Chester W. Nimitz

Chester William Nimitz, Sr. (/ˈnɪmɪts/; February 24, 1885 – February 20, 1966) was a fleet admiral of the United States Navy. He played a major role in the naval history of World War II as Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet and Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas, commanding Allied air, land, and sea forces during World War II.[2]

Chester W. Nimitz
Portrait of Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz
Born(1885-02-24)February 24, 1885
Fredericksburg, Texas, U.S.
DiedFebruary 20, 1966(1966-02-20) (aged 80)
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Buried
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1905–1966[1]
Rank Fleet Admiral
Service number5572
Commands heldChief of Naval Operations
Pacific Ocean Areas
United States Pacific Fleet
Bureau of Navigation
USS Augusta (CA-31)
USS Rigel (AR-11)
USS Chicago (CA-14)
Atlantic Submarine Flotilla
USS Skipjack (SS-24)
3rd Submarine Division Atlantic Torpedo Fleet
USS Narwhal (SS-17)
USS Snapper (SS-16)
USS Plunger (SS-2)
First Submarine Flotilla
USS Decatur (DD-5)
Battles/warsWorld War I
World War II
AwardsNavy Distinguished Service Medal (4)
Army Distinguished Service Medal
Silver Lifesaving Medal
Full list
RelationsCharles Henry Nimitz (grandfather)
Chester Nimitz Jr. (son)
Other workRegent of the University of California
Signature

Nimitz was the leading US Navy authority on submarines. Qualified in submarines during his early years, he later oversaw the conversion of these vessels' propulsion from gasoline to diesel, and then later was key in acquiring approval to build the world's first nuclear-powered submarine, USS Nautilus, whose propulsion system later completely superseded diesel-powered submarines in the US. He also, beginning in 1917, was the Navy's leading developer of underway replenishment techniques, the tool which during the Pacific war would allow the US fleet to operate away from port almost indefinitely. The chief of the Navy's Bureau of Navigation in 1939, Nimitz served as Chief of Naval Operations from 1945 until 1947. He was the United States' last surviving officer who served in the rank of fleet admiral. The USS Nimitz supercarrier, the lead ship of her class, is named after him.

Early life and education

Nimitz, a German Texan, was born the son of Anna Josephine (Henke) and Chester Bernhard Nimitz on February 24, 1885, in Fredericksburg, Texas,[3] where his grandfather's hotel is now the Admiral Nimitz State Historic Site. His frail, rheumatic father had died six months earlier, on August 14, 1884.[4] He was significantly influenced by his German-born paternal grandfather, Charles Henry Nimitz, a former seaman in the German Merchant Marine, who taught him, "the sea – like life itself – is a stern taskmaster. The best way to get along with either is to learn all you can, then do your best and don't worry – especially about things over which you have no control."[5] His grandfather became a Texas Ranger in the Texas Mounted Volunteers in 1851. He then served as captain of the Gillespie Rifles Company in the Confederate States Army during the Civil War.[6]

Originally, Nimitz applied to West Point in hopes of becoming an Army officer, but no appointments were available. His congressman, James L. Slayden, told him that he had one appointment available for the United States Naval Academy and that he would award it to the best qualified candidate. Nimitz felt that this was his only opportunity for further education and spent extra time studying to earn the appointment. He was appointed to the Naval Academy from Texas's 12th congressional district in 1901, and he graduated with distinction on January 30, 1905, seventh in a class of 114.[7]

Military career

Early career

Midshipman 1/C Nimitz, circa 1905

Nimitz joined the battleship Ohio at San Francisco, and cruised on her to the Far East. In September 1906, he was transferred to the cruiser Baltimore; on January 31, 1907, after the two years at sea as a warrant officer then required by law, he was commissioned as an ensign. Remaining on Asiatic Station in 1907, he successively served on the gunboat Panay, destroyer Decatur, and cruiser Denver.

The destroyer Decatur ran aground on a mud bank in the Philippines on July 7, 1908 while under the command of Ensign Nimitz. The ship was pulled free the next day, and Nimitz was court-martialed, found guilty of neglect of duty, and issued a letter of reprimand.[8]

Nimitz returned to the United States on board USS Ranger when that vessel was converted to a school ship, and in January 1909, began instruction in the First Submarine Flotilla. In May of that year, he was given command of the flotilla, with additional duty in command of USS Plunger, later renamed A-1. He was promoted directly from ensign to lieutenant in January 1910. He commanded USS Snapper (later renamed C-5) when that submarine was commissioned on February 2, 1910, and on November 18, 1910 assumed command of USS Narwhal (later renamed D-1).[8]

In the latter command, he had additional duty from October 10, 1911 as Commander 3rd Submarine Division Atlantic Torpedo Fleet. In November 1911, he was ordered to the Boston Navy Yard, to assist in fitting out USS Skipjack and assumed command of that submarine, which had been renamed E-1, at her commissioning on February 14, 1912. On the monitor Tonopah (then employed as a submarine tender) on March 20, 1912, he rescued Fireman Second Class W. J. Walsh from drowning, receiving a Silver Lifesaving Medal for his action.[8]

After commanding the Atlantic Submarine Flotilla from May 1912 to March 1913, he supervised the building of diesel engines for the fleet oil tanker Maumee, under construction at the New London Ship and Engine Company, Groton, Connecticut.[9]

World War I

In the summer of 1913, Nimitz (who spoke German) studied engines at the Machinenfabrik-Augsburg-Nurnberg (M.A.N.) diesel engine plants in Nuremberg, Germany, and Ghent, Belgium. Returning to the New York Navy Yard, he became executive and engineer officer of Maumee at her commissioning on October 23, 1916.

After the United States declared war on Germany in April 1917, Nimitz was chief engineer of Maumee while the vessel served as a refueling ship for the first squadron of U.S. Navy destroyers to cross the Atlantic, to take part in the war. Under his supervision, Maumee conducted the first-ever underway refuelings. On August 10, 1917, Nimitz became aide to Rear Admiral Samuel S. Robison, Commander, Submarine Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet (COMSUBLANT).

On February 6, 1918, Nimitz was appointed chief of staff and was awarded a Letter of Commendation for meritorious service as COMSUBLANT's chief of staff. On September 16, he reported to the office of the Chief of Naval Operations, and on October 25 was given additional duty as senior member, Board of Submarine Design.

Between the wars

From May 1919 to June 1920, Nimitz served as executive officer of the battleship South Carolina. He then commanded the cruiser Chicago with additional duty in command of Submarine Division 14, based at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Returning to the mainland in the summer of 1922, he studied at the Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island.

In June 1923, he became aide and assistant chief of staff to the Commander, Battle Fleet, and later to the Commander In Chief, United States Fleet. In August 1926, he went to the University of California, Berkeley, to establish the Navy's first Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps unit.

Nimitz lost part of one finger in an accident with a diesel engine, saving the rest of it only when the machine jammed against his Annapolis ring.[10]

In June 1929, he took command of Submarine Division 20. In June 1931, he assumed command of the destroyer tender Rigel and the destroyers out of commission at San Diego, California. In October 1933, he took command of the cruiser Augusta and deployed to the Far East, where in December, Augusta became the flagship of the Asiatic Fleet. While in command of the Augusta, his legal aide was Chesty Puller.[11]

In April 1935, Nimitz returned home for three years as assistant chief of the Bureau of Navigation, before becoming commander, Cruiser Division 2, Battle Force. In September 1938 he took command of Battleship Division 1, Battle Force. On June 15, 1939, he was appointed chief of the Bureau of Navigation. During this time, Nimitz conducted experiments in the underway refueling of large ships which would prove a key element in the Navy's success in the war to come.

From 1940 to 1941, Nimitz served as president of the Army Navy Country Club, in Arlington, Virginia.

World War II

Admiral Chester W. Nimitz pins the Navy Cross on Doris "Dorie" Miller at ceremony on board USS Enterprise, Pearl Harbor, May 27, 1942.
The surrender of Japan aboard USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, September 2, 1945: Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz, representing the United States, signs the instrument of surrender.

Ten days after the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Rear Admiral Nimitz was selected by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to be the commander-in-chief of the United States Pacific Fleet (CINCPACFLT). Nimitz immediately departed Washington for Hawaii and took command in a ceremony on the top deck of the submarine Grayling. He was promoted to the rank of admiral, effective December 31, 1941, upon assuming command. The change of command ceremony would normally have taken place aboard a battleship, but every battleship in Pearl Harbor had been either sunk or damaged during the attack. Assuming command at the most critical period of the war in the Pacific, Admiral Nimitz organized his forces to halt the Japanese advance, despite the shortage of ships, planes, and supplies.[12] He had a significant advantage in that the United States had cracked the Japanese diplomatic naval code and had made progress on the naval code JN-25. The Japanese had kept radio silence before the attack on Pearl Harbor, but now events were moving so rapidly that they had to rely on coded radio messages that they did not realize were being read in Hawaii.[13]

On March 24, 1942, the newly formed US-British Combined Chiefs of Staff issued a directive designating the Pacific theater an area of American strategic responsibility. Six days later, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) divided the theater into three areas: the Pacific Ocean Areas, the Southwest Pacific Area (commanded by General Douglas MacArthur), and the Southeast Pacific Area. The JCS designated Nimitz as "Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas", with operational control over all Allied units (air, land, and sea) in that area.[14]

Nimitz, in Hawaii, and his superior Admiral Ernest King, the Chief of Naval Operations, in Washington, rejected the plan of General Douglas MacArthur to advance on Japan through New Guinea and the Philippines and Formosa. Instead they proposed an island-hopping plan that would allow them to bypass most of the Japanese strength in the Central Pacific until they reached Okinawa. President Roosevelt compromised, giving both MacArthur and Nimitz their own theaters. The two Pacific theaters were favored, to the dismay of generals George Marshall and Dwight Eisenhower, who favored a Germany-first strategy. King and Nimitz provided MacArthur with some naval forces, but kept most of the carriers. However, when the time came to plan an invasion of Japan, MacArthur was given overall command.[15][16]

Nimitz faced superior Japanese forces at the crucial defensive actions of the Battle of the Coral Sea and the Battle of Midway. The Battle of the Coral Sea, while a loss in terms of total damage suffered, resulted in the strategic success of turning back a Japanese invasion of Port Moresby on the island of New Guinea. Two Japanese carriers were temporarily taken out of action in the battle, which would deprive the Japanese of their use in the Midway operation that shortly followed. The Navy's intelligence team figured that the Japanese would be attacking Midway, so Nimitz moved all his available forces to the defense. The severe losses in Japanese carriers at Midway affected the balance of naval air power during the remainder of 1942, and was crucial in neutralizing Japanese offensive threats in the South Pacific. Naval engagements during the Battle of Guadalcanal left both forces severely depleted. However, with the allied advantage in land-based air power, the results were sufficient to secure Guadalcanal. The US and allied forces then undertook to neutralize remaining Japanese offensive threats with the Solomon Islands campaign and the New Guinea Campaign, while building capabilities for major fleet actions. In 1943, Midway became a forward submarine base, greatly enhancing US capabilities against Japanese shipping.[17]

In terms of combat, 1943 was a relatively quiet year, but it proved decisive inasmuch as Nimitz gained the materiel and manpower needed to launch major fleet offensives to destroy Japanese power in the central Pacific region. This drive opened with the Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaign from November 1943 to February 1944, followed by the destruction of the strategic Japanese base at Truk Lagoon, and the Marianas campaign that brought the Japanese homeland within range of new strategic bombers. Nimitz's forces inflicted a decisive defeat on the Japanese fleet in the Battle of the Philippine Sea (June 19–20, 1944), which allowed the capture of Saipan, Guam, and Tinian.[18] His Fleet Forces isolated enemy-held bastions on the central and eastern Caroline Islands and secured in quick succession Peleliu, Angaur, and Ulithi. In the Philippines, his ships destroyed much of the remaining Japanese naval power at the Battle of Leyte Gulf, October 24 to 26, 1944. With the loss of the Philippines, Japan's energy supply routes from Indonesia came under direct threat, crippling their war effort.[19]

By Act of Congress, passed on December 14, 1944, the rank of fleet admiral — the highest rank in the Navy — was established. The next day President Franklin Roosevelt appointed Nimitz to that rank. Nimitz took the oath of that office on December 19, 1944.[20]

In January 1945, Nimitz moved the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet forward from Pearl Harbor to Guam for the remainder of the war. Nimitz's wife remained in the continental United States for the duration of the war, and did not join her husband in Hawaii or Guam. In 1945, Nimitz's forces launched successful amphibious assaults on Iwo Jima and Okinawa and his carriers raided the home waters of Japan. In addition, Nimitz also arranged for the Army Air Corps to mine the Japanese ports and waterways by air with B-29 Superfortresses in a successful mission called Operation Starvation, which severely interrupted the Japanese logistics.[21][22]

On September 2, 1945, Nimitz signed as representative of the United States when Japan formally surrendered on board USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. On October 5, 1945, which had been officially designated as "Nimitz Day" in Washington, D.C., Nimitz was personally presented a second Gold Star for the third award of the Navy Distinguished Service Medal by President Harry S. Truman "for exceptionally meritorious service as Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet and Pacific Ocean Areas, from June 1944 to August 1945."[23]

Post war

On November 26, 1945, Nimitz's nomination as Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) was confirmed by the U.S. Senate, and on December 15, 1945, he relieved Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King. He had assured the President that he was willing to serve as the CNO for one two-year term, but no longer. He tackled the difficult task of reducing the most powerful navy in the world to a fraction of its war-time strength, while establishing and overseeing active and reserve fleets with the strength and readiness required to support national policy.

For the postwar trial of German Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz at the Nuremberg Trials in 1946, Nimitz furnished an affidavit in support of the practice of unrestricted submarine warfare, a practice that he himself had employed throughout the war in the Pacific. This evidence is widely credited as a reason why Dönitz was sentenced to only 10 years of imprisonment.[24]

Nimitz endorsed an entirely new course for the U.S. Navy's future by way of supporting then-Captain Hyman G. Rickover's chain-of-command-circumventing proposal in 1947 to build USS Nautilus, the world's first nuclear-powered vessel.[25] As is noted at a display at the Nimitz Museum in Fredericksburg, Texas: "Nimitz's greatest legacy as CNO is arguably his support of Admiral Hyman Rickover's effort to convert the submarine fleet from diesel to nuclear propulsion."

From 1949 to 1953, Nimitz served as UN-appointed Plebiscite Administrator for Jammu and Kashmir.[26] His proposed role as administrator was accepted by Pakistan but rejected by India.[27][28]

Inactive duty as a fleet admiral

Nimitz retired from office as CNO on December 15, 1947, and received a third Gold Star in lieu of a fourth Navy Distinguished Service Medal. However, since the rank of fleet admiral is a lifetime appointment, he remained on active duty for the rest of his life, with full pay and benefits. He and his wife, Catherine, moved to Berkeley, California. After he suffered a serious fall in 1964, he and Catherine moved to US Naval quarters on Yerba Buena Island in the San Francisco Bay.

In San Francisco, Nimitz served in the mostly ceremonial post as a special assistant to the Secretary of the Navy in the Western Sea Frontier. He worked to help restore goodwill with Japan after World War II by helping to raise funds for the restoration of the Japanese Imperial Navy battleship Mikasa, Admiral Heihachiro Togo's flagship at the Battle of Tsushima in 1905.

Nimitz was also appointed as the United Nations Plebiscite Administrator for Kashmir on 31 December 1948. The terms of the plebiscite were that Pakistan would vacate regions of Kashmir under its control, and that India would remove additional military from Kashmir. But due to disagreements between the two nations regarding demilitarisation, the plebiscite is still pending.[29]

Nimitz became a member of the Bohemian Club of San Francisco. In 1948, he sponsored a Bohemian dinner in honor of U.S. Army General Mark Clark, known for his campaigns in North Africa and Italy.[30]

Nimitz served as a regent of the University of California during 1948–1956, where he had formerly been a faculty member as a professor of naval science for the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps program. Nimitz was honored on October 17, 1964, by the University of California on Nimitz Day.

Personal life

Nimitz as he appears at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.

Nimitz married Catherine Vance Freeman (March 22, 1892 – February 1, 1979) on April 9, 1913, in Wollaston, Massachusetts.[8] Nimitz and his wife had four children:

  1. Catherine Vance "Kate" (22 February 1914, Brooklyn, NY – 14 January 2015)[31][32]
  2. Chester William "Chet", Jr. (1915–2002)[31][33]
  3. Anna Elizabeth "Nancy" (1919–2003)[34][35]
  4. Mary Manson (1931–2006)[36][37]

Catherine Vance graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1934,[38] became a music librarian with the Washington D.C. Public Library,[39] and married U.S. Navy Commander James Thomas Lay (1909–2001[40]), from St. Clair, Missouri, in Chester and Catherine's suite at the Fairfax Hotel in Washington, D.C., on March 9, 1945.[41] She had met Lay in the summer of 1934 while visiting her parents in Southeast Asia.[38]

Chester Nimitz, Jr., graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1936 and served as a submariner in the Navy until his retirement in 1957, reaching the (post retirement) rank of rear admiral; he served as chairman of PerkinElmer from 1969 to 1980.

Anna Elizabeth ("Nancy") Nimitz was an expert on the Soviet economy at the RAND Corporation from 1952 until her retirement in the 1980s.

Sister Mary Aquinas (Nimitz) became a sister in the Order of Preachers (Dominicans), working at the Dominican University of California. She taught biology for 16 years, and was academic dean for 11 years, acting president for one year, and vice president for institutional research for 13 years before becoming the university's emergency preparedness coordinator. She held this job until her death, due to cancer, on February 27, 2006.

Death

In late 1965, Nimitz suffered a stroke, complicated by pneumonia. In January 1966, he left the U.S. Naval Hospital (Oak Knoll) in Oakland to return home to his naval quarters. He died at home at age 80 on the evening of February 20 at Quarters One on Yerba Buena Island in San Francisco Bay.[42] His funeral on February 24 was at the chapel of adjacent Naval Station Treasure Island, and Nimitz was buried with full military honors at Golden Gate National Cemetery in San Bruno.[43][44][45][46] He lies alongside his wife and his long-term friends Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, Admiral Richmond K. Turner, and Admiral Charles A. Lockwood and their wives, an arrangement made by all of them while living.[47]

Dates of rank

United States Naval Academy Midshipman – January 1905
Ensign Lieutenant junior grade Lieutenant Lieutenant commander Commander Captain
O-1 O-2 O-3 O-4 O-5 O-6
January 7, 1907 Never held January 31, 1910 August 29, 1916 February 1, 1918 June 2, 1927
Commodore Rear admiral Vice admiral Admiral Fleet admiral
O-7 O-8 O-9 O-10 Special Grade
Never held June 23, 1938 Never held December 31, 1941 December 19, 1944
  • Nimitz never held the rank of lieutenant junior grade, as he was appointed a full lieutenant after three years of service as an ensign. For administrative reasons, Nimitz's naval record states that he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant junior grade and lieutenant on the same day.
  • Nimitz was promoted directly from captain to rear admiral. During Nimitz's service, there was only one rank of rear admiral, without the later distinction between upper and lower half, nor did the rank of commodore exist when Nimitz was at that stage of his career.
  • By Congressional appointment, he skipped the rank of vice admiral and became an admiral in December 1941.

Decorations and awards

United States awards

Submarine Warfare insignia
Navy Distinguished Service Medal with three gold stars
Army Distinguished Service Medal
Silver Lifesaving Medal
World War I Victory Medal with Secretary of the Navy Commendation Star
American Defense Service Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
National Defense Service Medal with service star

Orders

United Kingdom – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
France – Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour (French: Grand-Officier de la Légion d'honneur)
Netherlands – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau with Swords (Dutch: Ridder Grootkruis in de Orde van Oranje Nassau)
Greece – Grand Cross of the Order of George I
China – Grand Cordon of Pao Ting (Tripod) Special Class
Guatemala – Cross of Military Merit First Class (Spanish: La Cruz del Merito Militar de Primera Clase)
Cuba – Grand Cross of the Order of Carlos Manuel de Cespedes
Argentina – Order of the Liberator General San Martín (Spanish: Orden del Libertador San Martin)
Ecuador – Order of Abdon Calderon (1st Class)
Belgium – Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown with Palm (French: Grand Croix de l'ordre de la Couronne avec palme)
Italy – Knight of the Grand Cross of the Military Order of Italy (Italian: Cavaliere di Gran Croce)
Brazil – Order of Naval Merit (Portuguese: Ordem do Mérito Naval)

Decorations

PhilippinesPhilippine Medal of Valor
Belgium – War Cross with Palm (French: Croix de Guerre Avec Palme)

Service medals

United Kingdom – Pacific Star
Philippines – Liberation Medal with one bronze service star

Memorials and legacy

Nimitz's headstone at Golden Gate National Cemetery.

Besides the honor of a United States Great Americans series 50¢ postage stamp, the following institutions and locations have been named in honor of Nimitz:

Schools

See also

References

  1. U.S. officers holding five-star rank never retire; they draw full active duty pay for life. Spencer C. Tucker (2011). The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. pp. 1685. ISBN 978-1-85109-961-0.
  2. Potter, E. B. (1976). Nimitz. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. pp. 45. ISBN 0-87021-492-6.
  3. Potter, p. 26.
  4. Ancestry.com Archived September 1, 2018, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved March 17, 2014
  5. John Woolley; Gerhard Peters. "Gerald R. Ford: Remarks at the U.S.S. Nimitz Commissioning Ceremony in Norfolk, Virginia". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved May 10, 2007.
  6. National Park Service Civil War Soldiers and Sailors database. Ancestry.com Index to Compiled Confederate Military Service Records
  7. "Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz Biographical Sketch". The National Museum of the Pacific War. Archived from the original on April 24, 2007. Retrieved May 10, 2007.
  8. "USS Nimitz (CVA(N)-68)". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy. Retrieved May 10, 2007.
  9. Potter, p. 124.
  10. Potter, p. 126.
  11. Marine! : the life of Lt. Gen. Lewis B. (Chesty) Puller, USMC (ret.). New York, N.Y.: Bantam Books. 1988. ISBN 0-553-27182-2.
  12. Edwin Hoyt, How they won the war in the Pacific: Nimitz and his admirals (Rowman & Littlefield, 2011).
  13. John Winton, Ultra in the Pacific: how breaking Japanese codes & cyphers affected naval operations against Japan 1941-45 (1993).
  14. United States Navy Office of the Chief of Naval Operations: 100th Anniversary. Government Printing Office. 2015. pp. 25–30. ISBN 9780160927799.
  15. Thomas B. Buell (2013). Master of Seapower: A Biography of Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King. Naval Institute Press. pp. 166–68. ISBN 9781612512105.
  16. Bruce S. Jansson (2002). The Sixteen-Trillion-Dollar Mistake: How the U.S. Bungled Its National Priorities from the New Deal to the Present. pp. 48–49. ISBN 9780231505260.
  17. Gordon W. Prange, Donald M. Goldstein, and Katherine V. Dillon, Miracle at Midway (1982).
  18. Samuel Eliot Morison, The Two-Ocean War; A Short History of the United States Navy in the Second World War (1963) pp 222-291.
  19. Samuel Eliot Morison, Leyte, June 1944-January 1945 (1958)
  20. Thomas Alexander Hughes (2016). Admiral Bill Halsey. Harvard UP. p. 401. ISBN 9780674049635.
  21. Megan Tzeng, "The Battle of Okinawa, 1945: Final turning point in the Pacific." History Teacher (2000): 95-117. Online
  22. Morison, The Two-Ocean War pp 434-81.
  23. James C. Bradford, "Nimitz, Admiral Chester (1885–1966)." in Gordon Martel, ed. The Encyclopedia of War (2011).
  24. Judgement: Dönitz the Avalon Project at the Yale Law School.
  25. Wallace, Robert (September 8, 1958), "A Deluge of Honors For An Exasperating Admiral", LIFE, 45 (10): 109, ISSN 0024-3019
  26. "Admiral Nimitz Resigns U.N. Position as Plebiscite Administrator for Kashmir". Toledo Blade. Reuters. September 4, 1953. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  27. Fai, Ghulam Nabi (December 4, 2003). "Kashmir and the United Nations" (PDF): 2–4. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 10, 2017. Retrieved July 27, 2016. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. Panigrahi, D. N. (2012). Jammu and Kashmir, the Cold War and the West. Routledge. p. 97. ISBN 978-113-6-51752-5. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  29. Korbel, Josef (1966) [first published 1954], Danger in Kashmir (second ed.), Princeton University Press, pp. 155–156, ISBN 9781400875238
  30. Navy Department Library. "Documents relating to Admiral Nimitz's naval career." Retrieved on July 10, 2009.
  31. Potter. – p. 125.
  32. "Catherine Nimitz Lay, 100". Cape Cod Times. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  33. February 17, 1915 – January 3, 2002
  34. Potter. – p. 131.
  35. September 13, 1919 – February 19, 2004.
  36. Potter. – p. 150.
  37. June 17, 1931 – February 27, 2006
  38. Potter. pp. 158–59.
  39. Potter. – p. 165.
  40. January 6, 1909 – September 13, 2001.
  41. Potter. p. 366.
  42. "Fleet Adm. Nimitz dies of stroke". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. February 21, 1966. p. 1.
  43. "Private funeral held for Nimitz". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. February 24, 1966. p. 1A.
  44. Potter. – p.472.
  45. "Nimitz's Funeral Is Held On Coast; Admiral Declined Arlington Burial to Lie With Men". The New York Times. United Press International. February 25, 1966. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
  46. Lembke, Daryl E. (February 25, 1966). "Adm. Nimitz Buried in Simple Rites". Los Angeles Times. p. 4.
  47. Borneman. Page 465.
  48. Archival service record of Chester Nimitz, "Awards and dates of rank", National Personnel Records Center, released 2008
  49. Moore, Douglas M. (Autumn 2013). "Dedication of the Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz Statue". Naval Order of the United States. 24 (11): 1–2, 10–11.
  50. Nimitz Middle School, San Antonio, Texas
  51. Chester W. Nimitz Elementary School, Honolulu, Hawaii
  52. Nimitz Elementary School, Kerrville, Texas
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.

Bibliography

Further reading

Military offices
Preceded by
William S. Pye
Commander in Chief United States Pacific Fleet
1941–1945
Succeeded by
Raymond A. Spruance
Preceded by
Ernest J. King
Chief of Naval Operations
1945–1947
Succeeded by
Louis E. Denfeld
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
William Hood Simpson
Cover of Time Magazine
February 26, 1945
Succeeded by
Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia
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