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Amerikansk
admiral. Chef for Task Force 58 i Stillehavet.
Viceadmiral
i den amerikanske flåde og kommandør for den berømte
Task Force Fifty-Eight under Anden Verdenskrig. Born in Hillsboro, Wisconsin,
on January 26, 1887, Marc A. "Pete" Mitscher grew up an Oklahoman.
After Oklahoma Territory opened for settlement, Mitscher's father, O.
A. Mitscher, moved the family to Oklahoma City, where he was elected mayor
in 1891. In 1900 Pres. William McKinley appointed the elder Mitscher as
Osage Indian agent at Pawhuska. Unimpressed with the local schools, his
father sent young Mitscher to Washington, D.C., for his education. In
1904 U.S. Rep. Bird S. McGuire appointed Mitscher to the United States
Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland.
A poor student, Mitscher seemed to be in continuous trouble, earning 159
demerits in one class year. In 1906 Mitscher resigned, but his father
immediately coaxed McGuire to reappoint him. After six years, in 1910
Mitscher graduated 113th out of 131 classmates. At Annapolis he developed
a passion for aviation. He served in the fleet until 1915 when he found
an opportunity for aviation training aboard the USS North Carolina. In
1919 Mitscher received his first Navy Cross for his participation in the
trans-Atlantic flight of Navy Curtiss seaplanes, the first man-made flight
across the Atlantic. Three of these NC's made the attempt, and only one
landed safely; unfortunately, Mitscher had to be rescued from the sea.
Mitscher's investment in aeronautics and the Navy carried him through
various assignments, including teaching flyers in San Diego, duties with
the Bureau of Aeronautics, and stints on early aircraft carriers. In 1938
the Navy promoted him to captain, and three years later he assumed command
of the carrier USS Hornet. After Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor his carrier
hosted Col. Jimmy Doolittle's sixteen B-25 bombers that raided Tokyo and
other Japanese cities. On May 30, 1942, Mitscher achieved rear admiral
status and by June was battle-tested at Midway. After active campaigning
in the Pacific, Mitscher took command of Task Force Fifty, renamed Task
Force Fifty-Eight in January 1944. He was involved in most major battles
in the Pacific, including the Philippine Sea, Leyte Gulf, Marianas "Turkey
Shoot," and the assaults on Iwo Jima, Okinawa (where his forces were
in action for a remarkable ninety-two straight days), and the Japanese
home islands.
In 1945 Mitscher took the office of Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for
air and in 1946 became commander of the Eighth Fleet. The Navy then assigned
Admiral Mitscher to Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Fleet. The Navy
had awarded Marc A. Mitscher three Navy Crosses by the time he died of
a heart attack on February 3, 1947. His wife Frances survived him.
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