Kemp Tolley

Kemp Tolley
Birth name Kemp Tolley
Born 29 April 1908
Manila, Philippines
Died 28 October 2000 (2000-10-29) (aged 92)
Corbett, Maryland
Allegiance  United States of America
Service/branch  United States Navy
Years of service 1925–1959
Rank Rear Admiral
Battles/wars World War II
Korean War

Rear Admiral Kemp Tolley (29 April 1908 28 October 2000) was an officer in the U.S. Navy and is the author of three books and numerous articles on the history of U.S. Navy activities in the Pacific, China, and the Soviet Union.

Early life

Admiral Tolley was born in Manila in, while his father, Lieutenant Colonel Oscar Kemp Tolley, was serving there in the U.S. Army, Kemp Tolley was a 1929 graduate of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, where he was a member of Phi Alpha Theta.[1]

[2]

Early career

During the 1930s, Tolley served aboard battleships, cruisers and a submarine tender. He also served on the exotic China station, becoming executive officer of the river gunboat USS Tutuila on the upper Yangtze River.

Tolley had a natural aptitude for languages and was fluent in Russian, German, French and Spanish.

World War II

Lt. Kemp Tolley's escapre route to Australia in 1941-1942.

Tolley, then a lieutenant, left Hankou, China on 27 November 1941 aboard USS Wake (PR-3). The gunboat sailed down the Yangtze River to Shanghai, where Tolley boarded USS Oahu (PR-6), bound for Manila, Philippines.

On 5 December 1941 Tolley was given command of the sailing schooner Lanikai, which had been acquired by the Navy from a private owner, and given orders to sail in waters off the Philippines and report any sightings of Japanese warships. The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor before Tolley could embark on this mission and the Lanikai was assigned to the Inshore Patrol.

Lanikai was detached on 26 December 1941 and ordered to attempt to escape to friendly waters. This was the start of a two-month odyssey during which Lanikai sailed from Manila in the Philippine Islands, to Surabaya on Java in the then Netherlands East Indies. Lanikai participated briefly in the doomed defense of Java and was strafed by Japanese aircraft on at least one occasion. Just prior to the fall of Java, Tolley took Lanikai to Tjilatjap on the south coast of Java where she evacuated allied stragglers. Lanikai departed Java 26 February 1942 just prior to the Dutch surrender and arrived at Fremantle, Australia on 18 March 1942. After suitable recovery and refitting Lanikai was engaged in patrol work along the northern coast of Western Australia until April 27, 1942.[3]

In August 1942, the Lanikai was turned over to the Royal Australian Navy. Tolley was then reassigned as an assistant naval attaché in the Soviet Union. There, he met Vlada Gritzenko, whom he married in 1943. He served in this assignment until 1944 and was promoted to lieutenant commander and commander.[4]

Late in 1944, Tolley returned to the Pacific when he was assigned as the navigator of the battleship USS North Carolina where he participated in combat action at Leyte Gulf and off Luzon during the liberation of the Philippines. He was also aboard North Carolina during the invasion of Iwo Jima and was wounded by shell fragments at Okinawa Gunto.[5]

For his service during the war, Tolley received the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service, the Purple Heart for being wounded in action and seven battle stars.

Post War Career

After the war, he became an intelligence officer on the Naval Operations staff and commanded the attack cargo ship USS Vermilion (AKA-107) from June 1947 to September 1948.[6]

From 1949 to 1952, he was the director of the intelligence division at the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia, where his unorthodox teaching methods were frowned upon by his superiors although his classes were very popular with his students.

Other tours included operations officer on the staff of Commander Amphibious Group Two and command of Amphibious Squadron Five, during which time he was tasked with forming an evacuation plan for Taiwan. In 1956, he was designated commander of fleet activities at the Yokosuka, Japan.[7]

Later life

Tolley retired from the Navy in 1959, and was promoted to rear admiral on the retired list in recognition of his being decorated for combat service. He then returned to his boyhood home in historic Corbett Village, Monkton, Maryland.

In retirement, he wrote more than 100 articles and three books, "Yangtze Patrol," "Cruise of the Lanikai" and "Caviar and Commissars."[8]

In 1992, he was inducted into the Defense Attache Hall of Fame in Washington.

In 1993, he was honored at the White House Rose Garden by President Bill Clinton and later by Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin.

Tolley died at his home in Corbett, Maryland on October 28, 2000 at the age of 92.[9]

A bronze bust of Admiral Tolley was erected at the United States Naval Academy in his honor.[10]

Awards

Dates of rank

Books

References

  1. "Kemp Tolley, 92; Rear Admiral, Author" (Fee). Washington Post. 6 November 2000. Retrieved 2009-04-03. Kemp Tolley, 92, a retired Navy rear admiral who wrote scores of articles and three books concerning history and naval affairs, died at his home in Baltimore County, Maryland, after a stroke.
  2. "Maryland Historical Society". Retrieved 2009-04-03. Tolley, Kemp Papers, 1941 A naval officer's report on travels from China to the Philippines, Java, and points South; chiefly an account of a cruise in a schooner immediately after the outbreak of hostilities. 6 pages Tolley, Kemp Papers, 1941-1942 Chronicle of voyage of the schooner Lanakai through enemy waters from Manila Bay to Perth, Australia, 26 December 1941 to 27 April 1942. Includes map and newsclippings on Commander Tolley's voyage and the presentation of the volume to the Maryland Historical Society by his father, Lieutenant Colonel Oscar Kemp Tolley. 1 volume horizontal tab character in |quote= at position 220 (help)
  3. Kemp Tolley: One Step Ahead of the Japs, U.S. Navy All Hands magazine December 1944, pp. 6-9, 64.
  4. "For Those Who Dare". U.S. Naval Institute. Retrieved 2009-04-03. Then there was Rear Admiral Kemp Tolley, legendary for his naval exploits in China, Indonesia, and Australia (detailed in his Naval Institute Press books, Cruise of the Lanikai and Far Yangtze Station) and for his work as a naval intelligence officer in Stalin's Russia (the topic of his book, Caviar and Commissars). Admiral Tolley, who wrote dozens of articles for Proceedings, was well-known among the Naval Institute staff for other things, most notable among them being his photographic collection of women he had met in his world travels, which he used to illustrate his always unpredictable newsletter, the China Gunboatman.
  5. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2000-11-01/news/0011010314_1_attack-on-pearl-pearl-harbor-japanese-attack
  6. http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/02/02107a.htm
  7. http://www.usni.org/heritage/tolley
  8. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2000-11-01/news/0011010314_1_attack-on-pearl-pearl-harbor-japanese-attack
  9. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2000-11-01/news/0011010314_1_attack-on-pearl-pearl-harbor-japanese-attack
  10. http://www.williamsburgsculpture.com/U.S.%20Navy%20Memorial.htm

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.