Harry George Armstrong
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Harry George Armstrong | |
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1899 – 1983 | |
Major General Harry George Armstrong |
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Place of birth | De Smet, South Dakota |
Service/branch | United States Marine Corps United States Army United States Air Force |
Years of service | 1918-1919 (Marine Corps) 1925-1957 (Army/Air Force) |
Rank | Major General |
Commands held | Surgeon General of the Air Force |
Awards | Legion of Merit Order of the British Empire Croix de Guerre Collier Award |
Harry George Armstrong (February 17, 1899 — February 5, 1983), known as "the father of space medicine"[1], was a United States Marine, a member of the United States Army Air Forces, a Major General in the United States Air Force, a physician, and an airman. Armstrong served in the Marines during World War I and the Army and Air Force from 1930 to 1957. As Director of the United States Aeromedical Research Laboratory, he applied his medical and aviation knowledge to the improvement of aircrew protection from temperature extremes and the lack of oxygen at high altitude.
He is widely recognized as a pioneer in the field of aviation medicine. The "Armstrong Limit", the altitude above which water boils at the temperature of the human body, is named after him.
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[edit] Biography
Armstrong was born in De Smet, South Dakota, in 1899. He attended the University of Minnesota, but left after one year to enlist in the US Marine Corps, serving with them as a private from October 1918 to March 1919. He then entered the University of South Dakota, graduating in 1921. In 1925 he received his Doctor of Medicine Degree from the University of Louisville. He entered the Medical Corps Reserve in April of 1925. Armstrong entered the School of Aviation Medicine at Brooks Field, Texas, that September. Upon graduation in 1930, he was commissioned a first lieutenant in the Regular Army Medical Corps. In 1931, he was attached to the Air Corps and assigned as assistant surgeon. He was promoted to captain in 1932, to Major (United States) in 1938, lieutenant colonel (temporary) in February of 1942, and to colonel (temporary) in August of 1942. Serving alternately in England and the United States, in 1945 he became surgeon for the Air Division in the office of Military Government for Germany (U.S.), with headquarters in Berlin. In 1946, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel (permanent), returned to the School of Aviation Medicine at Randolph Field upon appointment as Assistant Commandant, and that July was named Commandant. In 1948 he was promoted brigadier general (temporary), then to major general (temporary). In June 1949, he was assigned to Air Force headquarters at Washington, D.C., as Deputy Surgeon General of the U.S. Air Force, promoted to colonel (permanent) in October, and the following December was designated Surgeon General. Armstrong was promoted to brigadier general (permanent) Oct. 9, 1951. In 1954, General Armstrong went to Wiesbaden, Germany, as Surgeon of the United States Air Forces in Europe.
Armstrong retired from the Air Force in 1957. He died in 1983 from heart disease.
In 1977, the Harry G. Armstrong Award for Scientific Excellence was created by the Air Force Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory.
[edit] Awards and decorations
- Distinguished Service Medal
- Legion of Merit with oak leaf cluster
- Order of the British Empire
- French and Belgium Croix de Guerre with Palms
- Wellcome Award (1937)
- Collier Award (1939)
- John Jeffries Award (1941)
- Honorary Fellow of American College of Healthcare Executives (HFACHE) (1953)
- Edward Warner Award (1981)
- National Aviation Hall of Fame (1998)
[edit] Published works
Armstrong published 105 scientific papers in the field of aviation medicine and aerospace medicine.
- Principles and Practice of Aviation Medicine, Williams & Wilkins (1939)
- Aerospace medicine, Williams & Wilkins Co (1961) ISBN 0-683-07109-2
[edit] External links
- Air Force official biography
- Harry George Armstrong on the South Dakota World War II Memorial website
- Armstrong, Harry: Scientist on the National Aviation Hall of Fame website
- Principles and Practice of Aviation Medicine on PubMed
Preceded by Malcolm C. Grow |
Surgeon General of the United States Air Force 1949-1954 |
Succeeded by Dan C. Ogle |