Fleet Admiral
Chester William Nimitz,
USN (24 February 1885 – 20 February 1966)
was a
five-star admiral in the
United States Navy. He held the dual
command of
Commander in Chief,
United States Pacific
Fleet ("CinCPac" pronounced "sink-pack"), for U.S. naval forces
and Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas (CinCPOA), for U.S. and
Allied air, land, and sea forces during
World War II. He was the leading U.S. Navy
authority on
submarines, as well as Chief
of the Navy's
Bureau of
Navigation in 1939. He served as Chief of Naval Operations
(CNO) from 1945 until 1947. He was the United States' last
surviving Fleet Admiral.
Early life
Chester W. Nimitz, a German Texan, was the son of Chester Bernhard and Anna (Henke) Nimitz. He was born in Fredericksburg, Texas
, where his house is now the Admiral Nimitz State Historic Site
. His father died before he was born. He was significantly influenced by his grandfather, Charles H. 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."
Originally, young Nimitz applied to West Point
in hopes of becoming an Army officer, but there
were no appointments available. His congressman,
James L. Slayden, told him that he had one
appointment available for the Navy 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 United States
Naval Academy
from Texas's 12th congressional
district in 1901, and he graduated with distinction on 30
January 1905, seventh in a class of 114.
Military career
Early career

Ensign Nimitz, c.
He joined
the battleship Ohio at San Francisco
, and cruised on her to the Far East. In
September 1906, he was transferred to
Baltimore ; and, on 31 January
1907, after the two years at sea then required by law, he was
commissioned as an
Ensign. Remaining
on Asiatic Station in 1907, he successively served on
USS Panay,
USS Decatur, and
USS Denver.
While
Nimitz was a 22-year-old ensign in the Philippines
and conning the destroyer USS Decatur , his ship ran
aground on a mudbank. However, he successfully rescued a man
overboard when the ship ran into the mudbank. Nimitz was
court-martialed and convicted of hazarding a Navy ship and received
a
letter of reprimand.
Nimitz returned to the United States on
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 commanded
USS Snapper (later renamed
C-5) when that submarine was commissioned on 2 February
1910, and on 18 November 1910 assumed command of
USS Narwhal (later renamed
D-1). In the latter command he had additional duty from 10
October 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 14 February 1912. On 20 March 1912 he
rescued Fireman Second Class W. J. Walsh, from drowning, receiving
a Silver
Lifesaving Medal for his
action.
After
commanding the Atlantic Submarine Flotilla from May 1912 to March
1913, he supervised the building of diesel
engines for the tanker USS
Maumee, under construction at the New London Ship and
Engine Building Company, Groton, Connecticut
.
Nimitz
married Catherine Vance Freeman (March 1892 - 1 February 1979) on 9
April 1913, in Wollaston, Massachusetts
.
Nimitz had a son,
Chester Nimitz
Jr who also served in the
United
States Navy.
World War I
In the
summer of 1913, Nimitz studied engines at the diesel engine plants in Nuremberg,
Germany
, and Ghent, Belgium
. Returning to the New York
Navy Yard
, he became Executive and Engineer Officer of the
fleet oiler Maumee on her commissioning, 23 October 1916. On
10 August 1917, Nimitz became aide to Rear Admiral
Samuel S. Robinson, Commander, Submarine Force,
U.S. Atlantic Fleet (
COMSUBLANT). On 6 February 1918,
Nimitz was appointed Chief of Staff and was awarded a Letter of
Commendation for meritorious service as
COMSUBLANT's
Chief of Staff. On 16 September, he reported to the Office of the
Chief of Naval Operations,
and on 25 October was given additional duty as Senior Member, Board
of Submarine Design.
Between the wars
From May 1919 to June 1920 he served as executive officer of
South Carolina.
He then
commanded Chicago with
additional duty in command of Submarine Division 14, based at
Pearl
Harbor
. Returning to the United States in the summer
of 1922, he studied at the Naval War College
, Newport, Rhode Island
, and in June 1923, became Aide and Assistant Chief
of Staff to Commander Battle Fleet, and
later to the Commander in Chief, U.S. 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, only
saving the rest of it—and his career—when the machine jammed
against his Annapolis
ring.. Nimitz barked orders even through the
unbearable pain.
In June 1929 he took command of Submarine Division 20.
In June 1931 he
assumed command of Rigel
and the destroyers out of commission at San Diego,
California
. In October 1933 he took command of
Augusta and deployed to the
Far East, where in December the
Augusta became
flagship of the
Asiatic
Fleet. In April 1935, he 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 15 June
1939 he was appointed Chief of the Bureau of Navigation.
World War II
Ten days
after the attack on
Pearl Harbor
on 7 December 1941 he was selected Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet (CinCPAC), with the rank of
Admiral, effective from 31 December.
Assuming command at
the most critical period of the war in the Pacific, Admiral Nimitz,
despite the losses from the attack on Pearl Harbor and the shortage
of ships, planes and supplies, successfully organized his forces to
halt the Japanese
advance.
On 24 March 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 US
Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) divided
the theater into three areas: the
Pacific Ocean Areas (POA), the
Southwest Pacific
Area (SWPA, commanded by General
Douglas MacArthur), and the
South East Pacific Area. The JCS
designated Nimitz as
Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean
Areas CinCPOA, with operational control
over all Allied units (air, land, and sea) in that area.
As
rapidly as ships, men, and material became available, Nimitz
shifted to the offensive and defeated the Japanese navy in the
Battle of the Coral Sea, the
pivotal Battle of
Midway
, and in the Solomon Islands
Campaign.
By Act of Congress, approved 14 December 1944, the grade of
Fleet Admiral of the United States
Navy — the highest grade in the Navy — was established and the
next day
President of the
United States Franklin
Roosevelt appointed Admiral Nimitz to that rank. Nimitz took
the oath of that office on 19 December 1944.

Tokyo Bay -- Surrender of Japanese
aboard USS Missouri.
Admiral Chester Nimitz, representing the United States, signs
the instrument of surrender.
In the
final phases in the war in the Pacific, he attacked the Mariana
Islands
, inflicting a decisive defeat on the Japanese Fleet
in the Battle of the
Philippine Sea, and capturing Saipan
, Guam
, and
Tinian
.
His Fleet
Forces isolated enemy-held bastions of the Central and Eastern
Caroline
Islands
and secured in quick succession Peleliu
, Angaur
, and
Ulithi
.
In the
Philippines, his ships turned back powerful task forces of the
Japanese Fleet, a historic victory in the multi-phased Battle for
Leyte Gulf
24 to 26 October 1944. Fleet Admiral Nimitz
culminated his long-range strategy by successful amphibious
assaults on Iwo
Jima
and Okinawa
. In addition, Nimitz also ordered the
United States Army Air
Forces 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.
In
January 1945, Nimitz moved the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet
forward from Pearl
Harbor
to Guam
for the
remainder of the war. Mrs. Nimitz remained in the United
States for the duration of the war, and she did not join her
husband in Hawaii or Guam.
On 2
September 1945 Nimitz signed for the United States when Japan
formally surrendered on board the Missouri
in Tokyo
Bay
. On 5 October 1945, which had been officially
designated as "Nimitz Day" in Washington, D.C.
, Admiral Nimitz was personally presented a Gold
Star in lieu of the third Distinguished Service
Medal by the President of the United States "for exceptionally
meritorious service as Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific
Fleet and Pacific Ocean Areas, from June 1944 to August
1945...."
Post war
On 26 November 1945 his nomination as
Chief of Naval Operations was
confirmed by the US Senate, and on 15 December 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
post-war trial of German Grand Admiral
Karl Dönitz at the Nuremberg
Trials
in 1946, Admiral 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 only sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment. After Dönitz
was released, Admiral Nimitz went to visit Dönitz.
On 14
March 1950, in United Nations
Security Council Resolution 80 the governments of India and
Pakistan
both agreed that he should administer the plebiscite that would determine the fate of
Jammu and
Kashmir
.
Inactive Duty as a Fleet Admiral
On 15 December 1947, Nimitz retired from office of Chief of Naval
Operations 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, he served in the mostly ceremonial post as a
Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy in the Western Sea
Frontier.
After World War II, he worked to help
restore goodwill with Japan 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. He was also suggested as a United Nations envoy to help mediate the
Kashmir
dispute, but due to the deterioration of relations
between India and Pakistan, the mission did not take
place.
Nimitz became a member of the
Bohemian
Club of San Francisco. In 1948, Nimitz sponsored a Bohemian
dinner in honor of Army General
Mark
Clark, known for his campaigns in North Africa and Italy.
Nimitz served as a regent of the
University of California from
1948-1956, where he had formerly been a faculty member as a
professor of Naval Science for the
NROTC program. Nimitz
was honored on 17 October 1964, by the University of California on
Nimitz Day.
Nimitz and his wife had four children: Catherine Vance (b. 1914),
Chester, Jr., (1915-2002), Anna
(1919-2003), and Mary (1931-2006). Chester W.
Nimitz, Jr.,
graduated from the U.S.
Naval Academy
in 1936, and he 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
1969-1980. 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 Dominican
University of California
teaching biology for 16 years, academic dean for 11
years, acting president for 1 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 27 February 2006 when she lost her battle
with cancer.
Nimitz suffered a stroke, complicated by pneumonia, in late 1965.
In January 1966 he left the U.S.
Naval Hospital (Oak Knoll) in Oakland
to return home to his naval quarters. He
died the evening of 20 February 1966.
The place of death is
Quarters One on Yerba Buena Island
in San Francisco Bay
. He was buried at Golden Gate
National Cemetery
in San Bruno, California
on 24 February 1966.
Dates of rank
- Fleet Admiral - rank made permanent in the United States Navy
on 13 May 1946, a lifetime appointment.
At the time of Nimitz's promotion to Rear Admiral, the United
States Navy did not maintain a one-star rank. Nimitz was thus
promoted directly from a Captain to a two-star Rear Admiral. By
Congressional Appointment, he skipped the rank of Vice Admiral and
became a four-star Admiral in December 1941.
Nimitz also 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.
Decorations and awards
United States awards
Submarine Warfare
insignia
Foreign awards
Memorials

Nimitz' headstone at Golden Gate
National Cemetery
Besides the honor of being on a United States
postage stamp, the following institutions and
locations have been named in honor of Nimitz:
- USS Nimitz, the
first of her class of
ten nuclear-powered supercarriers,
which was commissioned in 1975 and remains in service.
- Nimitz Foundation,
established in 1970, which funds the National Museum of the Pacific
War

- The
Nimitz Freeway (Interstate 880) - from Oakland
to San Jose
, California, in the San
Francisco Bay Area
- Nimitz Glacier
in Antarctica for his service during Operation Highjump as the
CNO.
- Nimitz Boulevard - a major throughfare in
the Point
Loma
Neighborhood of San Diego
.
- The
Nimitz Highway - Hawaiian state route 92 on
Oahu

- The
Nimitz Library, the main library at the U.S.
Naval Academy
, Annapolis
, Maryland
- Callahan Hall (the ROTC Building at UC Berkeley) containing the
"Nimitz Library" was gutted by arson in 1985
- Nimitz High
School, Irving,
Texas

- Nimitz
High School
- Chester W.
Nimitz Junior High
School, Odessa,
Texas

- Nimitz
Middle School, Huntington Park, California

- Nimitz
Middle School, San Antonio, Texas

- Nimitz
Elementary School, Sunnyvale, California
.
- Nimitz Elementary School, Kerrville, Texas

- Chester
W. Nimitz Elementary School Honolulu,
Hawaii

- Nimitz Middle School Tulsa, Oklahoma

- The
Nimitz Trail in Tilden
Park in Berkeley,
California
.
- Chester Nimitz Oriental Garden Waltz performed by Austin Lounge Lizards
- The
summit on Guam
where
Chester Nimitz relocated his Pacific Fleet headquarters, and where
the current Commander U.S. Naval Forces Marianas resides, is
called Nimitz Hill.
See also
References
- "Some Thoughts to Live By," Chester W. Nimitz with Andrew
Hamilton, ISBN 0-686-24072-3, reprinted from Boys' Life Magazine, 1966.
Further reading
- Potter, E. B. Nimitz. Annapolis: Naval Institute
Press, 1976. ISBN 978-0870214929.
- Potter, E. B., and Chester W. Nimitz. Sea Power.
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1960. ISBN 0137968701.
External links