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Harry McLaren Pinckney Huse |
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Graduate, U.S. Naval Academy, Class of 1878 Engagements: • Spanish-American War (1898)• Occupation of Veracruz (1914) |
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Biography: | ||||
Harry McLaren Pinckney Huse Vice Admiral, U.S. Navy Medal of Honor Recipient Occupation of Veracruz Vice Admiral Harry McLaren Pinckney Huse (8 December 1858 - 14 May 1942) was a U.S. Navy officer who received the U.S. military's highest award for valor, the Medal of Honor, for his heroic actions during the Occupation of Veracruz. Harry McLaren Pinckney Huse was born on 8 December 1858 at the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, NY, where his father, an Army officer, was then stationed. He was appointed to the U.S. Naval Academy in September 1874 and graduated in June 1878. He had extensive service at sea over the next decade, plus duty ashore, notably at the Naval Academy, where he would have several staff tours in the course of his career. During the 1898 Spanish-American War, Lieutenant Huse was Executive Officer of the gunboat USS Gloucester (1891), taking part in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba and leading a party ashore that first raised the U.S. flag over Puerto Rico. In the early 1900s, Lieutenant Commander Huse was stationed in the Philippines, where he commanded the gunboat USS Villalobos (PG-42). This was followed by nearly five years at the Naval Academy as, among other things, instructor of mathematics. Promoted to the rank of Commander in 1907, Huse was commanding officer of the monitor USS Nevada (BM-8) and later of the supply ship USS Celtic (AF-2). After his next promotion, to Captain late in 1909, he was Captain of the Yard at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, commanded the battleship USS Vermont (BB-20) and, in 1914-1915, was Chief of Staff to Rear Admiral Frank Friday Fletcher. He attended the Naval War College, graduating in 1915. Medal of Honor Rank and organization: Captain, U.S. Navy Citation: For distinguished conduct in battle, engagements of Vera Cruz, 21 and 22 April 1914. Under fire, Capt. Huse was eminent and conspicuous in the performance of his duties; was indefatigable in his labors of a most important character, both with the division commander in directing affairs and in his efforts on shore to get in communication with the Mexican authorities to avoid needlessly prolonging the conflict. Huse reached the rank of Rear Admiral in mid-1916, while at the War College. He held Navy Department positions through the World War I years, followed in 1919 by command of the Atlantic Training Fleet. From late 1919 to early 1921 he served abroad, initially as senior U.S. Navy representative on the Inter-Allied Naval Armistice Commission and the Naval Inter-Allied Commission of Control, then as Commander, U.S. Naval Forces in European waters, with the temporary rank of Vice Admiral. After returning to the U.S. he was Commandant of the Third Naval District, headquartered at New York City, and as a member of the Navy's General Board. Rear Admiral Huse left active duty in December 1922, later receiving the retirement rank of Vice Admiral. Post-Military Life Huse was a Washington, DC, resident for the rest of his life. He co-authored a book on genealogy entitled, The Descendants of Abel Huse of Newbury (1602-1690) published in 1935. Honors In 1943, USS Huse (DE-145) was named in honor of Vice Admiral Harry M. P. Huse. Death and Burial Vice Admiral Harry McLaren Pinckney Huse died at Bethesda Naval Hospital in suburban Maryland on 14 May 1942. He is buried with his wife, Mary Sheward Whitelock, at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, VA, in Section 2, Lot 4889. |
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Honoree ID: 2006 | Created by: MHOH |