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Maj. Gen. Hugh J. Knerr should be remembered as one of Americas
most important and influential airmen, and yet he is a relative
unknown in comparison with World War II contemporariesArnold,
Spaatz, Andrews, and Eaker, to name a few.
Knerr was a gifted airman, brilliant logistician, and near-genius
at devising organizational fixes. He was also stubborn and very
much his own man. Partly because of these attributes, his career
was sidetracked several times.
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Maj. Hugh Knerr,
shown standing in front of a B-1 Keystone bomber. Knerr was
one of Americas most influential airmen, yet he remains
all but unknown. |
Knerr was an early and outspoken advocate of creating an independent
Air Force. In fact, he was one of a handful of airmen who kept alive
the theories of air warfare propounded by Gen. William Billy
Mitchell. He also played a key role in organizing and building up
GHQ Air Force, the forebear of todays service.
In World War II, though, he made his major mark in logistics work.
It was a field of airpower that was as misunderstood as it was critical
to combat success.
Knerrs serious career began in 1925, when he was sent to
the Air Service Tactical School at Langley Field, Va. There, Knerr
found to his disappointment that the tactical school gave short
shrift to ground attack and emphasized pursuit as the basic
weapon for the air.
Bombardment aviation, he noted, was capable of destroying
the enemys means of resistance at the source on the ground,
rather than after we got into the air. In this, Knerr saw
great combat potential. When you take an enemys bullets
and beans away from him, said Knerr, his airplanes become
impotent.
He also emphasized the crucial importance of maintenance and supply
to combat operations.
Tactical School Years
Knerrs tenure at the tactical school was tempestuous. He
argued with faculty members, and his devotion to his own views got
him in trouble. For example, a spate of aircraft incidents at Langley
prompted Knerr to write a report challenging the schools sloppy
maintenance. As a result, said Knerr, he was placed under
arrest pending the outcome of an investigation. The arrest,
in his view, was intended to teach him the advisability of
not sounding off in the face of entrenched authority.
Knerr was a strong devotee of Billy Mitchell, whose acid critiques
of Army and Navy actions in the 1920s landed him in a court-martial.
Mitchells courage in castigating the fumbling leadership
in the Army and Navy, said Knerr, was like a breath
of fresh air in a stuffy room.
During the period 1927-30, Knerr commanded the 2nd Bomb Group at
Langley, one of only three combat groups in the Army Air Corps.
The entire Air Corps comprised fewer than 1,000 officers and about
8,700 enlisted men.
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| Knerr found the Air Service
Tactical School at Langley AFB, Va., disappointing in its single-minded
devotion to air pursuit. He agreed with Billy Mitchell that
bombers could destroy an enemys means of resistance.
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Knerr recognized that the 2nd Bomb Group consisted of extraordinarily
competent airmen. However, it lacked leadership, discipline, and
enthusiasm. Knerrs solution was to inaugurate a new training
program, one that left everyone too tired to get into trouble
on the weekends.
He worked his airmen hard, pioneering the development of bomber
formations that established a basis for tactics employed in World
War II. In addition to developing formation flying, Knerr was one
of the first airmen to emphasize and develop military transport.
Knerr also thought about basic requirements for bomber aircraft.
In 1927-28, he had formulated a concept for an advanced bomber that
could carry a 1,000-pound bomb load at 10,000 feet with a speed
of at least 150 mph. In 1930, heading for the field service unit
at Materiel Division, Wright Field, Ohio, he further refined these
bombardment concepts.
Knerr, the chief of the field service section in the period 1932-35,
played an important role in repairing and modifying aircraft for
airmail operations. In early 1934, Air Corps support of the airmail
flights, ordered by President Franklin Roosevelt, proved to be far
less than successful. Hampered by poor navigation equipment and
terrible winter weather, the Air Corps suffered a host of crashes
and 12 fatalities.
To revitalize the public image of the Air Corps, the War Department
in the summer of 1934 approved a major flight of long-range aircraft
to Alaska. Lt. Col. Henry H. Hap Arnold was appointed
flight commander, with Knerr as his executive officer. Knerrs
job was to get 10 new Martin B-10 bombers ready for flight, which
he did with his usual intensity.
In July 1934, the B-10s flew from Washington, D.C., to Alaska and,
by the end of the return flight, each of the airplanes had logged
some 18,000 miles. Arnold won his second Mackay Trophy for the flight,
but angered senior naval officers, who saw it as an infringement
upon the Navys coastal defense mission.
Strained Relations
It also strained Knerrs relations with Arnold, who was awarded
the Distinguished Flying Cross for leading the flight, while other
flight members went unrewarded.
Meanwhile, Roosevelt had directed formation of a board under former
Secretary of War Newton D. Baker to consider the question of control
of military aviation, an issue of long-standing controversy within
the War Department. The issue was simply this: With aviation technology
advancing rapidly, who should control the military air weapon?
Air Corps officers such as Maj. Carl A. Tooey Spaatz
argued that airmen knew best how to organize and employ aircraft.
Knerr, by then a lieutenant colonel, added that Army airmen required
their own promotion list and the opportunity to present their requirements
directly to Congress, without going through the filter of the War
Department General Staff.
Turning down the idea of a Department of Aviation, the Baker Board
in 1934 recommended establishment of a GHQ Air Force, to operate
the Armys strike aircraft to support ground forces and defend
the coasts. The Office of the Chief of Air Corps would control personnel,
supply, and the budget.
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| Knerr had to get 10 new Martin
B-10 bombers ready for the 1934 Washington-to-Alaska flight.
Leader Hap Arnold receives a key to Fairbanks in the above photo,
which also includes Knerr (fifth from left) among other crew
members. |
Brig. Gen. Frank M. Andrews was appointed commanding general of
GHQ Air Force, with headquarters at Langley Field. Andrews, who
while at the Tactical School at Langley in the late 1920s came to
know and respect Knerr, now picked him as his chief of staff. Among
others Andrews tapped for his staff were Henry B.S. Burwell, Follett
Bradley, George C. Kenney, and Joseph T. McNarney.
Under Andrews, GHQ Air Force blossomed into what has been called
the nations first air force. Knerr, now a colonel,
played a major role in this. Andrews and Knerr promoted the new
B-17 bomberonly 13 were allocated to GHQ Air Forceas
the basic air weapon.
However, Maj. Gen. Oscar Westover, Chief of the Air Corps, kept
control of GHQ Air Forces entire logistics and support budget.
Knerr commented that this was like giving a youngster an automobile
but leaving the keys with his mother.
Although Knerr plunged deeply into the business of building this
air force, his advocacy of the B-17 fell on deaf ears at the War
Department. The Army, he stated, feared we would
cut heavily into their budget. The Navy, he noted, viewed
with alarm our invasion of their domain.
War Department leaders continued to view support for Army ground
forces as the main mission of the Air Corps. According to Maj. Gen.
Stanley D. Embick, War Department deputy chief of staff: If
the equipment to be provided for the Air Corps be that best adapted
to carry out the specific functions appropriately assigned to it
under joint action, there would appear to be no need for the B-17.
Mitchells Chair
Knerr and Andrews, however, would not stop badgering the War Department
for a larger bomber force. The result was the breakup of Andrews
staff. In 1938, Knerr was demoted to lieutenant colonel and exiled
to Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. Kenney, Bradley, and McNarney were also
sacked.
At Ft. Sam Houston, Knerr found himself assigned to the exact office
once occupied by Mitchell. A photograph of Lt. Col. Billy
Mitchell, on the wall in back of my desk, made me feel highly honored
to be his successor, said Knerr.
(Later, Andrews himself was demoted to colonel and sent to the
same office at Ft. Sam Houston, where he languished until Gen. George
C. Marshall, War Department Chief of Staff, brought him to the General
Staff in Washington.)
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| Knerr (far right) eliminated
a logistics nightmare for Eighth Air Force commander Gen. Carl
Tooey Spaatz (center). With them at this World War
II strategy session are Maj. Gens. Hoyt Vandenberg (standing)
and Ralph Royce. |
To relieve his boredom, Knerr published The Student Pilots
Primer, which went through several printings and was used as a basic
text in high schools and colleges.
Frustrated by being put out to pasture, Knerr retired in March
1939, convinced that as a civilian he could more effectively influence
public opinion on the subjects of airpower and the need for an independent
air force. Sometimes it is necessary, he emphasized,
to violently rock the boat to dislodge the rats.
After retiring, he signed on to work for Sperry Gyroscope, accepted
speaking engagements around the country, and published articles
on the nations lack of military preparedness. He drew special
attention to the lack of airpower. Knerr had only harsh words for
the Navy, claiming it was overly dependent on battleships.
Following Japans attack on Pearl Harbor and Americas
entry into war, Knerrs forays became progressively strident.
The War Department, specifically Maj. Gen. Joseph McNarney, asked
Knerr to cease his public commentary.
In the midst of this angry standoff, the Army Air Forces recognized
that Knerr, airman and crack logistician, could make a major contribution
to its wartime operations. In October 1942, Knerr was recalled to
active duty. Arnold directed him to make recommendations on how
AAF logistics could be more effectively organized. Based on Knerrs
proposals, Arnold closed his logistics depot near National Airport
in Washington, D.C., and concentrated the function in Air Service
Command in Dayton, Ohio.
Arnold in 1943 directed Knerr to assess the air logistical setup
in Britain. In the UK for two years under Maj. Gen. Ira C. Eaker
and then under Spaatz, Knerr applied his logistics genius to major
problems confronting the Eighth Air Force bombing campaign over
Western Europe.
As commander of Eighth Air Force Service Command, Knerr established
more depots and instituted assembly-line procedures to reduce the
backlog of airplanes and equipment requiring repair. He also organized
better accounting methods, and by the end of 1943, he reported that
we were providing more aircraft ready to fly than there were
crews to man them.
Arnold was impressed with Knerrs operation and even agreed
not to send trained depot unitswhich had not worked wellbut
rather to let Knerr provide on-the-job training.
In early 1944, Spaatz appointed Knerrby now a major generalto
an additional position as deputy commander for administration of
US Strategic Air Forces in Europe. According to Knerr, he assured
Spaatz that he could handle this dual responsibility, whereupon
Spaatz emphasized that he was ready to sink or swim
with Knerrs performance.
Praise From Arnold
As it turned out, Spaatz need not have worried. The D-Day invasion
of Europe succeeded in no small measure because of the effectiveness
of the air logistics supporting the massive movement of men and
materiel.
The contributions of your command, Arnold wrote Knerr,
represent one of the greatest ever to be made in the history
of aviation.
In the postwar years, during the battle for a separate Air Force,
Knerr once more jumped into the fray, returning to his signature
barbs when referring to the other services.
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| After the war, Knerr pushed
for a separate air arm and was a key player in developing the
structure of the newly independent Air Force. He retired, for
the second time, in 1949, but continued to promote airpower.
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Each was intent on being top dog in the defense establishment,
he noted, but cooperative in discouraging the creation of
a US Air Forcenot unusual in big families. The Pentagon housed
a big family but far from a happy one. The Army appeared to me to
have the rule of a fussy old grandmother, the Navy that of a pompous
grandfather, and the Air Force, a redheaded brat feeling his oats.
Knerr played a major role in structuring the headquarters of the
newly established United States Air Force. The problem was that
during the war the Air Staff in AAF headquarters was unable to make
decisions quickly enough.
Spaatz, succeeding Arnold as AAF commander in February 1946, directed
Knerr, now secretary-general of the advisory Air Board, to come
up with recommendations for a new headquarters organization.
The Air Board emphasized that present Air Staff operations remained
unsatisfactory in speed and efficiency to fight the next war.
Knerr advocated the deputy chief of staff system that worked so
well in the UK during the war, and he was supported by Lt. Gen.
Nathan F. Twining, heading Air Materiel Command, and Maj. Gen. Muir
S. Fairchild, Air University commander.
In the deputy structure, according to Knerr, undivided responsibility
and authority can be fixed at every level. The next higher or lower
commander can put his finger on the individual due for praise or
censure without tracing the buck through the pinball mechanism of
a staff.
At Knerrs urging, Fairchild directed a study at Air University
that called for three deputy chiefs of staff: personnel and administration;
materiel and logistics; and plans and operations. The major objective
was to reduce the commanding generals workload. Spaatz, relying
on the work conducted by Knerr and the Air Board and by Fairchild
and Air University, directed that the Air Force implement the deputy
organization.
With establishment of the United States Air Force in September
1947, USAF headquarters, under Spaatz, Chief of Staff, and Gen.
Hoyt S. Vandenberg, vice chief of staff, featured three deputy chiefs
of staff: materiel, operations, and personnel and administration.
Although the Air Board remained in an advisory role to Spaatz,
during 1947-48 it considered many crucial issues facing the new
service. Its recommendations on a host of personnel and organizational
issues formed a broad framework upon which the Air Force was able
to build during the early years of independence.
Following his service on the Air Board, Hugh Knerr closed his long
career in 1948-49 as Air Force inspector general.
Knerr passed away on Nov. 1, 1971. The Air Forces official
biography said this of him:
Hugh Knerrs great technical knowledge, his command flying
experience, his loyalty to his organization, and his dogged determination
made him an officer that the Air Forces top leadersGenerals
Andrews, Arnold, and Spaatzdepended on in building and running
the air arm of the turbulent 30s and the wartime 40s.
Herman S. Wolk is senior historian in the Air Force Historical Research Agency‘s Washington, D.C., operating location. He is the author of The Struggle for Air Force Independence, 1943–1947 (1997) and Fulcrum of Power (2003). His most recent article for Air Force Magazine, “The Twentieth Against Japan,” appeared in the April issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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