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Don Whitmire

American football player and United States Navy admiral


Summary

American football player and United States Navy admiral

FieldValue
nameDon Whitmire
imageRADM Don Whitmire.jpg
birth_nameDonald Boone Whitmire
nickname"Big Daddy"
birth_date
birth_placeGiles County, Tennessee
death_date
death_placeAnnandale, Virginia
allegianceUnited States
branchUnited States Navy
rankRear Admiral
serviceyears1942-1977
commandsAmphibious Squadron 1
Task Force 76
battlesWorld War II
Korean War
Vietnam War
awardsAudie Murphy Patriotism Award
spouseJoan Corcoran
module{{Infobox NFL biography
embedyes
nameDon Whitmire
number70
positionTackle
height_ft5
height_in11
weight_lb215
high_schoolDecatur (Alabama)
collegeAlabama
Navy
draftyear1944
draftround9
draftpick82
pastteams
CollegeHOF1669

Task Force 76 Korean War Vietnam War Navy

  • Knute Rockne Trophy (1944)
  • Unanimous All-American (1944)
  • Consensus All-American (1943)
  • First-team All-American (1942)
  • 2× First-team All-Eastern (1943, 1944)
  • First-team All-SEC (1942)

Donald Boone Whitmire (July 1, 1922 – May 3, 1991) was an U.S. Navy officer and American football player who was drafted by the 1944 Green Bay Packers but choose to remain with the U.S. Navy.

Whitmire was born in Pulaski, Tennessee, the son of James Buford Whitmire Sr., who would later become the police chief in Decatur, Alabama, and Mary Whitmire. He attended the University of Alabama from 1940 to 1942, where he was named to the Crimson Tide All-Time Cotton and Orange Bowl teams. He would leave UA to enlist in the Marine Corps following America's entry into WWII. Recognizing his value, Navy line coach Rip Miller recruited him to complete his schooling with the United States Naval Academy (USNA), where he won the Knute Rockne Trophy and the academy's Thompson Trophy. He also served as a brigade commander. He is one of only four college football players to ever be named as an All-American at two different schools. Whitmire would be elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1956.

After his graduation from USNA in 1946, in the same class as future President Jimmy Carter, Whitmire was commissioned as an officer in the U.S. Navy, eventually retiring with the rank of rear admiral. Like Carter, Whitmire began his career as a submariner, where he commanded subs and a submarine division in the Atlantic. He served two tours in Vietnam, the first in command of an amphibious troop transport in 1967. He then went on to command an amphibious squadron in the Mediterranean.

Whitmire is best remembered as the commander of Task Force 76 in April 1975 during the Fall of Saigon. Task Force 76 provided logistical support to Operation Eagle Pull and Operation Frequent Wind, providing ground and air support to retreating American forces, and taking American diplomats, dependents, and Vietnamese allies aboard ships stationed just outside Saigon. U.S. and Vietnamese forces airlifted some 1,500 American diplomats and 5,500 Vietnamese and other allied citizens to Task Force vessels in the final 24 hours of the American withdrawal. The Task Force also supported a flotilla of former U.S. Navy and Coast Guard ships loaned to the Republic of Vietnam Navy, carrying some 30,000 RVNN personnel, families, and other dependents, and escorting them 1,000 miles across the China Sea to U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay, rather than surrendering them to the Vietnam People's Navy. In 1977, his last assignment prior to retiring from the Navy was serving on the Atlantic Fleet staff.

In 1984, he was presented with the Audie Murphy Patriotism Award by President Ronald Reagan.

After his death on May 3, 1991, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Military awards

Whitmire's military decorations and awards:

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Row2nd
Row3rd
Row4th
Row5th
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Gold Submarine Warfare insignia
Legion of MeritNavy and Marine Corps Medal
Bronze Star Medal with "V" deviceMeritorious Service MedalNavy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal
Navy Meritorious Unit CommendationAmerican Campaign MedalWorld War II Victory Medal
National Defense Service Medal with Service starKorean Service MedalVietnam Service Medal with Service star
United Nations Service Medal KoreaGallantry Cross Unit CitationVietnam Campaign Medal with 60– Device

References

References

  1. "Don Whitmire".
  2. (5 May 1991). "ADM. DONALD WHITMIRE DIES". Washington Post.
  3. (April 2021). "‘Greatest Humanitarian Mission’". U.S. Naval Institute.
  4. "RADM Donald Boone Whitmire".
  5. (4 July 1984). "Remarks at a Spirit of America Festival in Decatur, Alabama". Reagan Library.
  6. [https://ancexplorer.army.mil/publicwmv/#/arlington-national/search/results/1/Cgh3aGl0bWlyZRIGZG9uYWxk/ Burial Detail: Whitmire, Donald B] – ANC Explorer
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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