"Bull"
Halsey is best known for victories against the Japanese
in the Second World War as
fleet commander in the South Pacific and his slogan
of "Hit
hard, hit fast, hit often." Born on October 30, 1883, in
Elizabeth, New Jersey, the son of Captain William F. Halsey,
Sr., U.S. Navy, "Bull" was given his appointment to the
Naval Academy by President McKinley in 1900. During the
First World War, he commanded
destroyers that escorted convoys across the Atlantic,
which
was regularly patrolled by German U-Boats. The next stage
of his naval career began when, at the age of fifty-two,
Halsey became a naval aviator in 1934. From that point
on, he became a leading advocate of carrier warfare. He
was
quickly assigned successive commands of carrier divisions
during the late 1930s and early 1940s, earning promotions
at each major command position.
Sea duty on the USS Enterprise prevented Halsey
from responding to the attack on Pearl Harbor; however,
he aided in the first major U.S. retaliation, the famous
April 18, 1942 "Doolittle Raid" on Tokyo. The following
October, Admiral Chester Nimitz appointed Halsey commander
of the South
Pacific forces and the South Pacific area. His command
of the South Pacific theater, especially his command of
forces
that captured Guadalcanal, Bougainville, and other key
islands in the Solomon Island Chain catapulted Halsey
to fame. In
late October 1944, he served as Admiral Nimitz's tactical
commander for the Battle of Leyte and helped destroy
the
Japanese Navy. As the war in the Pacific drew to a close,
Halsey's fleet not only participated in the invasion
of
Okinawa, but he lent his flagship, USS Missouri,
as the stage for Japan's formal surrender.
During the war he called ER a "do-gooder" and "dreaded"
her arrival in the South Pacific to visit the troops.(1)
Halsey's mind began to change soon after ER's arrival as
he "marveled" at her work. Towards the end of her trip,
ER was permitted to go to Guadalcanal and tour the battlefield
and talk with the troops in and out of the hospital. She
covered seventeen islands, New Zealand, and Australia, seeing
by one estimation 400,000 troops. As she was departing for
the United States, Admiral Halsey told her that it was impossible
to express his feelings for what she had done for his men.
Following the war, Halsey took the oath as fleet admiral
on December 11, 1945, and became the fourth and last officer
to hold that esteemed rank. Officially retiring from the
navy on March 1, 1947, he accepted the position of President
of International Telecommunications Labs, Inc., which he
held until 1957. He died at Fishers Island Country Club,
Connecticut, on August 16, 1959, and was buried in Arlington
National Cemetery, next to his father.
Notes:
- Joseph P. Lash, Eleanor
and Franklin (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
1971). 684.
Sources:
Chambers, John W., II, ed. The Oxford
Companion to American Military History. New York:
Oxford University Press: New York, 1999, 310.
Lash, Joseph P. Eleanor and Franklin.
New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1971, 684, 688-691.
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