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Page 21 text:
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The Sta 9 NATTII MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE HEAIIIIUAHTEHS NAVAL AIR TECH IIIAI. TRAINING lhe atomic bomb and the supersonic jet have not changed the theory behind General Nathan fl. Forrest's cogent observation on how to win wars: Get Thar Fustest with the Mostest. During the Civil War, that meant plenty of horses and forced marches. Today, it means a lot of things-among them-Naval Air Technical Training. Although the .general public knows little about the vital postwar operations of Naval Air Technical Training, the growth of this inner cog of Naval Aviation from a conglomerate maze of shops, classrooms, and laboratories into the Enlisted's Man's Annapolis has been phenomenal. Born under the stress of war, the Naval Air Technical Training Command supplied the Combat fleets with more than 360,000 trained aviation technicians, devoted to aircraft upkeep and repair, thus, contributing much to the development of the aircraft carrier and the task force. Equally valiant and equally unsung are the maintenance crews trained by the Command for their peacetime mission-to keep the planes and the carriers of the Navy ready for any emergency. The peacetime flying Navy, exploiting the scientific potentialities of research in all phases of air technical problems, has directed its program to the progress of aeronautical science, both for the furtherance of its own military stature and for the benefit of the land it was created to protect. Early in World War II it was discovered-in the headlines-in the reorganization of the Naval High Command to emphasize Navy Air-in the victorious defeat of the Japanese in the Pacific-that pilots wearing Navy wings had ended an epoch in Naval warfare by taking to the air in an ofensive drive against the enemy. And for every plane and every pilot, ten to 20 technicians were needed. Skilled crewmen were needed to man new equip- ment used in the instruction of the Navy's new Naval Air Arm. Service schools were set-up to teach aircraft Maintenance subjects of the most fundamental kind. These schools were small and incapable of coping with the vastly stepped-up Naval Air program. On 11 September 1942, the Naval Air Technical Training Command was established to train officers and men in technical aviation duties-to produce trained personnel in quan- tities and qualities as required by the Navy Department. A modern system of training-the set-up of know-how-was quickly inaugurated. The learn while doing program advised by the top-flight faculty called for the furnishing of practical basic instruction to new recruits, while fleet-experienced technicians, veterans of actual service at sea, were supplied with refresher training and advanced schooling. Business and industry contributed their knowledge along with specialists of many sorts, developing scientifc training techniques that set new patterns for vocational education everywhere. The basic idea was to completely familiarize aviation personnel with all equipment which could be expected to be used during service in the Fleets. This could best be accomplished through formalized, shore-base instruction, supervised and directed by specially trained personnel. Today Naval Air Technical Training exists only to provide the fleets with trained tech- nicians. Training aviation specialists and keeping them skilled in their services-whether they be active or ready reserve personnel-is the function of Naval Air Technical Training in the postwar era. The training methods designed and so successfully promulgated in accomplishing the magnificent wartime success of Naval Air Technical Training have remained to become the best vocational education of its type available in the period of peacetime preparedness. From Memphis, Tennessee, NATTC, the Chief of Naval Air Technical Training, Rear Admiral H. M. Martin directs a closely integrated structure of aviation technical training which extends from coast to coast. The leading character in the story of Naval Air Technical Training is the Naval Air Technical Training Center at Memphis-the starting point of a never ending program in aviation technical training. H. M. MARTIN Rear Aclmnral Chief of Naval Air Technical Training
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