- John Whittet
Infobox Military Person
name= John D. Whittet
lived=
placeofbirth=
placeofdeath=
caption= 2nd Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy|nickname=
allegiance=USN
serviceyears= 1943-1975
rank=Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy
commands=Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy
unit=
battles=
awards=Distinguished Service Medal
laterwork=
portrayedby=Master Chief Petty Officer John D. Whittet (September 4 1925 ,Providence, Rhode Island -May 7 1989 ), was the secondMaster Chief Petty Officer of the Navy . He attended local grammar schools and theCranston High School . Master Chief Whittet enlisted in theU.S. Navy on24 March 1943 , and upon completion of recruit training, was assigned to the Aviation Machinist’s Mate School inGreat Lakes, Illinois . He followed the school with an assignment with Carrier Aircraft Service Units which operated fromGuam . He won his combat aircrewman wings flying 31 missions from the carrier USS "Lexington" (CV-2) and USS "Anzio", which won Presidential andNavy Unit Citation s respectively. He ended his wartime service aboard "Anzio" following the ship's participation in the capture ofIwo Jima .Following the war, Master Chief Whittet completed flight engineer training for the
B-24 Liberator aircraft and was assigned toSaudi Arabia . In 1950, he was transferred toMiramar Naval Air Station ,San Diego, California . While serving as the leading petty officer of a shipboard detachment ofF9F Panther aircraft, he was assigned temporary duty in the Western Pacific aboard the carrier USS|Bon Homme Richard|CV-31|6. While there, his air group participated in combat action in theKorean War and was awarded theNavy Unit Commendation .Master Chief Whittet followed his Korean War duty with assignments to several naval air station and aviation activities as a Jet Power Plant Instructor in the
United States . In 1957 he was transferred to theContinental Air Defense Command atColorado Springs, Colorado , where he worked as the flight crew plane captain for the Commander of Naval Forces at that command. In March 1960, Master Chief Whittet joined Fighter Squadron One Nine Three and made three additional Western Pacific deployments aboard "Bonhomme Richard".Returning to stateside duty, Master Chief Whittet spent two years with heavy attack squadrons at
Whidbey Island Washington , and in 1964, was assigned to the Aerospace Recovery Facility atEl Centro, California , where he performed duties as the Assistant Aircraft Maintenance Officer and LeadingChief Petty Officer . In 1967, Master Chief Whittet was transferred to the NAS Argentia, Newfoundland, and served a three-year tour of duty as the Aircraft Maintenance Control Chief and the Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Commander, Fleet Air Argentia. Immediately prior to assuming the duties as the Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy, he was assigned as the Master Chief of theU.S. Atlantic Fleet Air Force, inNorfolk, Virginia .Whittet served as MCPON during a tumultuous time in the Navy's history. The
Chief of Naval Operations ,Admiral Elmo Zumwalt , was enacting radical changes via his "Z-grams" to long-standing Navy policies and traditions. It fell to MCPON Whittet to solicit input and feedback from the enlisted force to the CNO and Chief of Naval Personnel (CNP) regarding these changes, such as the removal of the traditional jumper uniform "crackerjacks" from the junior enlisted seabag, and replacement with the jacket and tie uniform worn by commissioned officers and Chief Petty Officers. Grooming standards were relaxed; sailors were permitted to grow beards, and the maximum hair length was increased. One of his greatest challenges was getting the senior enlisted leadership to adapt to what they perceived as a relaxation of military order and discipline. Whittet's tenure saw many modernizations to policy that are still in place today, such as the first posting of women to ships, the institution of randomurinalysis for drug testing, revisions to the performance evaluation and enlisted advancement procedures and institution of the Chief Petty Officer selection board, and race sensitivity training to decrease racial tension within the enlisted ranks.After his tour as MCPON, Master Chief Whittet accepted the position with the Human Resources Management Program at
Naval Amphibious School ,Coronado, California . A year after his MCPON tour was over, and after having served over 30 years on active duty, Whittet would become one of the first members of the newMaster at Arms rating. After retirement from active duty in 1976, Master Chief Whittet went on to a position as director of morale, welfare, and recreation at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado. On7 May 1989 , Master Chief Whittet was diving in theColorado river . He became caught in the rocks and drowned.In addition to two Presidential Unit Citations and two Navy Unit Commendations, Master Chief Whittet holds twelve other awards including the
Good Conduct Medal (eight awards), theAsiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal , thePhilippine Liberation Medal , and theKorean Presidential Unit Citation , and theVietnam Service Medal . On June 25, 1974, the Chief of Naval Operations presented Master Chief Whittet with the Distinguished Service Medal.External links
* [http://www.quarterdeck.org/WindsOfChange/030-45%20MCPON%20Jack%20Whittet.htm Extensive biographical essay] about MCPON Whittet.
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