Georges Cabanier

Georges Cabanier
Born November 21, 1906
France
Died October 26, 1976 (69 years of age)
Allegiance  France
Service/branch  French Navy
 Free French Naval Forces
 French Navy
Rank Admiral
Commands held Rubis 1931
*Cap des Palmes
*G.A.S.M
*Jeanne d'Arc
*École Navale
Battles/wars World War II
Awards Grand Croix de la Légion d'honneur
Compagnon de la Libération
Médaille militaire
Croix de guerre 1939-1945
Croix de guerre des théâtres d'opérations extérieures
Médaille de la Résistance
Croix de guerre (Norvège)

Georges Cabanier (November 21, 1906 - October 26, 1976) was a French Navy officer and Admiral. Grand chancelier of the Légion d'honneur from February 15, 1969 to February 14, 1975.

Military career

Entered into the École Navale in 1925, he navigated on several naval warships (French: bâtiments) in the Atlantic, before opting for submarine service.

In 1928, he served successively on both the Du Couëdic and Duperré Avisos, then on the military transport Seine.

In 1930, he partook to campaigns in Antilles, Bermudes, Acores and Terre-neuve on board aviso Aldebaran. After one year at the torpedo officer and electricians school, Georges Cabanier opted for a career as a submariner in the submarine service (French: La sous-marinade). In 1932, he embarked on board 1500 ton-class submarine L'Achéron, then on submarine Le Saphir. Lieutenant de vaisseau in 1934, he served on submarine Orion, in 1936, on submarine cruiser Surcouf,[1] on which he partook to an endurance cruise in the South Atlantic.

In 1938, he served, then was designated as commandant of the mine laying Rubis.

Since June 1940, he opted to serve the camp of Free France with the quasi-totality of his crew. His Rubis FNFL pavilion pursued patrols in the Northern seas and conducted several mine laying missions in the larger oceanic area of Norway.

First under the orders of capitaine de corvette Cabanier then Lieutenant de vaisseau Rousselot, the Rubis was one of the most effective submarines of the French Navy during the second world war.

Capitaine de corvette in January 1941, he joined the Pacific (December 1941), where he was designated chef d'état-major of admiral Georges Thierry d'Argenlieu.

Capitaine de frigate (1943), he commanded the auxiliary croiseur Cap des Palmes (1944), which operated in the South Pacific with the 3rd Fleet of the United States Navy.

Capitaine de vaisseau on October 1945, he represented France at the United Nations Conference on International Organization of San Francisco (April 1945), and two months later, assumed the command of the French Naval School (June 1945) and in 1947 the school-cruiser Jeanne d'Arc.

Naval attaché to the U.S. in July 1949, he received his contre-amiral stars on January 1951.

In January 1953, the contre-amiral Cabanier was designated as secretary general adjoint of the Défense nationale (French: Secrétaire général adjoint de la Défense nationale).

In March 1954, he was the head of the naval contingent in Indochina. Upon his return to France on February 1956, he was designated as the chef de l'État-major of the particular naval state secretary (French: chef de l'État-major particulier du secrétaire d'état à la Marine).

Vice-amiral in November 1956, he assumed a couple of days later the command of Anti-Submarine Action Group (French: Groupe d'Action Anti-sous-marine - GASM). In 1957, Admiral Cabanier intervened so that the Rubis (along with corvette Aconit, the only two Compagnon de la Libération naval warships of the French Navy), would not get disposed of. Accordingly, a sonar target use was assigned which resulted in drowning the boat indefinitely in the Mediterranean Sea. On June 1958, he was assigned as chef d'État-major de la Défense nationale (French: chef d'État-major de la Défense nationale) of the cabinet of général de Gaulle.

Vice-admiral of a naval squadron in November 1958, then Admiral on July 1, 1960, he was designated as Chief of Staff of the French Navy and held tenure in this post until January 1, 1968.

The Ashes of Admiral Cabanier, Vice-Admiral Rousselot and the last survivor of the crew, were dispersed of on top of L'Épave of French Submarine Rubis.

Decorations

See also

References

Sources

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