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General
Hamilton H. Howze
Army Aviation
Hall of Fame 1974 Induction
(Inducted to
represent the 1960-1969 period)

General
Hamilton H. Howze graduated from West Point and was commissioned in the
Cavalry in 1930. He earned his Army Aviator wings in 1947. He is
recognized as the intellectual force behind current airmobility and Army
Aviation doctrine. While Director of Army Aviation from 1955 to 1958, he
developed new tactical principles for the employment of Army Aviation, and
was instrumental in helping the Aviation School become fully established
in its new home at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
As
Chairman of the Tactical Mobility Requirements Board in 1961, he cited the
need for the development of airmobile theory and doctrine. Adoption of the
Howze Board recommendations revolutionized mobile warfare concepts based
on the use of organic aviation in much the same manner as the introduction
of the tank had affected mobility concepts almost fifty years earlier.
The 11th Air Assault
Division was formed in 1963 to test and validate these concepts. As a
result of his leadership, foresight, and perception, two airmobile
divisions were eventually established in the Army force structure. These
divisions successfully provided the full spectrum of mobile, combined arms
capabilities which are requisite to successful ground combat and which
have become fundamental to modern airmobility doctrine. |