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Page 13 text:
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captain frederick brush The very outset of Captain Frederick J. Brush's command of the Bon Homme Richard was fringed with action, as he headed the ship out to sea from Subic Bay, Pl., to avoid a raging typhoon immediately after relieving Captain Lamar P. Carver as Commanding Ofhcer in an impressive flight deck ceremony. His knowledge of action and qualifications for his first attack aircraft carrier command stemmed from his graduation from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1931. His first duty station was the battleship USS Colorado. After a year, the captain reported to the cruiser USS Portland where he remained until 1935. At this point in his career, Capt. Brush received his aviator's wings at Pensacola, Fla. Prior to World War H, he served aboard the carrier USS Saratoga and the battleship USS Pennsylvania as well as at Coco Solo, Panama, and Key West Fla. During the conflict, Capt. Brush became gunnery officer for Commander, Air Force Atlantic Fleet. From 1943 until the following year he served as Commander Air Group 81 attached to the carrier USS Wasp. In the last year of the war the captain became executive officer of the aircraft carrier USS Cowpens. He later became commanding officer and in that capacity prepared the ship for the reserve Heet. Duty stations since the war include executive officer at NAS Jacksonville, Fla., Fleet Air Wing Two at Pearl Harbor, and a year at the Naval War College. Following his command of the escort carrier USS Point Cruz, Capt. Brush served with the Strategic Plans Division of Naval Gperations.
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Page 12 text:
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Captain Zamar p. earfver The call to the sea came june 17, 1925 to Captain Lamar Peyton Carver when he entered the Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. Born in St. Louis, Mo., March 18, 1908, the Bon Homme Richard Commanding Ofhcer attended Winona, Wis., schools. Commissioned as an ensign in June, 1929, Capt. Carver served aboard the. battleship USS New Mexico before entering flight training at Pensacola, Fla. iGraduating with wings in 1931, the captain boarded the battleship USS Maryland for duty as avation officer. After leaving the Maryland, Capt. Carver fiew with patrol squadron VP8F and fighter squadron VF-1 before being attached as landing signal officer aboard the carrier USS Lexington in 1937-38. His other duties included test piloting at Anacostia, D.C. and a two-year Atlantic tour with squadrons VB-9 and VS-41 and carrier group CVG-4 before the outbreak of World War ll. Capt. Carver's first ship command came in June, 1946, when he assumed command of the seaplane tender USS Duxbury Bay in the Pacific Fleet. Other duties include tours at the Naval War College, Newport, Rl, the Cffice of Naval Intelligence, Washington, D.C.g the Chiefs of Staff, Washington, D.C., staff of Commander, Second Fleet, and staff of Chief of Naval Air Training, Pensacola, Fla. He boarded the Bon Homme Richard from the staff of the Commander, in Chief, Pacific Fleet where he had served two years until July, 1955. in the philippines lie was relieved by 'v l i l i E I 1 I l E P l z J i l 5 i i l I i a E l l I l l l 1 l 5 L l if
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Page 14 text:
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our first executive officer ZUCZS CO777J77fCUZCZ87' 'LU. IZ. leonard who was relieved by Commander William N. Leonard served as the Bon Homme Richard executive officer from the ship's recommissiong Sept. 6, 1955, to April 5, 1956, when he was relieved by Commander Rex W. Warner. Cdr. Leonard, a veteran naval aviator, joined the staff of the Air Warfare Division of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations upon leaving the ship. Born in Douglas, Ariz., in 1916, the commander was appointed to the U.S. Naval Academy in 1933 following gradua- tion from high school at Minneapolis, Minn. He was commissioned an ensign in June, 1938. He attended flight school at Pensacola, Fla., in 1940 after duty aboard the light cruiser USS Honolulu and battleship USS Arkansas. He received his wings in January 1941. During VVorld War H, Cdr. Leonard served in squadrons based aboard the carriers USS Yorktown, Hornet, and Enterprise and at Guadacanal and on duty with Commander, Fleet Air, West Coast, until 1944. Upon leaving the command of carrier Air Group 17 in 1951, the commander' served two years with the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group under the Defense Department and two years as executive and commanding officer of Air Development Squadrons before boarding the Bon Homme Richard as executive officer.
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