List of United States Navy four-star admirals
This is a complete list of four-star admirals in the United States Navy. The rank of admiral (or full admiral, or four-star admiral) is the highest rank normally achievable in the U.S. Navy. It ranks above vice admiral (three-star admiral) and below fleet admiral (five-star admiral).
There have been 277 four-star admirals in the history of the U.S. Navy. Of these, 236 achieved that rank while on active duty, 40 were promoted upon retirement in recognition of combat citations, and one was promoted posthumously. Admirals entered the Navy via several paths: 238 were commissioned via the U.S. Naval Academy (USNA), 23 via Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC), nine via Officer Candidate School (OCS), two via warrant, two via Aviation Officer Candidate School (AOCS), one via direct commission (direct), one via the Naval Aviation Cadet (NAVCAD) program, and one via the U.S. Merchant Marine.
List of admirals
Entries in the following list of four-star admirals are indexed by the numerical order in which each officer was promoted to that rank while on active duty, or by an asterisk (*) if the officer did not serve in that rank while on active duty. Each entry lists the admiral's name, date of rank,[1] active-duty positions held while serving at four-star rank,[2] number of years of active-duty service at four-star rank (Yrs),[3] year commissioned and source of commission,[4] number of years in commission when promoted to four-star rank (YC),[5] and other biographical notes.[6]
# | Name | Photo | Date of rank[1] | Position[2] | Yrs[3] | Commission[4] | YC[5] | Notes[6] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | David G. Farragut | 25 Jul 1866 |
|
4 | 1810 (warrant) | 56 | (1801–1870) Brother-by-adoption of Navy four-star admiral David D. Porter Jr. | |
2 | David D. Porter Jr. | 15 Aug 1870 |
|
21 | 1829 (warrant) | 41 | (1813–1891) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1865–1869. Brother-by-adoption of Navy four-star admiral David G. Farragut. | |
3 | George Dewey | 2 Mar 1899 |
|
18 | 1858 (USNA) | 41 | (1837–1917) Promoted to admiral, 8 Mar 1899 but was promoted to Admiral of the Navy, 24 Mar 1903, with retroactive date of rank 2 Mar 1899. Candidate for Democratic Party nomination for U.S. President, 1900. | |
4 | Frank F. Fletcher | 10 Mar 1915 |
|
2 | 1875 (USNA) | 40 | (1855–1928)[7] Awarded Medal of Honor, 1914. Uncle of Navy four-star admiral Frank J. Fletcher. | |
5 | Thomas B. Howard | 11 Mar 1915 |
|
1 | 1873 (USNA) | 42 | (1854–1920)[7] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Observatory, 1917–1919. | |
6 | Walter C. Cowles | 12 Mar 1915 |
|
1 | 1873 (USNA) | 42 | (1853–1917)[7] | |
7 | Albert G. Winterhalter | 9 Jul 1915 |
|
2 | 1877 (USNA) | 38 | (1856–1920)[7] | |
8 | Cameron M. Winslow | 13 Sep 1915 |
|
1 | 1875 (USNA) | 40 | (1854–1932)[7] | |
9 | Henry T. Mayo | 19 Jun 1916 |
|
3 | 1876 (USNA) | 41 | (1857–1937)[7][8] Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1924–1928. | |
10 | William B. Caperton | 28 Jul 1916 |
|
3 | 1875 (USNA) | 41 | (1855–1941)[7][8] Special Representative of the President in Brazil, 1918. | |
11 | William S. Benson | 29 Aug 1916 |
|
3 | 1877 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1855–1932)[7][8] Chairman/Commissioner, U.S. Shipping Board, 1919–1928. | |
12 | Austin M. Knight | 4 Apr 1917 |
|
1 | 1873 (USNA)[9] | 44 | (1854–1927)[7] President, Naval War College, 1913–1917. Brother of Seattle Mayor Bertha Knight Landes. | |
13 | William S. Sims | 4 Dec 1918 |
|
2 | 1880 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1858–1936)[7][8] President, Naval War College, 1917; 1919–1922. Awarded Pulitzer Prize for History, 1921. | |
14 | Henry B. Wilson Jr. | 30 Jun 1919 |
|
2 | 1881 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1861–1954)[7][8] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1921–1925. Father-in-law of U.S. Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley. | |
15 | Hugh Rodman | 1 Jul 1919 |
|
2 | 1880 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1859–1940)[7][8] U.S. Minister and Envoy to Peru, 1921. | |
16 | Albert Gleaves | 1 Sep 1919 |
|
2 | 1877 (USNA)[9] | 42 | (1858–1937)[7][8] Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1928–1931. | |
17 | Robert E. Coontz | 1 Nov 1919 |
|
6 | 1885 (USNA)[9] | 34 | (1864–1935)[7][8] Governor of Guam, 1912–1913. | |
18 | Joseph Strauss | 4 Feb 1921 |
|
1 | 1885 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1861–1948)[7][8] | |
19 | Hilary P. Jones | 30 Jun 1921 |
|
2 | 1884 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1865–1939)[7][8] | |
20 | Edward W. Eberle | 5 Jul 1921 |
|
6 | 1885 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1864–1929)[7] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1915–1919. | |
21 | Edwin A. Anderson | 28 Aug 1922 |
|
1 | 1882 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1860–1933)[7] Awarded Medal of Honor, 1914. | |
22 | Samuel S. Robison | 30 Jun 1923 |
|
3 | 1888 (USNA)[9] | 35 | (1867–1952)[7][10] Military Governor of Santo Domingo, 1921–1922; Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1928–1931; Superintendent, Admiral Farragut Academy, 1931–1948. Brother-in-law of Navy four-star admiral Charles F. Hughes. | |
23 | Thomas Washington | 11 Oct 1923 |
|
2 | 1887 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1865–1954)[7][10] Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1931–1937. | |
24 | Charles F. Hughes | 14 Oct 1925 |
|
5 | 1888 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1866–1934)[7] Brother-in-law of Navy four-star admiral Samuel S. Robison; daughter married brother of Navy five-star admiral Chester W. Nimitz. | |
25 | Clarence S. Williams | 14 Oct 1925 |
|
2 | 1884 (USNA)[9] | 41 | (1863–1951)[7][10] President, Naval War College, 1922–1925. | |
26 | Richard H. Jackson | 4 Sep 1926 |
|
1 | 1887 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1866–1971)[7][10] Distant cousin of Air Force four-star general Charles P. Cabell. | |
27 | Henry A. Wiley | 8 Sep 1927 |
|
2 | 1888 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1867–1943)[7] Chairman/Commissioner, U.S. Maritime Commission, 1936–1940. | |
28 | Mark L. Bristol | 9 Sep 1927 |
|
2 | 1887 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1868–1939)[7] U.S. High Commissioner, Turkey, 1919–1927. | |
29 | Louis R. de Steiguer | 10 Sep 1927 |
|
1 | 1889 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1867–1947)[7][10] | |
30 | William V. Pratt | 26 Jun 1928 |
|
5 | 1889 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1869–1957)[7][11] President, Naval War College, 1925–1927. | |
31 | Louis M. Nulton | 21 May 1929 |
|
1 | 1889 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1869–1954)[7][10] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1925–1928. | |
32 | Charles B. McVay Jr. | 9 Sep 1929 |
|
2 | 1890 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1868–1949)[7][10] | |
33 | Frank H. Schofield | 24 May 1930 |
|
2 | 1890 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1869–1942)[7] | |
34 | Jehu V. Chase | 17 Sep 1930 |
|
1 | 1890 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1869–1937)[7] Great-grandfather of Navy four-star admiral James F. Caldwell Jr. | |
35 | Montgomery M. Taylor | 1 Sep 1931 |
|
2 | 1890 (USNA)[9] | 41 | (1869–1952)[7][10] Grandnephew of U.S. President Zachary Taylor; distant cousin of Army four-star general Montgomery C. Meigs. | |
36 | Richard H. Leigh | 15 Sep 1931 |
|
2 | 1891 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1870–1946)[7][10] | |
37 | Luke McNamee | 11 Aug 1932 |
|
1 | 1892 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1871–1952)[7][10] Governor of Guam, 1907; Director of Naval Intelligence, 1921–1923; President, Naval War College, 1933–1934. | |
38 | William H. Standley | 20 May 1933 |
|
4 | 1895 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1872–1963)[7][11][12] U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union, 1942–1943. | |
39 | David F. Sellers | 10 Jun 1933 |
|
1 | 1894 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1874–1949)[7][10] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1934–1938. | |
40 | Joseph M. Reeves | 1 Jul 1933 |
|
3 | 1894 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1872–1948)[7][10][13] | |
41 | Frank B. Upham | 18 Aug 1933 |
|
2 | 1893 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1872–1939)[7] Married aunt of Navy four-star admiral Robert B. Carney. | |
42 | Frank H. Brumby | 15 Jun 1934 |
|
1 | 1895 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1874–1950)[7][10] | |
43 | Harris Laning | 1 Apr 1935 |
|
1 | 1895 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1873–1941)[7] President, Naval War College, 1930–1933; Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1937–1941. | |
44 | Orin G. Murfin | 4 Oct 1935 |
|
1 | 1897 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1876–1956)[7][10] | |
45 | William D. Leahy | 30 Mar 1936 |
|
10 | 1897 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1875–1959)[14] Promoted to fleet admiral, 15 Dec 1944. Governor of Puerto Rico, 1939–1940; U.S. Ambassador to France, 1941–1942. Wife's niece married Navy four-star admiral David W. Bagley. | |
46 | Arthur J. Hepburn | 24 Jun 1936 |
|
2 | 1897 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1877–1964)[7][10] | |
47 | Harry E. Yarnell | 30 Oct 1936 |
|
3 | 1897 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1875–1959)[7][10][15] | |
48 | Claude C. Bloch | 2 Jan 1937 |
|
3 | 1899 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1878–1967)[7][16] | |
49 | Edward C. Kalbfus | 29 Jan 1938 |
|
1 | 1899 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1877–1954)[7][10] President, Naval War College, 1934–1936; 1939–1942. | |
50 | James O. Richardson | 24 Jun 1939 |
|
2 | 1902 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1878–1974)[7][16] Relieved, 1941. | |
51 | Thomas C. Hart | 25 Jul 1939 |
|
3 | 1897 (USNA)[9] | 42 | (1877–1971)[17] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1931–1934; U.S. Senator from Connecticut, 1945–1946. | |
52 | Harold R. Stark | 1 Aug 1939 |
|
6 | 1903 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1880–1972) | |
53 | Charles P. Snyder | 6 Jan 1940 |
|
1 | 1900 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1879–1964)[7][16] President, Naval War College, 1937–1939. | |
54 | Husband E. Kimmel | 1 Feb 1941 |
|
0 | 1904 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1882–1968)[7] Relieved, 1941. Brother-in-law of Navy four-star admiral Thomas C. Kinkaid. | |
55 | Ernest J. King | 1 Feb 1941 |
|
4 | 1901 (USNA)[9] | 40 | (1878–1956) Promoted to fleet admiral, 17 Dec 1944. Awarded Congressional Gold Medal, 1946. Father-in-law of Air Force four-star general Frederic H. Smith Jr. | |
56 | Chester W. Nimitz | 31 Dec 1941 |
|
6 | 1905 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1885–1966) Promoted to fleet admiral, 19 Dec 1944. Brother married daughter of Navy four-star admiral Charles F. Hughes. | |
57 | Royal E. Ingersoll | 1 Jul 1942 |
|
3 | 1905 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1883–1976) | |
58 | William F. Halsey Jr. | 18 Nov 1942 |
|
3 | 1904 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1882–1959) Promoted to fleet admiral, 4 Dec 1945. | |
59 | Raymond A. Spruance | 16 Feb 1944 |
|
4 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1886–1969) U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines, 1952–1955. | |
60 | Jonas H. Ingram | 15 Nov 1944 |
|
2 | 1909 (USNA)[9] | 35 | (1886–1952) Commissioner, All-America Football Conference, 1947–1949. Awarded Medal of Honor, 1914. | |
61 | Frederick J. Horne | 15 Dec 1944 |
|
1 | 1899 (USNA)[9] | 45 | (1880–1959) | |
62 | Richard S. Edwards Jr. | 3 Apr 1945 |
|
2 | 1907 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1885–1956) | |
63 | H. Kent Hewitt | 3 Apr 1945 |
|
4 | 1907 (USNA)[9] | 38 | (1887–1972) | |
64 | Thomas C. Kinkaid | 3 Apr 1945 |
|
5 | 1908 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1888–1972) Brother-in-law of Navy four-star admiral Husband E. Kimmel. | |
65 | Richmond K. Turner | 24 May 1945 |
|
2 | 1908 (USNA)[9] | 37 | (1885–1961) | |
66 | Samuel M. Robinson | 27 Aug 1945 |
|
1 | 1903 (USNA)[9] | 42 | (1882–1972) Administrator, Webb Institute of Naval Architecture, 1946–1951. First staff corps officer to attain rank of admiral. | |
* | John S. McCain Sr. | 6 Sep 1945 |
|
0 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1884–1945) Father of Navy four-star admiral John S. McCain Jr.; grandfather of U.S. Senator John S. McCain III. | |
67 | John H. Towers | 7 Nov 1945 |
|
2 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | 39 | (1885–1955) | |
68 | DeWitt C. Ramsey | 28 Dec 1945 |
|
4 | 1912 (USNA) | 33 | (1888–1961) | |
69 | Louis E. Denfeld | 7 Jan 1946 |
|
2 | 1912 (USNA) | 34 | (1891–1972)[18] Candidate for Republican Party nomination for Governor of Massachusetts, 1950. Relieved, 1949. | |
70 | Charles M. Cooke Jr. | 8 Jan 1946 |
|
2 | 1910 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1886–1970) | |
71 | Marc A. Mitscher | 1 Mar 1946 |
|
1 | 1910 (USNA)[9] | 36 | (1887–1947) Died in office. | |
72 | Ben Moreell | 11 Jun 1946 |
|
0 | 1917 (direct) | 29 | (1892–1978) | |
73 | Richard L. Conolly | 23 Sep 1946 |
|
4 | 1914 (USNA) | 32 | (1892–1962)[19] President, Naval War College, 1950–1953; President, Long Island University, 1953–1962. | |
74 | William H.P. Blandy | 3 Feb 1947 |
|
3 | 1913 (USNA) | 34 | (1890–1954) | |
75 | Arthur W. Radford | 7 Apr 1949 |
|
8 | 1916 (USNA) | 33 | (1896–1973) Married aunt of Army four-star general Michael S. Davison. | |
76 | Forrest P. Sherman | 2 Nov 1949 |
|
2 | 1917 (USNA) | 32 | (1896–1951) Died in office. | |
77 | William M. Fechteler | 1 Feb 1950 |
|
6 | 1916 (USNA) | 34 | (1896–1967) | |
78 | Robert B. Carney | 2 Oct 1950 |
|
5 | 1916 (USNA) | 34 | (1895–1990) Aunt married Navy four-star admiral Frank B. Upham. | |
79 | Lynde D. McCormick | 22 Dec 1950 |
|
4 | 1915 (USNA) | 35 | (1895–1956)[20] President, Naval War College, 1954–1956. | |
80 | Donald B. Duncan | 9 Aug 1951 |
|
5 | 1917 (USNA) | 34 | (1896–1975) Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1957–1962. Brother-in-law of U.S. Secretary of Commerce Harry L. Hopkins. | |
81 | Felix B. Stump | 27 Jun 1953 |
|
5 | 1917 (USNA) | 36 | (1894–1972) | |
82 | Jerauld Wright | 6 Apr 1954 |
|
6 | 1917 (USNA) | 37 | (1898–1995) U.S. Ambassador to China, 1963–1965. | |
83 | John H. Cassady | 7 Apr 1954 |
|
2 | 1918 (USNA) | 36 | (1896–1969) | |
84 | Arleigh A. Burke | 6 Jun 1955 |
|
6 | 1923 (USNA) | 32 | (1901–1996) Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom, 1977. | |
85 | Robert P. Briscoe | 30 Apr 1956 |
|
3 | 1918 (USNA) | 38 | (1897–1968) | |
86 | Walter F. Boone | 1 May 1956 |
|
4 | 1920 (USNA) | 36 | (1898–1995) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1954–1956; Deputy Associate Administrator for Defense Affairs, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1962–1968. | |
87 | Harry D. Felt | 1 Sep 1956 |
|
8 | 1923 (USNA) | 33 | (1902–1992) | |
88 | Maurice E. Curts | 29 Apr 1957 |
|
1 | 1919 (USNA) | 38 | (1898–1976)[19] | |
89 | James L. Holloway Jr. | 1 Jan 1958 |
|
1 | 1918 (USNA) | 40 | (1898–1984) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1947–1950; Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1962–1966. Father of Navy four-star admiral James L. Holloway III. | |
90 | Herbert G. Hopwood | 1 Feb 1958 |
|
2 | 1919 (USNA) | 39 | (1898–1966) | |
91 | James S. Russell | 21 Jul 1958 |
|
7 | 1926 (USNA) | 32 | (1903–1996) | |
92 | Charles R. Brown | 1 Jan 1959 |
|
2 | 1921 (USNA) | 38 | (1899–1983) | |
93 | Robert L. Dennison | 1 Feb 1959 |
|
4 | 1923 (USNA) | 36 | (1901–1980) | |
94 | Harold Page Smith | 1 Feb 1960 |
|
5 | 1924 (USNA) | 36 | (1904–1993) Uncle of Navy four-star admiral Leighton W. Smith Jr. | |
95 | John H. Sides | 1 Mar 1960 |
|
3 | 1925 (USNA) | 35 | (1904–1978) | |
96 | George W. Anderson Jr. | 1 Aug 1961 |
|
2 | 1927 (USNA) | 34 | (1906–1992) U.S. Ambassador to Portugal, 1963–1966. | |
97 | Claude V. Ricketts | 1 Nov 1961 |
|
3 | 1929 (USNA) | 32 | (1906–1964) Died in office. | |
98 | David L. McDonald | 1 Apr 1963 |
|
4 | 1928 (USNA) | 35 | (1906–1997) | |
99 | Charles D. Griffin | 26 Jun 1963 |
|
5 | 1927 (USNA) | 36 | (1906–1996) | |
100 | U.S. Grant Sharp Jr. | 27 Sep 1963 |
|
5 | 1927 (USNA) | 36 | (1906–2001) Great-aunt married U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant. | |
101 | Thomas H. Moorer | 26 Jun 1964 |
|
10 | 1933 (USNA) | 31 | (1912–2004) | |
102 | Horacio Rivero Jr. | 31 Jul 1964 |
|
8 | 1931 (USNA) | 33 | (1910–2000) U.S. Ambassador to Spain, 1972–1974. | |
103 | John S. Thach | 25 Mar 1965 |
|
2 | 1927 (USNA) | 38 | (1905–1981) | |
104 | Alfred G. Ward | 27 Mar 1965 |
|
3 | 1932 (USNA) | 33 | (1909–1982) | |
105 | Roy L. Johnson | 31 Mar 1965 |
|
2 | 1929 (USNA) | 36 | (1906–1999) | |
106 | John S. McCain Jr. | 1 May 1967 |
|
5 | 1931 (USNA) | 36 | (1911–1981) Son of Navy four-star admiral John S. McCain Sr.; father of U.S. Senator John S. McCain III. | |
107 | Ignatius J. Galantin | 19 May 1967 |
|
3 | 1933 (USNA) | 34 | (1910–2004) | |
108 | Ephraim P. Holmes | 17 Jun 1967 |
|
3 | 1930 (USNA) | 37 | (1908–1997) | |
109 | John J. Hyland Jr. | 1 Dec 1967 |
|
3 | 1934 (USNA) | 33 | (1912–1998) | |
110 | Bernard A. Clarey | 17 Jan 1968 |
|
5 | 1934 (USNA) | 34 | (1912–1996) | |
111 | Waldemar F.A. Wendt | 12 Jul 1968 |
|
3 | 1933 (USNA) | 35 | (1912–1997) | |
112 | Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr. | 1 Jul 1970 |
|
4 | 1942 (USNA) | 28 | (1920–2000) Democratic Party nominee for U.S. Senator from Virginia, 1976. Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom, 1998. | |
113 | Charles K. Duncan | 1 Sep 1970 |
|
2 | 1933 (USNA) | 37 | (1911–1994) | |
114 | Jackson D. Arnold | 14 Oct 1970 |
|
1 | 1934 (USNA) | 36 | (1912–2007) First restricted line officer to attain rank of admiral. | |
115 | Ralph W. Cousins | 30 Oct 1970 |
|
5 | 1937 (USNA) | 33 | (1915–2009) | |
116 | William F. Bringle | 1 Jul 1971 |
|
2 | 1937 (USNA) | 34 | (1913–1999) | |
117 | Isaac C. Kidd Jr. | 1 Dec 1971 |
|
7 | 1942 (USNA) | 29 | (1919–1999) | |
118 | Richard G. Colbert | 1 Jun 1972 |
|
1 | 1937 (USNA) | 35 | (1915–1973) President, Naval War College, 1968–1971. | |
119 | Noel A.M. Gayler | 1 Sep 1972 |
|
4 | 1935 (USNA) | 37 | (1914–2011) Director, National Security Agency, 1969–1972. | |
120 | Maurice F. Weisner | 1 Sep 1972 |
|
7 | 1941 (USNA) | 31 | (1917–2006) | |
121 | James L. Holloway III | 1 Sep 1973 |
|
5 | 1942 (USNA) | 31 | (1922–2019) Son of Navy four-star admiral James L. Holloway Jr. | |
122 | Worth H. Bagley | 1 Sep 1973 |
|
2 | 1947 (USNA) | 26 | (1924–2016) Son of Navy four-star admiral David W. Bagley; brother of Navy four-star admiral David H. Bagley; great-aunt married Navy five-star admiral William D. Leahy; great-aunt married U.S. Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels. | |
123 | Hyman G. Rickover | 16 Nov 1973 |
|
9 | 1922 (USNA) | 51 | (1900–1986)[21] Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom, 1980; Congressional Gold Medal, 1958 and 1982. | |
124 | Means Johnston Jr. | 25 Nov 1973 |
|
2 | 1939 (USNA) | 34 | (1916–1989) | |
125 | Harold E. Shear | 24 May 1974 |
|
6 | 1942 (USNA) | 32 | (1918–1999) Administrator, U.S. Maritime Administration, 1981–1985. | |
126 | John P. Weinel | 2 Aug 1974 |
|
3 | 1939 (USNA) | 35 | (1916–2004) | |
127 | Frederick H. Michaelis | 19 Apr 1975 |
|
3 | 1940 (USNA) | 35 | (1917–1992) | |
128 | David H. Bagley | 21 May 1975 |
|
2 | 1943 (USNA) | 32 | (1920–1992) Son of Navy four-star admiral David W. Bagley; brother of Navy four-star admiral Worth H. Bagley; great-aunt married Navy five-star admiral William D. Leahy; great-aunt married U.S. Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels. | |
129 | Stansfield Turner | 1 Sep 1975 |
|
4 | 1946 (USNA) | 29 | (1923–2018) President, Naval War College, 1972–1974. | |
130 | Daniel J. Murphy | 28 May 1976 |
|
1 | 1943 (OCS) | 33 | (1922–2001) U.S. Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, 1977–1981; Chief of Staff to the U.S. Vice President, 1981–1985. | |
131 | Thomas B. Hayward | 12 Aug 1976 |
|
6 | 1947 (USNA) | 29 | (1924–2022) | |
132 | Robert L. J. Long | 5 Jul 1977 |
|
6 | 1943 (USNA) | 34 | (1920–2002) | |
133 | Donald C. Davis | 9 May 1978 |
|
3 | 1943 (USNA) | 35 | (1921–1998) | |
134 | Alfred J. Whittle Jr. | 1 Aug 1978 |
|
3 | 1945 (USNA) | 33 | (1924–1993) | |
135 | Harry D. Train II | 1 Oct 1978 |
|
4 | 1949 (USNA) | 29 | (1927– ) | |
136 | James D. Watkins | 18 Sep 1979 |
|
7 | 1949 (USNA) | 30 | (1927–2012) Chairman, Watkins Commission, 1987–1988; U.S. Secretary of Energy, 1989–1993. | |
137 | William J. Crowe Jr. | 30 May 1980 |
|
9 | 1947 (USNA) | 33 | (1925–2007) Chairman, President's Intelligence Advisory Board, 1993–1994; U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, 1994–1997. Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom, 2000. | |
138 | Bobby R. Inman | 12 Feb 1981 |
|
1 | 1952 (OCS) | 29 | (1931– )[22] Director of Naval Intelligence, 1974–1976; Director, National Security Agency, 1977–1981. First naval intelligence specialist to attain rank of admiral. | |
139 | William N. Small | 1 Jul 1981 |
|
4 | 1948 (USNA) | 33 | (1927–2016) | |
140 | John G. Williams Jr. | 1 Jul 1981 |
|
2 | 1947 (USNA) | 34 | (1924–1991) | |
141 | George E.R. Kinnear II | 31 Jul 1981 |
|
1 | 1948 (OCS) | 33 | (1928–2015) | |
142 | Kinnaird R. McKee | 2 Mar 1982 |
|
6 | 1951 (USNA) | 31 | (1929–2013) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1975–1978. | |
143 | Sylvester R. Foley Jr. | 28 May 1982 |
|
3 | 1950 (USNA) | 32 | (1928–2019) U.S. Assistant Secretary of Energy for Defense Programs, 1985–1988. | |
144 | Wesley L. McDonald | 1 Oct 1982 |
|
3 | 1946 (USNA) | 36 | (1924–2009) | |
145 | Ronald J. Hays | 29 Apr 1983 |
|
5 | 1950 (USNA) | 33 | (1928–2021) | |
146 | Steven A. White | 1 Aug 1983 |
|
2 | 1952 (NROTC) | 31 | (1928–2021) Manager of Nuclear Power, Tennessee Valley Authority, 1986–1988. | |
147 | Lee Baggett Jr. | 30 May 1985 |
|
3 | 1950 (USNA) | 35 | (1927–1999) | |
148 | James A. Lyons Jr. | 16 Sep 1985 |
|
2 | 1952 (USNA) | 33 | (1927–2018) | |
149 | Carlisle A.H. Trost | 4 Oct 1985 |
|
5 | 1953 (USNA) | 32 | (1930–2020) | |
150 | James B. Busey IV | 17 Oct 1985 |
|
4 | 1954 (NAVCAD) | 31 | (1932–2023) Administrator, Federal Aviation Administration, 1989–1991; U.S. Deputy Secretary of Transportation, 1991–1992. | |
151 | Arthur S. Moreau Jr. | 15 Nov 1985 |
|
1 | 1953 (USNA) | 32 | (1931–1986) Died in office. | |
152 | Frank B. Kelso II | 13 Jun 1986 |
|
8 | 1956 (USNA) | 30 | (1933–2013) | |
153 | Huntington Hardisty | 11 Mar 1987 |
|
4 | 1952 (USNA) | 35 | (1929–2003) President, Naval War College, 1977. | |
154 | Powell F. Carter Jr. | 1 Oct 1987 |
|
4 | 1955 (USNA) | 32 | (1931–2017) | |
155 | David E. Jeremiah | 1 Oct 1987 |
|
7 | 1956 (OCS) | 32 | (1934–2013) | |
156 | Leon A. Edney | 1 Oct 1988 |
|
4 | 1957 (USNA) | 31 | (1935– ) | |
157 | Bruce DeMars | 1 Nov 1988 |
|
8 | 1957 (USNA) | 31 | (1935– ) | |
158 | James R. Hogg | 1 Dec 1988 |
|
3 | 1956 (USNA) | 32 | (1934– ) | |
159 | Jonathan T. Howe | 1 Jun 1989 |
|
3 | 1957 (USNA) | 32 | (1935– ) U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Politico-Military Affairs, 1982–1984; Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary General for Somalia, 1993–1994. | |
160 | Charles R. Larson | 1 Mar 1990 |
|
8 | 1958 (USNA) | 32 | (1936–2014)[23] Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1983–1986; Democratic Party nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, 2002. | |
161 | Jerome L. Johnson | 1 Jul 1990 |
|
2 | 1956 (NROTC) | 34 | (1935– ) | |
162 | Paul D. Miller | 1 Feb 1991 |
|
3 | 1964 (OCS) | 27 | (1941– ) | |
163 | William D. Smith | 22 Feb 1991 |
|
2 | 1955 (USNA) | 36 | (1933–2020) | |
164 | Robert J. Kelly | 1 Mar 1991 |
|
3 | 1959 (USNA) | 32 | (1938– ) | |
165 | Jeremy M. Boorda | 2 Mar 1992 |
|
4 | 1962 (OCS) | 30 | (1938–1996) Died in office. | |
166 | William O. Studeman | 9 Apr 1992 |
|
3 | 1962 (NROTC) | 30 | (1940– ), Director of Naval Intelligence, 1985–1988; Director, National Security Agency, 1988–1992. Father of Navy rear admiral Michael W. Studeman. | |
167 | Stanley R. Arthur | 6 Jul 1992 |
|
3 | 1957 (NROTC) | 35 | (1935– )[24] | |
168 | Henry H. Mauz Jr. | 1 Aug 1992 |
|
2 | 1959 (USNA) | 33 | (1936– ) | |
169 | Henry G. Chiles Jr. | 14 Feb 1994 |
|
2 | 1960 (USNA) | 34 | (1938– ) | |
170 | William A. Owens | 1 Mar 1994 |
|
2 | 1962 (USNA) | 32 | (1940– ) | |
171 | Leighton W. Smith Jr. | 1 May 1994 |
|
2 | 1962 (USNA) | 32 | (1939– ) Nephew of Navy four-star admiral Harold Page Smith. | |
172 | Richard C. Macke | 1 Oct 1994 |
|
2 | 1960 (USNA) | 34 | (1938–2022)[7] Relieved, 1996. | |
173 | Ronald J. Zlatoper | 5 Oct 1994 |
|
2 | 1963 (NROTC) | 31 | (1941–2022) | |
174 | William J. Flanagan Jr. | 1 Nov 1994 |
|
2 | 1964 (MMA)[25] | 30 | (1943– ) | |
175 | Joseph W. Prueher | 1 Jun 1995 |
|
4 | 1964 (USNA) | 31 | (1942– ) U.S. Ambassador to China, 1999–2001. | |
176 | Jay L. Johnson | 1 Apr 1996 |
|
4 | 1968 (USNA) | 28 | (1946– ) | |
177 | Thomas J. Lopez | 31 Jul 1996 |
|
2 | 1964 (NROTC) | 32 | (1940– ) | |
178 | Frank L. Bowman | 1 Oct 1996 |
|
8 | 1966 (NROTC) | 30 | (1944– ) | |
179 | Harold W. Gehman Jr. | 1 Oct 1996 |
|
4 | 1965 (NROTC) | 31 | (1942– ) | |
180 | Archie R. Clemins | 1 Jan 1997 |
|
2 | 1966 (NROTC) | 31 | (1943–2020) | |
181 | J. Paul Reason | 1 Feb 1997 |
|
2 | 1965 (USNA) | 32 | (1941– ) First African-American to achieve the rank of admiral. | |
182 | Donald L. Pilling | 30 Oct 1997 |
|
3 | 1965 (USNA) | 32 | (1943–2008) | |
183 | Richard W. Mies | 1 Aug 1998 |
|
3 | 1967 (USNA) | 31 | (1944– ) | |
184 | Charles S. Abbot | 1 Sep 1998 |
|
2 | 1966 (USNA) | 32 | (1945– ) Deputy Director, Office of Homeland Security, 2001–2003. | |
185 | James O. Ellis | 1 Jan 1999 |
|
5 | 1969 (USNA) | 30 | (1947– ) | |
186 | Dennis C. Blair | 1 May 1999 |
|
3 | 1968 (USNA) | 31 | (1946– ) President, Institute for Defense Analyses, 2003–2006; Director of National Intelligence, 2009–2010. | |
187 | Vernon E. Clark | 1 Nov 1999 |
|
6 | 1968 (OCS) | 31 | (1944– ) | |
188 | Thomas B. Fargo | 1 Dec 1999 |
|
6 | 1970 (USNA) | 29 | (1948– ) | |
189 | Robert J. Natter | 1 Sep 2000 |
|
3 | 1967 (USNA) | 33 | (1945– ) | |
190 | William J. Fallon | 1 Nov 2000 |
|
8 | 1967 (NROTC) | 33 | (1944– ) Resigned, 2008. | |
191 | Gregory G. Johnson | 24 Oct 2001 |
|
3 | 1969 (NROTC) | 32 | (1946– ) | |
192 | Walter F. Doran | 4 May 2002 |
|
3 | 1967 (NROTC) | 35 | (1945– ) | |
193 | Edmund P. Giambastiani Jr. | 2 Oct 2002 |
|
5 | 1970 (USNA) | 32 | (1948– ) | |
194 | Michael G. Mullen | 28 Aug 2003 |
|
8 | 1968 (USNA) | 35 | (1946– ) | |
195 | John B. Nathman | 1 Dec 2004 |
|
3 | 1970 (USNA) | 34 | (1948– ) | |
196 | Timothy J. Keating | 1 Jan 2005 |
|
5 | 1971 (USNA) | 34 | (1949– ) | |
197 | Kirkland H. Donald | 1 Jan 2005 |
|
8 | 1975 (USNA) | 30 | (1953– ) | |
198 | Robert F. Willard | 18 Mar 2005 |
|
7 | 1973 (USNA) | 32 | (1950– ) | |
199 | Henry G. Ulrich III | 22 Jul 2005 |
|
2 | 1972 (USNA) | 33 | (1950– ) | |
200 | Gary Roughead | 1 Sep 2005 |
|
6 | 1973 (USNA) | 32 | (1951– ) | |
201 | James G. Stavridis | 18 Oct 2006 |
|
7 | 1976 (USNA) | 30 | (1955– ) Dean, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 2013–2018. | |
202 | Patrick M. Walsh | 5 Apr 2007 |
|
5 | 1977 (USNA) | 30 | (1955– ) | |
203 | Eric T. Olson | 6 Jul 2007 |
|
4 | 1973 (USNA) | 34 | (1952– ) First Navy SEAL to achieve the rank of admiral. | |
204 | Jonathan W. Greenert | 29 Sep 2007 |
|
8 | 1975 (USNA) | 32 | (1953– ) | |
205 | Mark P. Fitzgerald | 30 Nov 2007 |
|
3 | 1973 (NROTC) | 34 | (1951– ) | |
206 | John C. Harvey Jr. | 24 Jul 2009 |
|
3 | 1973 (USNA) | 36 | (1951– ) Virginia Secretary of Veterans and Defense Affairs, 2014–2017. | |
207 | James A. Winnefeld Jr. | 19 May 2010 |
|
5 | 1978 (NROTC) | 32 | (1956– ) Chair, President's Intelligence Advisory Board, 2022–present. | |
208 | Samuel J. Locklear III | 6 Oct 2010 |
|
5 | 1977 (USNA) | 33 | (1954– ) | |
209 | William H. McRaven | 8 Aug 2011 |
|
3 | 1977 (NROTC) | 34 | (1955– ) Chancellor, University of Texas System, 2015–2018. | |
210 | Mark E. Ferguson III | 22 Aug 2011 |
|
5 | 1978 (USNA) | 33 | (1956– ) | |
211 | Cecil D. Haney | 20 Jan 2012 |
|
4 | 1978 (USNA) | 34 | (1955– ) | |
212 | Bruce W. Clingan | 24 Feb 2012 |
|
2 | 1977 (NROTC) | 34 | (1955– ) | |
213 | William E. Gortney | 14 Sep 2012 |
|
4 | 1977 (AOCS) | 35 | (1955– ) | |
214 | John M. Richardson | 2 Nov 2012 |
|
7 | 1982 (USNA) | 31 | (1960– ) | |
215 | Harry B. Harris Jr. | 16 Oct 2013 |
|
5 | 1978 (USNA) | 35 | (1956– )[26] U.S. Ambassador to South Korea, 2018–2021. First Asian-American to achieve the rank of admiral. | |
216 | Michael S. Rogers | 3 Apr 2014 |
|
4 | 1981 (NROTC) | 33 | (1959– ) First Information Warfare Community officer to achieve the rank of admiral. | |
217 | Michelle J. Howard | 1 Jul 2014 |
|
3 | 1982 (USNA) | 32 | (1960– ) Chair, The Naming Commission, 2021–2022. First woman to achieve the rank of admiral. | |
218 | Philip S. Davidson | 19 Dec 2014 |
|
7 | 1982 (USNA) | 32 | (1960– ) | |
219 | Scott H. Swift | 27 May 2015 |
|
3 | 1979 (AOCS) | 36 | (1957– ) | |
220 | James F. Caldwell Jr. | 14 Aug 2015 |
|
9 | 1981 (USNA) | 34 | (1959– ) Great-grandson of Navy four-star admiral Jehu V. Chase. | |
221 | Kurt W. Tidd | 14 Jan 2016 |
|
2 | 1978 (USNA) | 38 | (1956– ) Son of Navy vice admiral Emmett H. Tidd; brother of Navy rear admiral Mark L. Tidd. | |
222 | William F. Moran | 31 May 2016 |
|
3 | 1981 (USNA) | 35 | (1958– )[27] | |
223 | James G. Foggo III | 20 Oct 2017 |
|
3 | 1981 (USNA) | 36 | (1959– ) | |
224 | Christopher W. Grady | 4 May 2018 |
|
6 | 1984 (NROTC) | 34 | (1962– ) | |
225 | John C. Aquilino | 17 May 2018 |
|
6 | 1984 (USNA) | 34 | (1961– )[28] | |
226 | Craig S. Faller | 26 Nov 2018 |
|
3 | 1983 (USNA) | 35 | (1961– ) | |
227 | Robert P. Burke | 10 Jun 2019 |
|
3 | 1983 (NROTC) | 36 | (1962– ) | |
228 | Michael M. Gilday | 22 Aug 2019 |
|
4 | 1985 (USNA) | 34 | (1962– ) | |
229 | Charles A. Richard | 18 Nov 2019 |
|
3 | 1982 (NROTC) | 37 | (1959– ) | |
230 | William K. Lescher | 29 May 2020 |
|
2 | 1980 (USNA) | 40 | (1958– ) | |
231 | Samuel J. Paparo Jr. | 5 May 2021 |
|
3 | 1987 (AOCS) | 34 | (1964– ) | |
232 | Daryl L. Caudle | 7 Dec 2021 |
|
3 | 1985 (OCS) | 36 | (1963– ) | |
233 | Stuart B. Munsch | 27 Jun 2022 |
|
2 | 1985 (USNA) | 37 | (1962– ) | |
234 | Lisa M. Franchetti | 2 Sep 2022 |
|
2 | 1985 (NROTC) | 37 | (1964– ) | |
235 | James W. Kilby | 5 Jan 2024 |
|
0 | 1986 (USNA) | 38 | (1963– ) | |
236 | William J. Houston | 10 Jan 2024 |
|
0 | 1990 (NROTC) | 34 | (1968– ) |
Tombstone admirals
The Act of Congress of 4 March 1925, allowed officers in the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard to be promoted one grade upon retirement if they had been specially commended for performance of duty in actual combat. Combat citation promotions were colloquially known as "tombstone promotions" because they conferred all the perks and prestige of the higher rank including the loftier title on their tombstones but no additional retirement pay. The Act of Congress of 23 February 1942, enabled tombstone promotions to three- and four-star grades. Tombstone promotions were subsequently restricted to citations issued before 1 January 1947, and finally eliminated altogether effective 1 November 1959.
Any admiral who actually served in a grade while on active duty receives precedence on the retired list over any tombstone admiral holding the same retired grade. Tombstone admirals rank among each other according to the dates of their highest active duty grade.
Name | Photo | Date of rank (VADM) | Date retired | Commission[4] | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | William L. Calhoun | 16 Jun 1942 | Dec 1946 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | (1885–1963)[29] Great-grandson of U.S. Vice President John C. Calhoun. | |
2 | Frank J. Fletcher | 26 Jun 1942 | May 1947 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | (1885–1973) Awarded Medal of Honor, 1914. Nephew of Navy four-star admiral Frank F. Fletcher. | |
3 | Aubrey W. Fitch | 28 Dec 1942 | Jul 1947 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | (1883–1948) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1945–1947. | |
4 | John Howard Hoover | 1 Jan 1943 | Jul 1948 | 1906 (USNA)[9] | (1887–1970) | |
5 | Alan G. Kirk | 10 Sep 1944 | Mar 1946 | 1909 (USNA)[9] | (1888–1963) Director of Naval Intelligence, 1941; U.S. Ambassador to Belgium and Luxembourg, 1946–1947; to Soviet Union, 1949–1952; to China, 1962–1963. | |
6 | George D. Murray | 29 Nov 1944 | Aug 1951 | 1911 (USNA)[9] | (1889–1956) | |
7 | Jesse B. Oldendorf | 7 Dec 1944 | Sep 1948 | 1909 (USNA)[9] | (1887–1974) | |
8 | Arthur S. Carpender | 3 Apr 1945 | Nov 1946 | 1908 (USNA)[9] | (1884–1959) Superintendent, Admiral Farragut Academy, 1948–19?? | |
9 | Harry W. Hill | 22 Apr 1945 | May 1952 | 1911 (USNA)[9] | (1890–1971) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1950–1952; Governor, U.S. Naval Home, 1952–1954. | |
10 | Frederick C. Sherman | 13 Jul 1945 | Mar 1947 | 1910 (USNA)[9] | (1880–1957) | |
11 | John L. Hall Jr. | 10 Dec 1945 | May 1953 | 1913 (USNA) | (1891–1978) | |
12 | Oscar C. Badger II | 13 Dec 1945 | Jun 1952 | 1911 (USNA)[9] | (1890–1958) Awarded Medal of Honor, 1914. Cousin of U.S. Secretary of the Navy George E. Badger. | |
13 | John D. Price | 31 Aug 1946 | Jun 1954 | 1916 (USNA) | (1892–1957) | |
14 | Francis S. Low | 12 Mar 1947 | Jul 1956 | 1915 (USNA) | (1894–1964) | |
15 | David W. Bagley | 1 Apr 1947 | Apr 1947 | 1904 (USNA)[9] | (1883–1960) Father of Navy four-star admiral David H. Bagley and Navy four-star admiral Worth H. Bagley; grandson of North Carolina Governor Jonathan Worth; aunt married U.S. Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels; wife's aunt married Navy five-star admiral William D. Leahy. | |
16 | Harold B. Sallada | 11 May 1947 | Oct 1949 | 1917 (USNA) | (1895–1977) | |
17 | Arthur D. Struble | 26 Apr 1948 | Jul 1956 | 1915 (USNA)[30] | (1894–1983) | |
18 | Russell S. Berkey | 1 Jul 1948 | Sep 1950 | 1916 (USNA) | (1893–1984) | |
19 | John W. Reeves Jr. | 1 Apr 1949 | May 1950 | 1911 (USNA)[9] | (1888–1967) general manager, Los Angeles International Airport, 1950–1952. | |
20 | C. Turner Joy | 1 Aug 1949 | Jul 1954 | 1916 (USNA) | (1895–1956) Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy, 1952–1954. | |
21 | Thomas L. Sprague | 15 Aug 1949 | Apr 1952 | 1917 (USNA) | (1894–1972) | |
22 | John J. Ballentine | 1 Nov 1949 | May 1954 | 1917 (USNA) | (1896–1970) | |
23 | Matthias B. Gardner | 1 Oct 1950 | Aug 1956 | 1919 (USNA) | (1897–1975) | |
24 | Albert G. Noble | 29 Dec 1950 | Oct 1951 | 1917 (USNA) | (1885–1980) | |
25 | Harold M. Martin | 1 Feb 1951 | Feb 1956 | 1919 (USNA) | (1896–1972) | |
26 | Arthur C. Davis | 12 Feb 1951 | Apr 1955 | 1915 (USNA) | (1893–1965) | |
27 | Laurance T. DuBose | 30 Mar 1951 | Jun 1955 | 1913 (USNA) | (1893–1967) | |
28 | James Fife Jr. | 9 Aug 1951 | Aug 1955 | 1918 (USNA) | (1897–1975) Director, Mystic Seaport, 1956–1975 | |
29 | Frank G. Fahrion | 28 Dec 1951 | May 1956 | 1917 (USNA) | (1894–1970) | |
30 | Joseph J. Clark | 7 Mar 1952 | Dec 1953 | 1918 (USNA) | (1893–1971) | |
31 | Roscoe F. Good | 27 Mar 1953 | Mar 1958 | 1919 (USNA) | (1897–1974) | |
32 | William K. Phillips | 28 Jul 1953 | Aug 1955 | 1918 (USNA) | (1894–1986) | |
33 | John E. Gingrich | 30 Jul 1953 | Oct 1954 | 1919 (USNA) | (1897–1960) | |
34 | Alfred M. Pride | 9 Oct 1953 | Oct 1959 | 1918 (OCS)[31] | (1897–1988) | |
35 | Edmund T. Wooldridge | 6 Apr 1954 | Aug 1958 | 1920 (USNA) | (1897–1968) | |
36 | Austin K. Doyle | 7 May 1954 | Aug 1958 | 1920 (USNA) | (1898–1970) | |
37 | Stuart S. Murray | 7 Dec 1955 | Aug 1956 | 1918 (USNA) | (1898–1980) Nephew of Oklahoma governor William H. Murray. | |
38 | Cato D. Glover Jr. | 8 Dec 1955 | Sep 1957 | 1919 (USNA) | (1897–1988) | |
39 | John M. Will | 17 Apr 1956 | Jul 1959 | 1923 (USNA) | (1899–1981) | |
40 | Byron N. Hanlon | 1 Nov 1957 | Oct 1958 | 1921 (USNA) | (1900–1977) |
History
Four-star positions
1866–1941
The rank of admiral was created in 1866 to honor the Civil War achievements of David Farragut. Upon his death, another Civil War hero, David D. Porter Jr., succeeded to the title. In 1873, Congress stated that further vacancies in the grade would not be filled, and the rank lapsed with Porter's death in 1890. Congress revived the rank in 1899 to honor George Dewey, stipulating that the grade would again cease to exist upon his death or retirement. In 1903, Dewey was promoted to the unique rank of Admiral of the Navy, which during his lifetime was considered to be equivalent to an admiral of the fleet, but was later declared to be senior to the five-star grade of fleet admiral.
The Act of 3 March 1915, provided that the commanders in chief of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Asiatic Fleets would have the rank of admiral while so serving, and their seconds in command the rank of vice admiral. In 1916, the Chief of Naval Operations was also made an admiral while so serving, ranking next after the Admiral of the Navy. The ranks of admiral and vice admiral were strictly temporary appointments for the duration of an officer's tour in designated billets, and the temporary admiral reverted to his permanent grade of rear admiral immediately upon vacating the office bearing the title.
In 1917, Congress accommodated the Navy's desire to reorganize the fleet by authorizing the President to appoint three admirals and three vice admirals for any six fleet command positions. All fleet command tours lasted one year except for the commander in chief of the U.S. Fleet, whose term was sometimes renewed for a second year, and the commander in chief of the Asiatic Fleet, whose command was considered a backwater. (The Chief of Naval Operations was appointed for four years.) Officers would typically "fleet up" to admiral or vice admiral for their year of fleet command and then revert to rear admiral to mark time until mandatory retirement.
1941–1991
During World War II, the President was authorized to create as many admirals and vice admirals as he deemed necessary for the duration of the emergency. Most of these new creations retired at the end of the war, having been promoted to reward service in the fleet or headquarters, or to achieve parity with wartime counterparts. Although three- and four-star ranks remained temporary appointments, the practice of reverting to a lower grade pending retirement largely halted after 1942, when Congress authorized officers to be retired in the highest grade in which they served on active duty.[32] The rank of fleet admiral was created in 1944, and the four officers promoted to that grade were allowed to remain on active duty permanently.
By 1956, the Navy had equilibrated at a total of seven permanent billets bearing four-star rank: the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO); the Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO), the commanders in chief of the unified commands in the Pacific (CINCPAC) and Atlantic (CINCLANT); the commander in chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet (CINCPACFLT); the commander in chief of U.S. Naval Forces, Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean (CINCNELM) (retitled commander in chief of U.S. Naval Forces Europe (CINCUSNAVEUR) in 1960); and the commander in chief of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces in Southern Europe (CINCSOUTH). In 1965, an eighth billet was added when the chief of naval material (CNM) was promoted to admiral. Occasionally this count would fluctuate when a Navy officer was selected as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS), as the chairman's four-star representative to the NATO Military Committee (USMILREP), or as the director or deputy director of central intelligence; or by special legislation.[23]
When the long-serving director of the naval nuclear reactor program, Hyman G. Rickover, was finally compelled to retire in 1982, his successor was promoted to admiral and appointed director of naval nuclear propulsion, institutionalizing the position as a permanent four-star billet. To compensate, another four-star billet was eliminated by merging Allied Forces Southern Europe with U.S. Naval Forces Europe. Similarly, when the U.S. Atlantic Fleet commander (CINCLANTFLT) was separated from the Atlantic unified commander in 1985, the number of four-star billets was conserved by eliminating the chief of naval material position. The U.S. Atlantic Fleet was replaced by U.S. Fleet Forces Command (COMUSFF) in 2006.
1991–present
With the end of the Cold War, U.S. Atlantic Command was repurposed as the joint force trainer, becoming U.S. Joint Forces Command in 1999. The change in mission cost the Navy its traditional monopoly over that command, which has since rotated among all the services, but the Navy made up the difference through repeated appointments to other combatant commands and to the vice chairmanship of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (VJCS). All military commanders in chief were retitled "Commanders" in 2002, when the title of "Commander in Chief" was reserved solely to the President of the United States.
See also
- Admiral (United States)
- List of active duty United States four-star officers
- List of United States Air Force four-star generals
- List of United States Army four-star generals
- List of United States Coast Guard four-star admirals
- List of United States Marine Corps four-star generals
- List of United States military leaders by rank
- List of United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps four-star admirals
- List of United States Space Force four-star generals
- List of United States Navy vice admirals on active duty before 1960
- List of United States Navy vice admirals from 2000 to 2009
- List of United States Navy vice admirals from 2010 to 2019
- List of United States Navy vice admirals since 2020
References
- ^ a b Dates of rank are taken, where available, from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, or from the U.S. Navy register of active and retired commissioned officers, or from the World Almanac and Book of Facts. The date listed is that of the officer's first promotion to admiral, and may differ from the officer's entry in the U.S. Navy register, which lists admirals who reverted to their permanent ranks of rear admiral as ranking from the date of the legislation that ultimately restored them to the rank of admiral, not from the dates of their original appointments.
- ^ a b Positions listed are those held by the officer when promoted to admiral. Dates listed are for the officer's full tenure, which may predate promotion to four-star rank or postdate retirement from active duty.
- ^ a b The number of years of active-duty service at four-star rank is approximated by subtracting the year in the "Date of rank" column from the last year in the "Position" column. Time spent between active-duty four-star assignments is not counted, nor is time spent on special duty as an unassigned fleet admiral.
- ^ a b c The year commissioned is taken to be the year the officer graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, or equivalent, which may precede the officer's actual date of commission by up to two years. Prior to 1912, graduates of the U.S. Naval Academy were required by law to serve two years at sea as passed midshipmen before receiving their commission as ensign. Sources of commission are listed in parentheses after the year of commission and include: the United States Naval Academy (USNA), Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC), Officer Candidate School (OCS), warrant; the Massachusetts Maritime Academy (MMA), and the United States Military Academy (USMA).
- ^ a b The number of years in commission before being promoted to four-star rank is approximated by subtracting the year in the "Commission" column from the year in the "Date of rank" column.
- ^ a b Notes include years of birth and death; awards of the Medal of Honor, Congressional Gold Medal, Presidential Medal of Freedom, or honors of similar significance; major government appointments; university presidencies or equivalents; familial relationships with other four-star officers or significant government officials such as U.S. Presidents, cabinet secretaries, U.S. Senators, or state governors; and unusual career events such as premature relief or death in office.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Reverted to permanent rank of rear admiral upon vacating an office bearing the temporary rank of admiral.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Advanced to admiral on the retired list with date of rank 21 Jun 1930, as highest grade held during World War I.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu Commissioned as ensign after two years of sea duty.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Advanced to admiral on the retired list with date of rank 16 Jun 1942, as highest rank held on the active list.
- ^ a b Advanced to admiral on the retired list with date of rank 14 Aug 1938, as highest rank held while Chief of Naval Operations.
- ^ Retired as rear admiral, 1 Jan 1937; advanced to admiral on the retired list, 14 Aug 1938; recalled as admiral, 13 Feb 1941; retired, 11 Feb 1942; recalled as admiral, 12 Apr 1944; retired, 31 Aug 1945.
- ^ Retired as rear admiral, Dec 1936; recalled as rear admiral, 13 May 1940; advanced to vice admiral on the retired list, 23 Feb 1942; advanced to admiral on the retired list, 16 Jun 1942; retired, Dec 1946.
- ^ Retired as admiral, Aug 1939; recalled as admiral, 6 Jul 1942; promoted to fleet admiral, 15 Dec 1944; rank made permanent, 13 May 1946 (Act of 23 Mar 1946).
- ^ Retired as rear admiral, 1939; recalled as rear admiral, 1941; advanced to vice admiral on the retired list, 23 Feb 1942; advanced to admiral on the retired list, 16 Jun 1942; retired, 15 Jan 1943; recalled as admiral, 23 Jun 1943; retired, 15 Jan 1945.
- ^ a b c Retired as admiral, as highest rank held on active list.
- ^ Retired as admiral, Jul 1942, by Act of Congress; recalled as admiral, Jul 1942; retired, Feb 1945.
- ^ Promoted to admiral, 1947, with date of rank Jan 1946.
- ^ a b Reverted to vice admiral for final tour; retired as admiral.
- ^ Reverted to vice admiral for final tour; died in office.
- ^ Retired as vice admiral, 1964; retained on active duty until 1982; advanced to admiral on the retired list, 3 Dec 1973, with date of rank 16 Nov 1973.
- ^ Nomination as U.S. Secretary of Defense withdrawn, 1994.
- ^ a b In 1994, special legislation authorized Charles R. Larson to resume the superintendency of the U.S. Naval Academy, then a two-star billet, as a full admiral.
- ^ Nomination as commander in chief, U.S. Pacific Command (USCINCPAC) withdrawn, 1994.
- ^ Transferred from U.S. Merchant Marine, 1967.
- ^ Nomination as U.S. Ambassador to Australia withdrawn, 2018.
- ^ Nomination as Chief of Naval Operations confirmed, May 2019; retired prior to assumption of post.
- ^ First nomination as commander, U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (CDRUSINDOPACOM) returned to the President, 2021.
- ^ Retired as vice admiral, Dec 1946; advanced to admiral on the retired list by reason of combat citation, Jan 1954.
- ^ "US People--Struble, Arthur D". Archived from the original on 24 December 2010. Retrieved 16 November 2008. Struble entered the U.S. Naval Academy in 1911 and received his commission in 1915.
- ^ Transferred from U.S. Naval Reserve, 1921.
- ^ Act of Congress of 16 July 1942.
Bibliography
- Air Force Association (May 2006), "USAF Almanac 2006" (PDF), Air Force Magazine, 89 (5), archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2007
- Cole, Ronald H.; Poole, Walter S.; Schnabel, James F.; Watson, Robert J.; Webb, Willard J. (1995), The History of the Unified Command Plan, 1946–1993 (PDF), Washington D.C.: Office of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, archived from the original (PDF) on 27 November 2007, retrieved 14 April 2007
- Heaton, Dean R. (1995), Four Stars: The Super Stars of United States Military History, Baltimore: Gateway Press
- Naval Historical Center, Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Washington D.C.: Department of the Navy
- Oden, Archibald Jr. (1919), Navy Yearbook, Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office
- Reynolds, Clark G. (1978), Famous American Admirals, Annapolis: Naval Institute Press
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