This is a list of tombstone vice admirals in the United States Navy. A tombstone promotion transferred an officer to the retired list with the rank of the next higher grade. Tombstone promotions to vice admiral have been awarded for service during the construction of the Panama Canal and under the Appointments Clause of the United States Constitution, but almost all tombstone vice admirals were advanced to that rank between 1925 and 1959 because they were commended for performance of duty in actual combat before the end of World War II. Tombstone promotions for combat citations were halted on November 1, 1959.
Each entry lists the officer's name, date appointed rear admiral,[1] date retired and advanced to vice admiral,[2] and other biographical notes.[3]
Panama Canal service
Following the completion of the Panama Canal in 1914, Congress authorized Army and Navy officers who had served more than three years with the Isthmian Canal Commission to be advanced one grade in rank upon retirement. Under this provision, Navy surgeon James F. Leys retired as a vice admiral in 1932, the first Navy staff corps officer to achieve that rank. Despite awarding Army engineer Edgar Jadwin the retired pay of a lieutenant general under almost identical circumstances, the Comptroller General of the United States denied Leys the retired pay of a vice admiral on the grounds that the grade had been abolished in 1890 and all subsequent vice admirals actually held the grade of rear admiral with only the temporary rank of vice admiral, so the grade of vice admiral did not exist. The Court of Claims overturned this decision and gave Leys the retired pay of a vice admiral.[4]
(1867–1938)[5] First staff corps officer to attain rank.
Combat citations before the end of World War II
From 1925 to 1959, Navy rear admirals could retire with a tombstone promotion to the rank but not the pay of vice admiral, if they were specially commended for their performance of duty in actual combat before the end of World War II.[6] Officers who were promoted to vice admiral while on the active list had precedence on the retired list over those who were advanced to that grade based on combat citations.[7]
Tombstone promotions were based on an officer's grade on the day they actually retired, so a vice admiral could only receive a tombstone promotion to four-star admiral if he still held a three-star job when he retired. For example, when Gerald F. Bogan was relieved of his three-star command only three weeks before he was scheduled to retire with a tombstone promotion to admiral, he reverted to rear admiral and received a tombstone promotion back to vice admiral.[8][9] Similarly, Robert C. Giffen was reprimanded for misconduct while serving as vice admiral, reverted to rear admiral, and retired with a tombstone promotion back to vice admiral.[10][11]
By May 29, 1959, 154 out of 198 living retired vice admirals—78 percent—had never served in that rank on active duty. Only 22 percent had served in three-star positions prior to their retirement, the rest being rear admirals who received a tombstone promotion to vice admiral at retirement.[12] Congress stopped all tombstone promotions effective November 1, 1959.[13]
The President can use his plenary power under the Appointments Clause of the United States Constitution to nominate any officer to be retired in a higher grade, subject to Senate confirmation. For example, John D. Bulkeley served as president of the Board of Inspection and Survey for 21 years, having been retired in 1974 but immediately recalled to active duty, and was advanced to vice admiral on the retired list under the Appointments Clause when he retired permanently in August 1988.[23][24]Levering Smith served as technical director or program head of the Navy's submarine-launched ballistic missile program for 20 years, having also been retired and recalled to active duty in 1974, and was promoted to vice admiral when he finally stepped down in November 1977.[25][26]
The following list of Congressional legislation concerns tombstone promotions to the grade of vice admiral in the United States Navy. Each entry lists an act of Congress, its citation in the United States Statutes at Large, and a summary of the act's relevance.
Authorized officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat during World War I, and who retired because of ineligibility for promotion due to age, to be placed on the retired list with the rank of the next higher grade and three-fourths of the active-duty pay of the grade in which serving at the time of retirement.
Authorized line officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat, to be placed on the retired list with the rank of the next higher grade and three-fourths of the active-duty pay of the grade in which serving at the time of retirement.
Authorized Naval Reservists who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat, to be advanced to the next higher grade when placed on the honorary retired list, with no pay unless they were on active duty for ten of the eleven years preceding retirement, in which case they received 50 percent of the active-duty pay of the grade in which serving at the time of retirement.
Authorized officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat, and who retired before June 23, 1938, to be advanced on the retired list to the rank of the next higher grade and three-fourths of the active-duty pay of the grade in which serving at the time of retirement.
Authorized staff officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat, and who retired on or after June 23, 1938, to be advanced on the retired list to the rank but not the pay of the next higher grade.
Authorized officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat on or before December 31, 1946, to be placed on the retired list with (or advanced on the retired list to) the rank of the next higher grade and three-fourths of the active-duty pay of the grade in which serving at the time of retirement.
Repealed authorization for Naval Reservists who were specially commended for performance in duty in actual combat, to be advanced to the next higher grade when placed on the honorary retired list, if the duty was performed after December 31, 1946.
Repealed authorization for officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat, to retire with three-fourths of the active-duty pay of the grade in which serving at the time of retirement.
Repealed authorization for officers who were specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat, to retire with the rank of the next higher grade, effective November 1, 1959.
↑Dates appointed are taken from officers' first appearances as active-duty rear admirals in the Register of the Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps, which may be different from dates of rank listed in later editions of the Register.
↑Dates retired are taken from the Register of the Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps.
↑Biographical notes include years of birth and death; restricted line officer designations; and other unusual career events such as recall to active duty in the grade of vice admiral, death in office, or awards of the Medal of Honor. Dates are taken from U.S. Naval Officers, Vice Admiral and Above, 1864–1963 and the Register of the Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps.
↑Retired as medical director with rank of vice admiral, 1 Jan 1932, having been detailed for more than three years in Panama with the Isthmian Canal Commission (Act of March 4, 1915).
↑Wooldridge, E. T. (1995). Into the Jet Age: Conflict and Change in Naval Aviation, 1945–1975, An Oral History. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. pp. 104–105.
↑Advanced to tombstone vice admiral in 1950 after the sinking of the armored cruiser San Diego was attributed to a submarine torpedo instead of a mine, thereby qualifying as actual combat. "Frank G. Kutz v. The United States (132 C. Cls. 329)". Cases Decided in the Court of Claims of the United States. Vol. CXXXII. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1955. pp. 329–341.
↑Recalled to active duty as vice admiral, 28 Jan 1943–30 Jan 1943 and 16 Jul 1943–27 Apr 1947.
↑Recalled to active duty as vice admiral, 3 Jan 1942–14 Nov 1945.
↑Recalled to active duty as vice admiral, 1 Nov 1941–14 Dec 1946; died 14 Dec 1946.
↑Recalled to active duty as vice admiral, 1 Mar 1945–3 Jun 1946.
↑Vice admiral, 1 Feb 1946–7 Jan 1950; relieved of three-star command of First Task Fleet, 7 Jan 1950; retired as tombstone vice admiral, 1 Feb 1950.
↑Recalled to active duty as vice admiral, 1 Aug 1961.
↑Recalled to active duty as vice admiral, 6 Aug 1959–1 Aug 1963 and 11 Aug 1963–1 Jan 1964.
↑Temporary rear admiral, 13 Aug 1945; reverted to captain, 1 Oct 1946; promoted to rear admiral, 1 Jul 1948; retired as tombstone vice admiral, 1 Feb 1958.
↑"Who's News in Defense". Commanders Digest. Vol. 20, no. 18. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. October 27, 1977. p. 12.
↑Poole, Walter S. (2013). Adapting to Flexible Response, 1960–1968. History of Acquisition in the Department of Defense. Vol. II. Washington, D.C.: Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense. p. 256.