CALNAN, George C., LT

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Lieutenant
Last Rating/NEC Group
Line Officer
Primary Unit
1933-1933, USS Akron (ZRS-4)
Service Years
1920 - 1933
Lieutenant Lieutenant

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

89 kb


Home State
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Year of Birth
1900
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Steven Loomis (SaigonShipyard), IC3 to remember CALNAN, George C., LT.

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Contact Info
Home Town
South Boston, Massachusetts
Last Address
Died April 4, 1933 in the crash
of the USS Akron ZR-3 Barnegat,
New Jersey, United States
Date of Passing
Apr 04, 1933
 

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 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
In the Line of Duty
  1933, In the Line of Duty


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Lieutenant George Charles CALNAN, USN

US Fencing Hall of Fame
Naval Academy Fencing Captain 1919
Killed in the air crash of the USS Akron

Lt. George C. Calnan, (USN) (1900-1933) - AFLA national foil champion six times in seven years (1925, '26, '27, '28, '30, '31), medalist twice; national epee champion (1923); national three-weapon champion (1927). Member of all four national championship teams for the New York Fencers Club: foil, epee, sabre, three-weapon (1926). Member, US. Olympic team (1920, '24, '28, '32) and captain (1932). Olympic bronze medalist in epee individual (1928); member, Olympic bronze medal-winning foil team (1932) and Olympic bronze medal-winning epee team (1932). At the 1932 Olympics, he repeated the Oath of Participation on behalf of all participating athletes. Vice-president of the AFLA (1931-33). Captain of Naval Academy (1919). The national three-weapon team trophy was presented in his memory (1934-64).


George Charles Calnan (January 18, 1900 to April 4, 1933) was a United States Navy officer who also competed for the United States as a fencer. Competing in four Summer Olympics, he earned three bronze medals (Indivudual épée: 1928, Team foil: 1932, Team épée: 1932).


A model for behavior, Lieutenant George C. Calnan. 

Lt. Calnan learned to fence at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis and became team captain in 1919.  A brilliant fencer, he went to the Olympic Games in 1928 and during the individual epee competition he acknowledged a hit that the judges did not see.  This act of sportsmanship cost him the match and the gold medal.  He finished with a bronze, but ito many, that bronze medal was worth more truly won than the gold would have been under false pretenses.  The International Olympic Committee must have thought so, too, because they invited him to recite the Olympians' Oath at the 1932 Games on behalf of all the athletes, an obviously extraordinary honor.

George Calnan died in 1933 in the loss of the U.S. Navy airship Akron, remaining at his station and trying to maintain the ship's trim and ballast when it crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey. 

His was one of only ten Olympic medals ever won by an American in individual men's fencing. 


The Olympic Oath 1932

The voice of the announcer sounds again. It is introducing Lieutenant George C. Calnan, of the United States Olympic Team, who will take the Olympic Oath.

A tall figure, erect and military, ascends the rostrum on the field as a hush spreads over the audience. He grasps the American flag with his left hand and raises his right to the sky.

All over the field the athletes raise their right hands. Then, in a loud clear voice, come Lieutenant Calnan's words :

"We swear that we will take part in the Olympic Games in loyal competition, respecting the regulations which govern them and desirous of participating in them in the true spirit of sportsmanship for the honor of our country and for the glory of sport."

 

A native of South Boston, Massachusetts, Calnan did not start fencing until he was a student at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. By the time he was a senior, he was captain of the Navy's fencing team. Two years later, Calnan competed for the US at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris where he finished tied for fifth in the team épée competition. Calnan took the Olympic Oath at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

Calnan was among the 73 fatalities of the USS Akron crash in 1933. He had a lieutenant's rank at the time of the crash.

He was posthumously inducted in the US Fencing Hall of Fame in 1963, among the first inductees.

   
Other Comments:


Only one of the officers of the Akron survived, Lt. Cdr. Herbert V. Wiley, Executive Officer.
Rear Admiral William A. Moffett was also on board and killed.

Cdr. Frank C. McCord, Commanding
Lt. Cdr. Herbert V. Wiley, Executive Officer
Lt. Cdr. Harold E. MacLellan
Lt. George Calnan
Lt. Herbert M. Wescoat
Lt. Richard F. Cross, Jr.
Lt. (jg) Hammond J. Dugan
Lt. (jg) Charles F. Miller
Lt. (jg) Morgan Redfield
Lt. (jg) Wilfred Bushnell
Lt. (jg) Cyrus Clendening
Chief Machinist George C. Walsh

   
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  1916-1920, US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff)

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To Month/Year
- / 1920

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US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff) Unit Page

Rank
Midshipman

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 US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff) Details

US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff)

Type
Communications
 

Parent Unit
Naval Shore Units

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Last Updated: Apr 5, 2011
   
Memories For This Unit

Chain of Command
Naval Academy Fencing Captain 1919.

Other Memories
Generally considered the first American fencer of international calibre, George Calnan began fencing at the U.S. Naval Academy. While there he was captain of the varsity and brigade champion, but never, surprisingly intercollegiate champion. At the 1928 Olympics, Calnan passed through three rounds into the épée final, where he placed third and entered a direct-elimination super-final of four. Calnan lost, 13-11, to Géo Buchard of France, the three-time world champion, but he defeated Léon Tom, of Belgium, to win the bronze medal. At the 1932 Olympics, Calnan anchored two medal winning teams and again reached the final in épée individual, finishing seventh. Calnan also captained the U.S. fencing team in Los Angeles and took the oath of participation on behalf of the athletes of all nations. Calnan won nine AFLA national championships, and was a member of 13 national championship teams for the New York Fencer's Club. In 1925, he was a member of four national championship teams, a yet to be equalled feat. A career naval officer, Calnan perished in the crash of the dirigible Akron. The year after he died, the AFLA established the George C. Calnan Memorial Trophy for the national three-weapon team championship.

   
   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
USNA Fencing Team
66 Members Also There at Same Time
US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff)

RICHARDSON, James, ADM, (1902-1942) Commander
ROCKWELL, Francis, VADM, (1908-1948) Commander
Halsey Jr., William Frederick, FADM, (1900-1947) Lieutenant Commander
Christie, Ralph Waldo, VADM, (1915-1949) Lieutenant
Ellyson, Theodore Gordon, CDR, (1905-1928) Lieutenant
Ghormley, Robert Lee, VADM, (1906-1946) Lieutenant
Hill, Harry Wilbur, ADM, (1911-1954) Lieutenant
Kidd, Isaac Campbell, RADM, (1906-1941) Lieutenant
ROCKWELL, Francis, VADM, (1908-1948) Lieutenant
Van Valkenburgh, Franklin, CAPT, (1905-1941) Lieutenant
Fuller, R. Buckminster, LTJG, (1916-1919) Lieutenant Junior Grade
Fuller, R. Buckminster, LTJG, (1916-1919) Ensign
Smith, Robert Holmes, CAPT, (1919-1943) Ensign
Clark, Joseph James, ADM, (1917-1953) Midshipman
Denebrink, Francis Compton, VADM, (1917-1956) Midshipman
Duncan, Donald B., ADM, (1917-1957) Midshipman
GLOVER, Cato, ADM, (1916-1957) Midshipman
Goggins, William Bernard, RADM, (1919-1949) Midshipman
MALANAPHY, Michael, RADM, (1918-1958) Midshipman
MOEN, Arthur, RADM, (1917-1948) Midshipman
Moon, Don Pardee, RADM, (1916-1944) Midshipman
Moosbrugger, Frederick, VADM, (1923-1956) Midshipman
Moran, Edward J., RADM, (1917-1947) Midshipman
Murray, Stuart Shadrick, VADM, (1919-1956) Midshipman
PERRY, John Richard, RADM, (1918-1955) Midshipman
Phillips, William Kearney, ADM, (1917-1955) Midshipman
Simpson, Rodger, RDML, (1917-1951) Midshipman
Smith-Hutton, Henri, CAPT, (1922-1952) Midshipman
SNARE, Elmer, LCDR, (1921-1945) Midshipman
Soucek, Apollo, VADM, (1921-1955) Midshipman
Soucek, Zeus, LCDR, (1923-1929) Midshipman
Wallin, Homer Norman, VADM, (1917-1955) Midshipman
Wead, Frank, CDR, (1916-1944) Midshipman
Carpenter, Dudley Newcomb, CAPT, (1896-1933) OFF 210X Captain
Evans, Sydney Key, CAPT, (1907-1935) OFF 410X Captain
Halligan, John, RADM, (1894-1934) OFF Captain
Patrick, Bower Reynolds, CAPT, (1902-1944) OFF 410X Captain
Christy, Harley Hannibal, VADM, (1891-1934) OFF 00X Commander
Friedell, Wilhelm Lee, RADM, (1905-1946) OFF Commander
Halligan, John, RADM, (1894-1934) OFF Commander
Jacobs, Randall, VADM, (1907-1946) OFF Commander
Blandy, William Henry, ADM, (1913-1950) OFF 00X Lieutenant Commander
Dutton, Jr., Benjamin, CAPT, (1905-1937) OFF 111X Lieutenant Commander
Fitch, Aubrey Wray, ADM, (1906-1947) OFF Lieutenant Commander
Hewitt, Henry Kent, ADM, (1906-1949) OFF Lieutenant Commander
Withers, Thomas, RADM, (1906-1946) OFF Lieutenant Commander
Zacharias, Ellis Mark, RADM, (1912-1946) OFF Lieutenant Commander
Dutton, Benjamin, CAPT, (1901-1937) OFF 111X Lieutenant
Hall, John Lesslie, ADM, (1913-1953) OFF Lieutenant
Hewitt, Henry Kent, ADM, (1906-1949) OFF Lieutenant
Ingram, Jonas Howard, ADM, (1907-1947) OFF 110X Lieutenant
Spore, James Sutherland T., CDR, (1904-1935) OFF Lieutenant
Lind, Wallace Ludwig, CAPT, (1911-1940) OFF Lieutenant Junior Grade
Stevens, Leslie Clark, VADM, (1915-1951) OFF Lieutenant Junior Grade
Pendleton, Perley Earl, RADM, (1916-1950) OFF 111X Ensign
Stump, Felix Budwell, ADM, (1917-1958) OFF 00X Ensign
Webb, John Crawford, CAPT, (1918-1953) OFF Ensign
McCollum, Arthur Howard, RDML, (1917-1953) 00 00E Other Service Rank

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