High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 10 text:
“
CAPTAIN T. H. HEDERMAN United States Navy Former Chief of Staff Commander Sixth Fleet , APTAIN T. HENRY HEDIQRMAN, La Jolla, California, was graduated from the U. S. Naval Academy in 1923, where he was cap- tain of the baseball team and later served as coach. He has spent the greater part ol his sea duty in destroyers and commanded USS DOVVNES in 19110-111. During VVor1d VVar ll he commanded Destroyer Squadron 61 in Task Force 58 and led his squadron into lower Tokyo .Bay one month before Japan capitulated, destroying' a japanese convoy attempting' to sneak out. In 1946-117 he headed the Fleet Training Group, San Diego, and the lollowing' year was Commander Destroyer Flotilla ON1-Q in the Pacihc Fleet. Captain Hederman holds the Navy Cross and Legion ol' Nleril with combat pwwl. ., 'M A .v-wr:-'FA f - CAPTAIN R. L. CAMPBELL United States Navy Chief of Stay? Commalzder Sixth Fleet -1 X Q, .,xP1'A1x Rouigar Lokb CARIPBELL, lmlay Clitv. Nlichigsan, graduated from the U. S. Naval .Xcatleiny in 1921. Following graduation he served on the l'SS PENNSYLVANIA, USS ROBERT SMITH. and the USS PREBLE. Later he was Aide and Flag' Lieutenant on the stafl' ol' Commander Cruiser Division THREE. ln 1935 he assumed command of the USS R.-XIL, later commanded the USS SE- QUO1.-X and the USS TRIPPE. His next sea assignment was as navigator of the USS .-XL.-XBAM.-X. He participated in the Gilbert Islands and the Marshall Islands t'ampaig'ns. Alter various assignments with Destroyer Sq nadrons and shore duty he was ordered to duty as Chiel' of Stall, Com- mander SIXTH FLEET. 3 ..,i...-..-.-..-0.-..M-1-f.,.l ll . ,i tl ts M 1 lf ,. li IE is 1 1 1 1 E v'l
”
Page 9 text:
“
ici: Amrlk.-xi. .loim ji:NNiNc:s 15.-xLL11Nr1Nn was named Commander of the Sixth Fleet, United States Naval Forces, Eastern Atlantic and Mediter- ranean, on November 3, 1949, succeeding Admiral Forrest P. Sherman. He served in the Mediterra- nean area previously as Commander of Carrier Di- vision ONE. Born in Hillsboro, Ohio, O-rtober 4, 1896, Ad- miral Ballentine was graduated from the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, in 1917. Since 1920, when he received his designation, he has served in Naval aviation. At the outbreak of iVorld IVar II, he was serving as Executive Ollicer of the aircraft carrier USS RANGER. On December 24, 1941 he was ordered to take command of the carrier USS LONG IS- LAND. Later, from May until December, 1942, he served as Chief of Staff and Aide to the Commander, Carriers, Atlantic Fleet, and on May 25, 1943, he took command of the newly constructed 27,000 ton aircraft carrier USS BUNKER HILL. In February 1944 Admiral Ballentine reported for duty as Deputy and Chief of Staff and Aide to the Commander, Aircraft, Pacific Fleet, at Pearl Har- bor, T. H., serving in that duty until October 1944. On his return to the United States, he served from November 19-14 until .lune 1945 as Com- mander, Fleet Air, Seattle, I-Vashington. After brief duty in the THIRD Fleet as Com- VICE ADMIRAL JOHN J. IBAIQLENTINE V United States Navy , A Commander, Sixth Fleet mander Carrier Division SEVEN, in the USS BON HOMME RICHARD from June until August 1945, Admiral Ballentine was assigned duty as Fleet Liai- son Officer for Commander in Chief Pacific at Head- quarters, Supreme Commander for the Allied Pow- ers, Pacific. He landed at Atsugi Airport on 30 August in the airborne occupation of japan escort- ing General of the Army Douglas MacArthur to the surrender ceremonies on the battleship MIS- SOURI on 2 September 1945. In January 1946 Admiral Ballentine reported to the Oliice of the Chief of Naval Operations, for duty as Assistant on the Military Staff Committee of the Security Council, United Nations, and was designated Chief of Staff and Deputy to Admiral Richmond K. Turner, USN, Representative of the Chief of Naval Operations, on the Military Staff Committee of the Security Council of the United Nations. He continued those duties when Admiral Turner was relieved by Admiral H. K. Hewitt, USN, in March 1947 until detached in July 1947. He made a five months cruise in the Mediterra- nean in USS MIDIVAY in the winter of 1947-48 and made a similar cruise with the SIXTH Fleet in USS ROOSEVELT in 1948-49. He served as a Member of the General Board, Navy Department, IfVashington, D. C., before taking command of the Sixth Fleet.
”
Page 11 text:
“
- s 1.1 ty g l l rl 1 1 .l an eg .urn 1 1 u m 41 Eff fi? I EAR :XDNIIRAL Tuoxnxs MURRAY STOKES, USN, Commander Cruiser Division Four, was born 2 February 1899 in Fulton, Alabama. , At a very early age his family moved to Meridian, Mississippi where he attended the Meridian public school. He enlisted in the Navy in 1917, in YVorld YVar I, and went through training at Yerba Buena Island, San Francisco. In 1918 he received a Special Order discharge from enlisted service to enter the Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland. After graduation from the Naval Academy in june 1922, he reported to duty aboard the U.S.S. CONNECTICUT, and thereafter, until early 1941, followed the usual rotation of duty assignments in various types of ships and at shore establishments, which is normal practice in the Navy for training young officers. In February 1941 he commissioned and took com- mand of one of our, then new, destroyers, the U.S.S. GRAYSON QDD-4355, named for Rear Admiral Grayson, Medical Corps, USN. The GRAYSON was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet during the period of tension preceding lVorld lVar II, and was in Iceland on December 7, 1941. In early 1942 the GRAYSON was transferred to the Pacific and was REAR ADMIRAL T. M. STOKES United States Navy Commander Cruiser Division Four a part of the Task Force which took General Doo- little and his fliers close to the shores of Japan and launched them on the Tokyo Raid in April 1942. After this operation he was transferred from the GRAYSON to the U.S.S. CUSHING QDD-3765 as Commander of Destroyer Division TEN. The CUSHING was lost in combat, sunk by gunfire in the Battle of Guadalcanal, November 13, 1942. On 27 November 1942 Commander Stokes was assigned Executive Oflicer of the U.S.S. HELENA operat- as ing in the South Pacific, thence to the U.S.S. MAS- . A d SACHUSETTS as Chief of Staff to Comman er Battleship Division EIGHT, and in February 1944 as assi ned duty to commission and command an w g attack transport, the U.S.S. BARNSTABLE QAPA- 931. In August 1944 Captain Stokes was assigned duty Head of the Department of Marine Engineering, as U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland. Fol- . . . d h lowing this shore assignment, he commande t e U.S.S. IOW'A QBB-61j and has recently completed t lr of dut in the Office of the Chief of Naval a ot y Operations prior to duty with Cruiser Division FOUR. He was promoted to Rear Admiral in August 1948 while on duty in the Navy Department, Vlfashington, D. C.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.