- Paul K. Carlton
Infobox Military Person
name=Paul K. Carlton
born= birth year and age|1921
died=
caption=General Paul K. Carlton
nickname=
placeofbirth=Manchester,New Hampshire
placeofdeath=
placeofburial=
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Air Force
serviceyears=1942-1977
rank= General
unit=
commands=Military Airlift Command
battles=World War II
awards=Silver Star Legion of Merit (2) Distinguished Flying CrossAir Medal (6)Purple Heart
relations=Paul K. Carlton, Jr. (son)
laterwork=General Paul K. Carlton was commander in chief of theMilitary Airlift Command , with headquarters atScott Air Force Base , Illinois.Biography
General Carlton was born in
Manchester, New Hampshire , in 1921, and graduated from Academy High School,Erie, Pennsylvania , in 1939. He attended theUniversity of Pittsburgh andOhio University , and in September 1941 entered the Army Air Corps aviation cadet program. He received his pilot wings and commission as a second lieutenant in April 1942 atAlbany Army Airfield , Georgia.General Carlton was a
B-17 Flying Fortress instructor pilot withAir Training Command until 1944. He then flew B-29 aircraft with the first group operating against the Japanese mainland from India and China, accumulating a total of 350 combat hours.Following World War II, from January 1946 to September 1949, he was assigned to
Strategic Air Command 's first atomic bomb organization, the 509th Bombardment Wing,Roswell Air Force Base , New Mexico. This was followed by a four-year assignment as aide-de-camp to SAC Commander in Chief GeneralCurtis E. LeMay .From October 1953 to January 1956, General Carlton was assigned to
March Air Force Base , California, as director of operations, 320th Bombardment Wing, and later as director of plans,15th Air Force . He went to Guam in January 1956 and became director of operations for SAC's 3d Air Division atAndersen Air Force Base . He returned to the United States in November 1957 and served the next one and a half years as deputy commander of the 93d Bombardment Wing and the Combat Crew Training School for B-52 andKC-135 aircrews atCastle Air Force Base , California. He assumed command of the 4126th Strategic Wing,Beale Air Force Base , California, in May 1959.General Carlton was selected to attend the
National War College in Washington, D.C., from August 1961 to June 1962, during which time he also attendedThe George Washington University . In June 1962 General Carlton assumed command of the 379th Bombardment Wing atWurtsmith Air Force Base , Michigan, and in November 1963, was assigned as commander of the 305th Bombardment Wing,Bunker Hill Air Force Base , Indiana.In July 1965, General Carlton was assigned to SAC headquarters at
Offutt Air Force Base , Nebraska, with dual responsibilities as chief,Single Integrated Operational Plan s Division, Joint Strategic Target Planning Staff, and chief, Operations Plans Division, Directorate of operations. He assumed duties as assistant deputy chief of staff for operations in June 1967.General Carlton assumed command of the
1st Strategic Aerospace Division ,Vandenberg Air Force Base , California, in August 1968. He returned to Headquarters SAC in March 1969 to serve as deputy chief of staff for operations. He next served as commander of the 15th Air Force, with headquarters at March Air Force Base, California, from August 1969 until September 1972 when he assumed command of the Military Airlift Command. On February 1, 1977, when MAC was designated as a specified command, General Carlton became CINCMAC. He retired from the Air Force March 31, 1977.While serving as commander, achievements by Military Airlift Command people resulted in award of the 1972
Benjamin D. Foulois Flying Safety Trophy; the 1973Harmon International Trophy for the 1972 nonstop HC-130 flight fromChing Chuan Kang Air Base ,Taiwan , to Scott Air Force Base, Illinois; the 1974Mackay Trophy , for the prisoner of war release,Operation Homecoming ; the 1974David C. Schilling Award and the 1974 Harmon International Trophy, both for the American airlift to Israel, in which MACC-141 s and C-5 Galaxies moved 22,395 tons 6,500 miles by air to Israel in 33 days; and a special Humanitarian Award from Milwaukee's Trans-Aire '75 Exposition for MAC's many humanitarian achievements, including the airlift of Vietnamese and Cambodian orphans to their new homes in the United States and the massive airlift evacuation of Vietnamese refugees. General Carlton also received the 1975 Reserve Officers Association's Minuteman Hall of Fame Award.A command pilot, General Carlton has more than 12,000 flying hours and has flown the B-47, B-52, including the "H" model, supersonic B-58 Hustler, KC-135, C-141, C-5 and the Mach 3 plus SR-71 strategic reconnaissance aircraft. He is a member of the
Air Force Association (Citation of Honor, 1973),Order of Daedalians ,American Defense Preparedness Association , and theNational Defense Transportation Association .The Senate confirmed his presidential nomination to the grade of general October 9, 1972.
Awards and decorations
His military decorations and awards include the
Air Force Distinguished Service Medal ,Silver Star ,Legion of Merit with oak leaf cluster, Distinguished Flying Cross,Air Medal with five oak leaf clusters, Army Commendation Medal, and thePurple Heart .Reference
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