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General William E. Mitchell
1879 - 1936
First To Successfully
Demonstrate The Capabilities Of Air Power, 1921
Inducted in 1972
After World War I, General "Billy" Mitchell argued against the huge reductions being made in military aviation. His contention was that the less costly bomber and torpedo plane had rendered expensive surface warships obsolete. The uproar he stirred reached national proportions. Mitchell insisted his bombers could sink any warship afloat and proved it in July 1921.
Seventy-five
miles from the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, his Martin MB-2 bombers
sank three ex-German warships, including the supposedly unsinkable "Ostfriesland." When
the exercise was repeated in 1923 near Cape Hatteras, two obsolete
United States battleships, "Virginia" and "New Jersey," met
similar fates.
Many experts agreed that there were many lessons to be learned from such tests, but Mitchell was not satisfied with the pace of change. He remained a vocal critic and in 1925 issued a blistering statement accusing the War and Navy Departments of "incompetence, criminal negligence, and almost treasonable administration" of aviation affairs. By such actions, Mitchell made his trial by court-martial inevitable and was convicted on charges of "insubordination and conduct unbecoming an officer." Mitchell resigned from the Army, his prophecies largely disregarded by the government.
On December 7, 1941, the truth of Mitchell's arguments was driven home when Japanese air power made a shambles of the U.S. naval and air forces at Pearl Harbor. On July 25, 1946, ten years after his death, Congress posthumously awarded Brigadier-General Mitchell the Congressional Medal of Honor. |