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United States - Naval History, Naval Operations - World War II, United States - World War II Armed Forces, 20th Century American History - World War II, United States Navy - Military Biography, United States Navy
Admiral Arleigh Burke by E. B. Potter β€” book cover

Admiral Arleigh Burke

by E. B. Potter
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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

One of the military's most colorful figures, and the last surviving WW II naval commander, ``31-Knot Burke'' was a destroyer captain in the Solomons campaign, served as Admiral Marc Mitscher's chief of staff in the final two years of the war and, in 1955, was chosen over 91 senior admirals as Chief of Naval Operations. Retiring after four decades of active service in 1961, Burke became co-founder and director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies at Georgetown University. Potter, former chairman of naval history at the U.S. Naval Academy, has written an entertaining biography of a talented and resourceful officer who was instrumental in the development of the missile-armed, nuclear-propelled navy. Of particular interest is Potter's clarifying account of the controversy over unification of the armed services in the late 1940s and Burke's role in the so-called ``Revolt of the Admirals.'' Photos. (Apr.)

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1990
Publisher
New York : Random House, 1990.
Pages
494
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780394584249

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