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* BRIGADIER GENERAL
ROBERT E. GALER, USMC
Brigadier General Robert
Edward Galer, a combat aviator and holder of the Nation's highest decoration,
the Medal of Honor, for heroism in aerial combat during the Guadalcanal
campaign of World War II, was promoted to his present rank on retirement, 31
July 1957. At the time of his retirement he was serving in Washington, D.C., as
Assistant Director, Guided Missiles Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, Department
of the Navy.
General Galer, then a
major, was awarded the Medal of Honor on 24 March 1943, by former President
Franklin D. Roosevelt in a White House ceremony.
The general was born in
Seattle, Washington, 24 October 1913. He attended the University of Washington
and graduated with a B.S. degree in commercial engineering in 1935, at which
time he began elimination flight training at the Naval Reserve Aviation Base,
Seattle. In June 1936, he began his Aviation Cadet flight training at the Naval
Air Station, Pensacola, Florida, and was commissioned a second lieutenant in
the Marine Corps, 1 July 1936.
Following his designation
as a Naval Aviator in April 1937, he was transferred to the 1st Marine Brigade
at Quantico, Virginia, for duty with Aircraft One. In July of the same year he
was assigned to a course of instruction at the Basic School at Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Following the completion of his studies in June 1938, he was
ordered to the New York Navy Yard, but shortly thereafter was transferred to
the Virgin Islands where he served with Marine Scouting Squadron-3 at St.
Thomas. He was advanced to first lieutenant in July 1939.
Lieutenant Galer was
returned to the United States in June 1940, and in July reported to the 2d
Marine Aircraft Wing in San Diego, California. In January 1941, he was ordered
to Hawaii and was appointed a captain in March 1941. He was serving at the
Marine Corps Air Station, Ewa, Oahu, when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on
7 December 1941.
In May 1942, he assumed
command of Marine Fighting Squadron-224. It was while in command of this unit
that he received the Nation's highest award, shortly after his promotion to the
rank of major. He also received the British Distinguished Flying Cross for the
same act of heroism.
Following the presentation
of the Medal of Honor by the President at the White House, Major Galer was
ordered to Marine Forces, Air, West Coast, Miramar, California, where he served
as Assistant Operations Officer. Shortly after advancement to the rank of
lieutenant colonel in November 1943, he was ordered to return to the Hawaiian
Islands, where he became Chief of Staff, Marine Air, Hawaiian Area.
In May 1944, Lieutenant
Colonel Galer was named as Operations Officer, 3d Marine Aircraft Wing. He
served as an observer during the Palau Islands campaign while on temporary duty
from the 3d Marine Aircraft Wing. His next assignment found him as Training
Officer of Provisional Air Support Command, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific.
He again returned to the
United States in June 1945, and in July he reported to the Marine Barracks,
Naval Air Training Base, Corpus Christi, Texas, as officer in charge of a cadet
regiment. He remained in that capacity until August 1947, at which time he was
assigned as a student at the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia.
In June 1948, he reported
to Marine Aircraft Wing, at the Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North
Carolina, where he served as Operations and Training Officer. He joined
Headquarters Squadron-2 at that station in April 1949, and was transferred 26
April 1950, to the Naval Air Station, San Diego, California. He served there as
Marine Planning Officer and, later, as Assistant Chief of Staff for Plans, on
the Staff of the Commander, Air Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet. During his
assignment, he was promoted to colonel in March 1951.
Colonel Galer sailed in
March 1952 for Korea, where he saw duty as Assistant Chief of Staff, G-4
(Supply), of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing until the following May. He was then
named Commanding Officer of Marine Aircraft Wing there, and, for extraordinary
achievement on 11 July was awarded a Gold Star in lieu of a second
Distinguished Flying Cross. According to the citation accompanying this medal,
he "led a maximum effort strike of Marine attack aircraft against a
heavily defended industrial area in the North Korean capitol city of
Pyongyang."
Colonel Galer was also
awarded the Legion of Merit with Combat "V" for his service in Korea
from 24 May to 5 August 1952, when he was shot down behind enemy lines by
antiaircraft fire and later rescued by helicopter.
After a period of
hospitalization, he returned to duty at El Toro, California, in October 1952,
as Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1 (Personnel), and later, G-3 (Operations), of
Aircraft, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific. He was enrolled as a student in the Air
War College, Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama, in July 1953. Upon
graduation from the College the following June, he was transferred to
Headquarters Marine Corps, Washington, D.C., where he became Assistant
Director, Guided Missiles Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, Department of the
Navy. He served in that capacity until January 1956, when he became Acting
Director. The following June he was awarded a Masters Degree in Engineering
Administration from the George Washington University, Washington, D.C. For
exceptionally meritorious service in combat, he was advanced to brigadier
general upon his retirement, 31 July 1957.
A complete list of General
Galer's medals and decorations include the Medal of Honor, Legion of Merit with
Combat "V", Distinguished Flying Cross with one Gold Star, Air Medal
with four Gold Stars, Purple Heart, Presidential Unit Citation with one bronze
star, American Defense Service Medal with Base Clasp, Asiatic-Pacific Campaign
Medal with one silver star, American Campaign Medal, World War II Victory
Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Korean Service Medal with two bronze
stars, United Nations Service Medal, Distinguished Flying Cross (British
Award), and the Korean Presidential Unit Citation.
General Galer and his wife,
the former Dorothy May Beyer of Los Angeles, California, have two sons: Robert
T. (born 25 February 1945), and Vincent H. (born 14 November 1948).
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