- Robert Coontz
Robert Edward Coontz (
11 June 1864 -26 January 1935 ) was anadmiral in theUnited States Navy , who sailed with theGreat White Fleet and served as the secondChief of Naval Operations .Born in
Hannibal, Missouri , Coontz graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1885 and served at the Navy Department and in several ships over the next decade, among them vessels stationed inAlaska n waters and theGreat Lakes . He returned to the Navy Department late in 1894 to work on updating officer records, then was assigned to thecruiser "Philadelphia", the Coast Survey and the cruiser "Charleston". His time in the latter includedSpanish-American War service in the Pacific. Following further duty afloat and ashore, Coontz, then aLieutenant Commander , was Executive Officer of thebattleship "Nebraska" during the 1907-1909 world cruise of the "Great White Fleet ".After promotion to
Commander in 1909, Coontz was Commandant ofMidshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy. In 1912-14, he was Governor ofGuam .Captain Coontz then served as Commanding Officer of the battleship "Georgia", followed by duty as Commandant of thePuget Sound Navy Yard and the 13th Naval District. He held those positions until late in 1918. Following a brief period as acting Chief of Naval Operations,Rear Admiral Coontz assumed command of a battleship division in the Atlantic.Coontz had just been assigned to the Pacific Fleet in September 1919 when he was selected to become Chief of Naval Operations, succeeding
Admiral William S. Benson . Reportedly, his term as CNO was marked by unceasing pressure for economy, Congressional unhappiness over base closings, diplomatic efforts to achieve naval limitations, internal Navy Department conflicts over organization and the best ways to manage new technologies, plus the naval fallout of theTeapot Dome scandal. While dealing with these problems, Admiral Coontz established a unifiedUnited States Fleet and strengthened the CNO's position within the Navy Department.Relieved as CNO in mid-1923 by Admiral
Edward W. Eberle , Coontz was able to return to sea as Commander in Chief of the U.S. Fleet. In 1925, he led the fleet on a trans-Pacific visit toNew Zealand andAustralia , the first massed deployment of American battleships since the "Great White Fleet " cruise nearly two decades earlier and a valuable demonstration of their strategic reach. From October 1925 until his retirement in June 1928, Coontz served as Commandant of the Fifth Naval District, reverting to the rank of Rear Admiral. After retiring, he wrote a memoir chronicling his Navy career titled, "From the Mississippi to the Sea".ref label|foot02|2|^ Admiral Robert E. Coontz died on 26 January 1935.Namesake
USS "Coontz" (DLG-9, later DDG-40) and USS "Admiral R. E. Coontz" (AP-122) were named in his honor.
References
:DANFS
*Robert E. Coontz (1930) "From the Mississippi to the Sea". Philadelphia: Dorrance & Co, Inc. See also cite web
title = United States Naval History: A Bibliography
url= http://www.history.navy.mil/biblio/biblio1/biblio1k.htm
accessdate = 2008-01-01External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/pers-us/uspers-c/r-coontz.htm Naval Historical Center]
*findagrave|21755 Retrieved on2008-02-11
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