- Jacob E. Smart
Infobox Military Person
name=Jacob E. Smart
born= 1909
died= death year and age|2006|1909
caption=General Jacob Smart
nickname=
placeofbirth=Ridgeland, South Carolina
placeofdeath=Ridgeland,South Carolina
placeofburial=
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Air Force
serviceyears=1931-1966
rank= General
unit=
commands=Pacific Air Forces U.S. Forces in Japan Twelfth Air Force
battles=World War II
awards=Distinguished Service Cross Distinguished Flying CrossLegion of Merit Air Medal (4)
relations=
laterwork=General Jacob Edward Smart (May 31 ,1909 -November 12 ,2006 ) was aU.S. Army Air Force leader inWorld War II and Cold War era Air Force general.Smart was born in
Ridgeland, South Carolina , the son of a railroad conductor, and was educated in the public schools ofSouth Carolina and Georgia, and atMarion Military Institute inMarion, Alabama . He graduated from theUnited States Military Academy in 1931 and entered flight training with the Army Air Corps. He became aflying instructor . When the United States entered World War II, Smart (Colonel at that time) was chief of staff for flight training at Air Force headquarters in Washington, D.C.. He joined theAir Corps Advisory Council in July 1942, serving on the staff of General “Hap” Arnold, Chief of Staff of theArmy Air Force . In this position, he was involved with the planning of the invasion of Europe and participated in the meeting between U.S. PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime MinisterWinston Churchill in Casablanca,Morocco in 1943. He received theLegion of Merit for his services.He was assigned to
9th Bomber Command in the Middle East in 1943. He was the architect of Operation Tidal Wave, in which 178B-24 Liberator heavy bomber s from five bombardment groups of the9th Army Air Force flew a 2,400-mile round trip from bases nearBenghazi inLibya to perform a low-level bombing raid on the oil refineries atPloieşti ,Romania , on1 August 1943 . Nearly 40% of the oil plant was destroyed, but 55 of the American planes were lost and another 50 severely damaged. He received the Distinguished Service Medal; five other airmen received theMedal of Honor , the most for any single military action. Despite its success, the plant was repaired and back to its original operating capacity within a week.He attended theArmy-Navy Staff College , graduating in February 1944. He then joined the15th Air Force in the Mediterranean Theater, commanding the97th Bomb Group in Italy. Despite his knowledge of top secret issues, such as plans for the Normandy invasion, he was allowed to fly missions over enemy territory. On his 29th mission, May 10, 1944, Smart was flying aB-17 Flying Fortress on a mission to bomb aircraft factories nearWiener Neustadt ,Austria . The aircraft was hit by anti-aircraft fire and exploded. Smart was thrown from the wreck in mid-air. He managed to open his parachute despite the wounds he received from the explosion. He landed and was immediately captured by the Germans and held as aprisoner of war until freed by the forces of GeneralGeorge S. Patton 's Army in April 1945. His captors knew he was important and did their best to extract secrets from him but Smart was able to evade all their questions.Upon his repatriation to the US, he returned to duty as a top aide to General Arnold, continuing as the
U.S. Air Force was formed in 1947. He graduated from theNational War College in June 1950, and commanded32nd Air Division at Stewart Air Force Base in New York, and was alter later vice commander ofEastern Air Defense Force .During the
Korean War , Smart served as deputy for operations in theFar East Air Force where he showed his skill as a strategist. He also flew several sorties, and was injured. He returned to Washington, D.C., in June 1955, as assistant vice chief of staff at U.S. Air Force Headquarters, and became commander of theTwelfth Air Force ,Tactical Air Command , in September 1959. He became vice commander ofTactical Air Command in January 1960, based atLangley Air Force Base . He served as Commander U.S. Forces in Japan from August 1961; and then as Commander of thePacific Air Forces inHonolulu from August 1963. He became Deputy Commander of theU.S. European Command in July 1964, and retired in July 1966.Following his retirement, Smart served as an administrator with
NASA for several years; finally, he returned to live in Ridgeland.Smart died in his sleep from congestive heart failure at the age of 97 on Sunday,
November 12 ,2006 and was buried the following week on ThursdayNovember 16 ,2006 . He was divorced in 1946. He had four children; three daughters,one surviving, and a son, who also survives.Awards and decorations
Smart received numerous decorations including: Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Distinguished Flying Cross,
Legion of Merit and four awards of theAir Medal . He was also awarded thedecoration of Ulchi by the Republic of Korea, and was an honoraryKnight Commander of the British Empire .References
*"Forged In Fire", DeWitt Copp, Doubleday, 1982 (episodes in the book trace Gen. Smart's service during WWII)
External links
* [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/16/AR2006111601716.html Obituary] , "
Washington Post ",16 November 2006
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2486685,00.html Obituary] , "The Times ",5 December 2006
*cite web |title=Colonel Jacob E. Smart |work=The Story of Stalag Luft III |url=http://atlas.usafa.af.mil/dfsel/sl3/americans/smart.html |accessdate=2006-03-12
* [http://www.af.mil/bios/bio.asp?bioID=7165 General Jacob Smart] U.S. Air Force Website
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