Robert C. Richardson III
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Robert C. Richardson III | |
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1918- | |
Place of birth | Rockford, Illinois |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Air Force |
Years of service | 1939-1967 |
Rank | Brigadier General |
Commands held | 83rd Fighter Wing |
Battles/wars | World War II |
Awards | Legion of Merit Air Medal Croix de Guerre |
Relations | Robert C. Richardson, Jr. |
Robert Charlwood Richardson III (born 1918) was an officer, first of the United States Army Air Corps, then with the United States Air Force, eventually attaining the rank of Brigadier General.
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[edit] Early career
Richardson was born in Rockford, Illinois. In 1932, he attended the Gunnery School in Washington, Connecticut, and in 1933, entered Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pennsylvania, graduating in 1935. He received a congressional appointment from Pennsylvania to the United States Military Academy and graduated in June 1939.
He next attended pilot training schools in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Randolph and Kelly fields, Texas, graduating in June 1940. In July 1940, he was assigned as a flight instructor at Randolph Field and subsequently in the advanced twin-engine school at Barksdale Field, Louisiana.
[edit] Laconia incident
In September 1941, he was transferred to the 52nd Fighter Group, Selfridge Field, Michigan, served as squadron commander and group operations officer, and went with the Group to Norfolk, Virginia, and Florence, South Carolina. In April 1942, he took command of the 1st Composite Squadron which was organized at Key Field, Meridian, Mississippi, and redeployed, in June 1942, to Ascension Island in the South Atlantic Ocean.
On 16 September 1942, while senior duty officer at Ascension, Richardson received word from a patrolling bomber that four U-boats displaying the Red Cross flag were rescuing survivors of the sinking of RMS Laconia. Richardson ordered the aircraft to bomb the rescue boats in what came to be known as the Laconia incident.
[edit] In Europe
In March 1943, Richardson returned from Ascension Island to become project officer and flight leader on the only attempt to ferry P-38 Lightnings to North Africa via the South Atlantic. In April 1943, 52 of 53 aircraft were successfully delivered. Next, he was assigned as chief of the Aircraft Division, and later as chief of the Fighter Division, Army Air Force Board, Orlando, Florida.
In July 1944, he was assigned to the Operations Division, Headquarters U.S. Strategic Air Force in Europe. He served in General Carl Spaatz's headquarters in London and Paris through December 1944. In January 1945, he was assigned to the Operations Division of Headquarters, 9th Tactical Air Command, Ninth Air Force; and in April 1945, he assumed command of the 365th Fighter Group, Upon redeployment of the 365th Fighter Group from Fitzlar, Germany, in September 1945, he remained in the Occupation Forces as chief of the Aircraft Allocation Division, Headquarters, U.S. Air Forces in Europe. In February 1946, he became assistant chief of staff for operations, European Air Transport Service.
[edit] After the war
In June 1946, Richardson was assigned to the War Plans Division of the Air Staff in Washington, DC. In July 1947, he was transferred to the Joint War Plans Committee, which in December 1947, upon implementation of the 1947 Unification Act, became Joint Strategic Plans Group, Joint Chiefs of Staff. Upon creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation in 1949, he became the first Air Force planner on the NATO Standing Group and was primarily concerned with the negotiation of an agreement for Germany's rearmament and for the establishment of the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers in Europe (SHAPE).
In February 1951, he accompanied General Lauris Norstad to Europe as a member of his planning staff. In July 1951, he was designated as the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff representative and military observer to the European Defense Community Treaty Conference in Paris. In July 1953, he was assigned to the Plans Staff of the Air Deputy, SHAPE, when responsibility for U.S. military advice to the European Defense Community was transferred from the U.S. Ambassador to the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. From July 1953 to July 1955, Richardson was special assistant to Air Vice Marshal Huddleston, Royal Air Force, Deputy Chief of Staff/Operations SHAPE, and later, the deputy director/policy, Headquarters SHAPE, serving primarily as the U.S. Air Force member of the Inter-Allied Planning Committee (New Approach Group) that developed the first plans and concept for an atomic defense of Europe.
In July 1955, Richardson returned to the United States to attend the National War College, graduating in June 1956. He assumed command of the 83rd Fighter Wing (redesignated 4th Fighter Wing) at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina. In January 1958, he was transferred to Headquarters U.S. Air Force, to become assistant for long range objectives to the deputy chief of staff/plans and programs. He was promoted to brigadier general in May 1960.
In June 1961, Richardson was transferred to the Military Assistance Division, Headquarters U.S. European Command, Paris, France, and upon arrival was reassigned by General Norstad as director of operations for Live Oak, the Tripartite Berlin Plans and Operations Group. Upon termination of the Berlin Crisis, Richardson was assigned as deputy standing group representative, NATO, effective 1 January 1962 through 1 January 1964.
Next, Richardson was transferred to Headquarters Air Force Systems Command, Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland. He served as assistant to the commander, then assistant deputy chief of staff for plans, and in August 1965, was assigned as the deputy chief of staff for science and technology. On 31 July 1966, he reported to Field Command, Defense Atomic Support Agency.
Richardson is the author of numerous articles on atomic warfare, strategy and concepts. These include: "Atomic Weapons and War Damage," ORBIS, spring 1960; "Do We Need Unlimited Forces for Limited War," Air Force Magazine, March 1959; "Forces in Being - The Weapons," Air Force Magazine, August 1958; "In The Looking Glass," Air University Review, winter 1957-1958; "Nuclear Stalemate Fallacy," Air Force Magazine, August 1956; "Atomic Weapons and Theater Warfare" (four articles) Air University Review, winter and spring 1955; "The U.S. Air Force and NATO," Air University Review, winter 1952-1953; and "Defense on the Technological Front," Air Force Magazine, June 1966.
His final assignment was to Headquarters Field Command, Defense Atomic Support Agency, Sandia National Laboratories, New Mexico, as deputy commander for weapons and training. In this position, he was responsible for managing atomic weapon development and training activities and the nuclear weapons stockpile.
Richardson retired on 1 August 1967 but continued to write and lecture on defense issues. He has served as Deputy Director of High Frontier and Director of the American Foreign Policy Institute and of the Security and Intelligence Fund.
Richardson's decorations include the Legion of Merit, Air Medal, Army Commendation Medal, and French Croix de Guerre with silver star.
[edit] References
Based on the official Air Force biography, http://www.af.mil/bios/bio.asp?bioID=6901