leader other than General George C Marshall on one occasion expressed moral objections before Hiroshima to the use of the atomic bomb on Japanese cities Nor before Hiroshima did any other top military leader Admiral William Leahy Admiral Ernest King or General Henry Arnold ever raise a political or military objection to the use of the A bomb on Japanese cities or argue explicitly that it would be unnecessary Only after the war would Leahy utter moral and political objections 171 Truman administration Edit In July 1945 Leahy accompanied Truman to the Potsdam Conference where Truman met with Stalin and the new British Prime Minister Clement Attlee to make decisions about the governance of occupied Germany 172 Hopkins was too ill to make the journey 173 Leahy was disappointed in the outcome of these conferences He considered that both Truman and Stalin had suffered defeats with proposals that would have ensured a lasting peace in Europe being watered down or turned down He recognized that the Soviet Union was a dominant power in Europe and that the British Empire was in terminal decline underscored by the mid conference replacement of Churchill by Attlee 174 Sitting from left Clement Attlee Harry S Truman Joseph Stalin behind William D Leahy Ernest Bevin James F Byrnes and Vyacheslav Molotov On January 24 1946 Leahy was appointed to the interim National Intelligence Authority NIA which oversaw activities of the nascent Central Intelligence Group 175 The following year the National Security Act of 1947 replaced these organizations with the National Security Council and the Central Intelligence Agency respectively ending Leahy s involvement 176 He continued to chair meetings of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and he rejected war plans that he felt placed too much emphasis on the first use of nuclear weapons 177 Like many naval officers he was opposed to the unification of the War and Navy departments into the Department of Defense fearing that the Navy would lose its naval aviation and the Marine Corps Nor did he agree with formalizing the role of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 178 Leahy was involved in the preparation of two speeches that marked the onset of the Cold War Truman s Navy Day address on October 27 1945 179 180 and Churchill s Iron Curtain speech on March 5 1946 181 182 The former was written by Leahy and Rosenman and reflected Leahy s ideas about the fundamental goals of U S foreign policy 179 the latter was written by Churchill but in consultation with Leahy who was the only one of the American military men referred to in the speech with whom Churchill discussed the speech 181 But Leahy s non interventionist stance on U S involvement in the Greek Civil War and the Israeli Palestinian conflict were increasingly out of step with the policies of the Truman administration 183 On September 20 1948 columnist Constantine Brown published allegations that White House advisors Clark Clifford and David K Niles were urging Truman to get rid of Leahy whom they regarded Brown said as an old fashioned reactionary 184 On the day after Truman won the presidential election on November 2 1948 Leahy asked to be retired in January In December doctors diagnosed Leahy with a partial blockage of the kidneys On December 28 he met with Truman as chief of staff for the last time 185 Truman officially accepted his resignation as his chief of staff on March 2 1949 although as an officer with five star rank Leahy technically remained on active service as an advisor to the Secretary of the Navy 186 The following year Leahy published his war memoirs I Was There His unemotional unexciting and unenlightening style did his publisher no favors 187 Orville Prescott the book reviewer for The New York Times wrote As the personal confidant of President Roosevelt and President Truman Admiral Leahy ought to have a good story to tell Unfortunately he hasn t its stiff official manner its elaborate discretion its desperate need of editing and its lack of any exciting new information make it dull and dusty fare writes in a prose style as rigid as a naval cadet standing at attention in his review 188 The book sold poorly and when Leahy subsequently proposed a book about his time in Puerto Rico the publisher turned it down 187 Death and legacy Edit Grave at Arlington National Cemetery Leahy died at the U S Naval Hospital in Bethesda Maryland on July 20 1959 at the age of eighty four At the time of his death he was the oldest officer on active duty in the history of the U S Navy He was given an Armed Forces military funeral His body was viewed at the Bethlehem Chapel at the Washington National Cathedral from noon on July 22 until noon on July 23 A funeral service was then held in the cathedral at 14 00 followed by the burial in Arlington National Cemetery 189 Honorary pallbearers were Fleet Admiral Chester W Nimitz Admiral Thomas C Hart Admiral Charles P Snyder Admiral Louis E Denfeld Admiral Arthur W Radford Vice Admiral Edward L Cochrane and Rear Admiral Henry Williams all retired from service Active military servicemen who were honorary pallbearers were Admiral Jerauld Wright Admiral Robert L Dennison Rear Admiral Joseph H Wellings and close friend William D Hassett 189 Leahy s papers are in the Naval History and Heritage Command and the Library of Congress in Washington D C some personal correspondence is held by the Wisconsin Historical Society 190 191 The DLG 16 the lead ship of the Leahy class cruisers was named in his honor 192 Dates of rank Edit United States Naval Academy naval cadet Class of 1897 35th of class of 47 Ensign Lieutenant Junior Grade Lieutenant Lieutenant Commander CommanderO 1 O 2 O 3 O 4 O 5 July 1 1899 6 July 1 1902 6 December 31 1903 6 September 15 1909 6 August 29 1916 6 Captain Rear Admiral Vice Admiral Admiral Fleet AdmiralO 6 O 8 O 9 O 10 Special Grade July 1 1918 6 October 14 1927 6 July 13 1935 6 January 2 1937 6 December 15 1944 6 Decorations and awards Edit Navy CrossNavy Distinguished Service Medalwith two gold stars Sampson Medal Spanish Campaign MedalPhilippine Campaign Medal Nicaraguan Campaign Medal 1912 Mexican Service MedalDominican Campaign Medal World War I Victory Medalwith TRANSPORT clasp American Campaign MedalAsiatic Pacific Campaign Medal European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal World War II Victory MedalNavy Occupation Medal National Defense Service Medal Navy Rifle Marksmanship RibbonSource 6 Leahy was invested as an Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Military Division of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath on November 21 1945 193 Bibliography EditLeahy William D 1950 I Was There The Personal Story of the Chief of Staff to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman Based on His Notes and Diaries Made at the Time New York Whittlesey House OCLC 702607509 Retrieved May 11 2022 Notes Edit a b Borneman 2012 pp 13 14 O Brien 2019 pp 5 7 Thomas 1973 p 10 a b O Brien 2019 pp 7 8 O Brien 2019 pp 9 10 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Leahy William Daniel Naval History amp Heritage Command Retrieved May 8 2022 Thomas 1973 p 27 Naval Academy Class of 78 Shines with Four 4 Stars United States Naval Academy January 19 2016 Retrieved May 8 2022 USNA Timeline History of USNA United States Naval Academy Retrieved June 15 2022 Borneman 2012 p 18 a b Borneman 2012 pp 23 25 Thomas 1973 p 44 a b O Brien 2019 p 14 O Brien 2019 p 25 Thomas 1973 pp 50 51 Thomas 1973 p 56 Thomas 1973 p 65 Thomas 1973 pp 71 73 O Brien 2019 pp 15 19 Thomas 1973 p 81 a b Thomas 1973 pp 87 93 O Brien 2019 p 20 O Brien 2019 pp 19 23 a b c Borneman 2012 pp 66 67 a b O Brien 2019 pp 24 26 Vice Admiral Albert Parker Niblack U S Navy Deceased PDF Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved May 10 2022 a b O Brien 2019 pp 26 27 Burial Detail Leahy William H ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Retrieved October 4 2022 a b c Thomas 1973 p 98 Adams 1985 p 26 O Brien 2019 p 32 O Brien 2019 pp 32 34 a b Borneman 2012 pp 68 69 Thomas 1973 p 99 Thomas 1973 pp 108 109 Mobley 2019 p 47 O Brien 2019 pp 36 37 O Brien 2019 pp 38 39 O Brien 2019 pp 40 44 Thomas 1973 pp 127 128 a b c O Brien 2019 pp 46 48 William Leahy Recipient Military Times Retrieved May 12 2022 a b Adams 1985 pp 36 37 a b O Brien 2019 pp 49 51 Adams 1985 pp 40 42 O Brien 2019 pp 56 60 Adams 1985 pp 45 46 Borneman 2012 pp 107 108 O Brien 2019 pp 67 68 Adams 1985 pp 58 61 O Brien 2019 pp 68 69 a b Adams 1985 pp 64 66 a b O Brien 2019 pp 70 72 O Brien 2019 p 73 O Brien 2019 p 79 O Brien 2019 p 82 a b c O Brien 2019 pp 84 87 Adams 1985 pp 70 71 a b Borneman 2012 pp 153 155 O Brien 2019 pp 93 94 Adams 1985 p 83 a b O Brien 2019 p 95 Borneman 2012 p 156 Adams 1985 p 86 Leahy Takes Post Today Vice Admiral Will Assume Battle Force Command Succeeding Laning The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California March 30 1936 Retrieved May 14 2022 via newspapers com O Brien 2019 p 97 Borneman 2012 pp 166 167 Leahy Will Direct Naval Operations The New York Times November 11 1936 p 53 Retrieved May 14 2022 O Brien 2019 p 109 Adams 1985 p 90 Henry Roosevelt is Dead in Capital The New York Times February 23 1936 p 1 Retrieved May 14 2022 O Brien 2019 p 100 O Brien 2019 p 106 a b O Brien 2019 pp 104 106 Adams 1985 pp 94 95 Adams 1985 pp 97 98 Adams 1985 p 99 O Brien 2019 pp 112 114 McClain 1984 pp 20 21 O Brien 2019 pp 114 116 Rogers J David Development of the World s Fastest Battleships PDF Missouri University of Science and Technology Retrieved June 10 2022 Cimarron II AO Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved May 14 2022 a b O Brien 2019 pp 129 130 Leahy 1950 p 12 O Brien 2019 pp 131 133 Alexander 2007 p 52 O Brien 2019 pp 133 134 a b O Brien 2019 pp 139 142 U S Navy Department 1947 pp 5 9 McClain 1984 p 35 Adams 1985 p 132 Neiberg 2021 pp 1 2 Stimson amp Bundy 1971 p 541 Neiberg 2021 pp 10 15 a b Holmes 1974 p 2 a b Leahy 1950 p 8 Holmes 1974 p 41 Holmes 1974 pp 45 46 Neiberg 2021 p 98 Holmes 1974 pp 49 50 Leahy Confers With Petain The New York Times January 10 1941 p 4 Retrieved May 16 2022 Holmes 1974 p 53 Neiberg 2021 p 102 Holmes 1974 pp 57 59 Holmes 1974 pp 61 62 Holmes 1974 pp 95 98 Neiberg 2021 p 104 Neiberg 2021 pp 120 122 Neiberg 2021 pp 130 131 Neiberg 2021 pp 136 137 O Brien 2019 p 169 Holmes 1974 pp 184 188 Holmes 1974 p 194 O Brien 2019 pp 170 171 Neiberg 2021 pp 137 139 Neiberg 2021 p 147 Leahy 1950 pp 111 116 Borneman 2012 pp 267 269 O Brien 2019 p 177 Miles 1999 pp 60 63 Leahy 1950 p 118 Miles 1999 pp 66 67 Leahy 1950 pp 119 120 Hamilton Thomas J July 26 1942 President Praises Leahy s Vichy Role The New York Times p 17 Retrieved May 18 2022 Kluckhohn Frank L July 26 1942 Leahy s Role in the War Real Importance of Admiral s Task as Aide to the President May Appear Later The New York Times p 84 Retrieved May 18 2022 O Brien 2019 p 191 Miles 1999 pp 67 68 Adams 1985 p 182 a b c d e O Brien 2019 pp 191 192 a b Leahy 1950 p 126 Miles 1999 p 168 a b Miles 1999 p 140 Leahy 1950 pp 121 122 O Brien 2019 p 187 O Brien 2019 p 181 a b c Miles 1999 pp 90 92 a b Leahy 1950 pp 121 123 McClain 1984 pp 73 78 Adams 1985 p 201 Hayes 1982 pp 261 263 O Brien 2019 pp 222 229 McClain 1984 pp 115 118 McClain 1984 pp 113 115 Adams 1985 pp 224 227 a b McClain 1984 pp 122 125 O Brien 2019 p 257 McClain 1984 pp 129 130 McClain 1984 p 73 O Brien 2019 p 246 O Brien 2019 p 220 Costigliola 2008 pp 695 696 Hopkins Marries In White House He Weds Mrs Louise G Macy Before Fireplace in Oval Study The New York Times July 30 1942 p 17 Retrieved May 20 2022 Costigliola 2008 p 695 696 O Brien 2019 p 277 a b c O Brien 2019 pp 287 290 Hayes 1982 pp 621 624 McClain 1984 pp 180 181 Hayes 1982 pp 630 638 McClain 1984 pp 182 185 Five Star Officers Arlington National Cemetery Retrieved June 10 2022 McClain 1984 pp 204 205 Adams 1985 p 265 Adams 1985 pp 267 271 Leahy 1950 pp 374 379 Leahy 1950 pp 400 403 O Brien 2019 pp 329 331 O Brien 2019 pp 341 345 Truman 1955 p 11 Bernstein 1987 p 378 Leahy 1950 p 513 Bernstein 1987 pp 386 387 O Brien 2019 pp 348 350 Leahy 1950 p 447 Leahy 1950 p 497 O Brien 2019 pp 376 377 390 391 O Brien 2019 p 418 O Brien 2019 pp 424 426 O Brien 2019 pp 391 392 a b O Brien 2019 pp 367 371 Text of President s Navy Day Speech in Central Park on the Aims of U S Foreign Policy The New York Times October 28 1945 p 33 Retrieved May 20 2022 a b O Brien 2019 pp 371 374 Winston Churchill s Iron Curtain Speech March 5 1946 The National WWII Museum New Orleans Retrieved May 20 2022 O Brien 2019 pp 407 408 419 420 O Brien 2019 p 432 O Brien 2019 pp 434 436 Naval History and Heritage Command 2015 p 19 a b O Brien 2019 p 441 Prescott Orville March 20 1950 Books of the Times The New York Times p 19 Retrieved May 21 2022 a b Mossman amp Stark 1971 pp 143 148 Leahy William D Papers Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved May 11 2022 William D Leahy papers Library of Congress Retrieved May 11 2022 Borneman 2012 p 491 Photo of the Earl of Halifax British Ambassador to the U S and various U S Military leaders Harry S Truman Library and Museum Retrieved June 10 2022 References EditAdams Henry H 1985 Witness to Power The Life of Fleet Admiral William D Leahy Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 338 0 OCLC 464550175 Alexander David 2007 The Building A Biography of the Pentagon St Paul Minnesota MBI ISBN 978 0 7603 2087 7 OCLC 701237862 Bernstein Barton J 1987 Ike and Hiroshima Did he oppose it The Journal of Strategic Studies 10 3 377 389 doi 10 1080 01402398708437307 Borneman Walter 2012 The Admirals The Five Star Admirals Who Won the War at Sea Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 09783 3 OCLC 805654962 Costigliola Frank 2008 Broken Circle The Isolation of Franklin D Roosevelt in World War II Diplomatic History 32 5 677 718 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2008 00725 x JSTOR 24915955 Hayes Grace P 1982 The History of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in World War II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 269 7 OCLC 7795125 Holmes Janes Houghton February 18 1974 Admiral Leahy in Vichy France PhD thesis Washington D C The George Washington University via ProQuest McClain Linda August 1984 The Role of Admiral W D Leahy in U S Foreign Policy PhD thesis Charlottesville Virginia University of Virginia via ProQuest Miles Paul L Jr June 1999 American Strategy in World War II The Role of William D Leahy PhD thesis Princeton New Jersey Princeton University via ProQuest Mobley Scott 2019 By the Force of Our Arms William D Leahy and the U S Intervention in Nicaragua 1912 PDF Federal History 11 39 59 ISSN 2163 8144 Retrieved May 8 2022 Mossman B Stark M W 1971 The Last Salute Civil and Military Funeral 1921 1969 PDF Washington D C United States Department of the Army OCLC 596887 Retrieved May 11 2022 Naval History and Heritage Command 2015 United States Navy Office of the Chief of Naval Operations 100th Anniversary PDF Washington D C Naval History and Heritage Command ISBN 978 0 16 092779 9 OCLC 920468160 Retrieved May 12 2022 Neiberg Michael S 2021 When France Fell The Vichy Crisis and the Fate of the Anglo American Alliance Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 25856 3 OCLC 1288343540 O Brien Phillips 2019 The Second Most Powerful Man in the World The Life of Admiral William D Leahy Roosevelt s Chief of Staff New York Dutton Caliber an imprint of Penguin Random House ISBN 978 0 399 58482 4 OCLC 1260671230 Stimson Henry L Bundy McGeorge 1971 On Active Service in Peace and War New York Octagon Books ISBN 978 0 374 97627 9 OCLC 833688612 Thomas Gerald E 1973 William D Leahy and America s Imperial Years 1893 1917 PDF PhD thesis Yale University Retrieved May 10 2022 Truman Harry S 1955 Memoirs of Harry S Truman Vol I Year of Decisions Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company OCLC 20899832 U S Navy Department 1947 Building the Navy s Bases in World War II History of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Civil Engineer Corps 1940 1946 Vol II Washington D C U S Government Printing Office OCLC 1023942 Further reading EditBeruff Jorge Rodriguez 2002 Las memorias de Leahy los relatos del almirante William D Leahy sobre su gobernacion de Puerto Rico 1939 1940 Leahy s Memoirs Admiral William D Leahy s Account of His Governorship of Puerto Rico 1939 1940 in Spanish and English San Juan Puerto Rico Autor ISBN 978 1 881730 09 5 OCLC 253353884 Hall George M 1994 The Fifth Star High Command in an Era of Global War Westport Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 275 94802 3 OCLC 28891203 Langer William L 1947 Our Vichy Gamble New York Knopf OCLC 906119423 Wikiquote has quotations related to William D Leahy Wikimedia Commons has media related to William D Leahy Military officesPreceded byWilliam H Standley Chief of Naval Operations1937 1939 Succeeded byHarold R StarkNew office Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief1942 1949 Succeeded byOmar Bradleyas Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of StaffPolitical officesPreceded byJose E Colon Governor of Puerto RicoSeptember 11 1939 November 28 1940 Succeeded byJose Miguel GallardoDiplomatic postsPreceded byWilliam C Bullitt United States Ambassador to France1941 1942 VacantGerman occupation of FranceTitle next held byJefferson Caffery in 1944 Portals Biography France Nuclear technology Politics Puerto Rico United States World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William D Leahy amp oldid 1141827856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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