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  1. William D. Leahy

    William D. Leahy

    United States admiral, ambassador to France, Chief of Staff

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  1. William Daniel Leahy (/ ˈ l eɪ h i ˌ ˈ l eɪ. i /) (May 6, 1875 – July 20, 1959) was an American naval officer. The most senior United States military officer on active duty during World War II, he held several titles and exercised considerable influence over foreign and military policy

  2. HISTORY. The Hidden Power Behind D-Day. As a key advisor to F.D.R., Adm. William D. Leahy was instrumental in bringing the Allies together to agree upon the invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe....

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  3. Aug 12, 2019 · Roosevelt’s Right-Hand Man Was a Quiet Yet Powerful Force. A new biography illuminates Admiral William D. Leahy's role as FDR's chief of staff, adviser, and friend during World War II. by Craig L. Symonds 8/12/2019. Admiral William D. Leahy, traveling here with FDR in 1943, gained the president’s respect as an adviser and friend.

    • From Ensign to Admiral
    • Route to The Joint Chiefs
    • The Atomic Bomb and Admiral Leahy

    Born to an Irish-American family in 1875 Iowa, William Leahy would follow in his father’s footsteps and serve in the military. His father, a Civil War veteran, had attended West Point, and while that was initially the plan for Leahy, he would go on to attend the United States Naval Academy and graduate in 1897. Serving as a Midshipman aboard the US...

    In 1937, he was appointed Chief of Naval Operations. He would serve in this role for two years as he sought to prepare the Navy for a future conflict that seemed just on the horizon. Admiral Leahy would be put on the retired list in 1939 with long-time friend Roosevelt letting him know not to get to settled into being retired should a war break out...

    In December of 1944, Leahy was promoted as the United States Navy’s first Fleet Admiral. Despite this 5 star ranking and his personal relationship with FDR, Admiral Leahy couldn’t get the President to agree with him when it came to the future notion of dropping the Atomic bomb on Japan. Admiral Leahy believed that Japan was already on the verge of ...

  4. President Harry S. Truman accepted Fleet Admiral Leahy’s resignation as Chief of Staff on March 2, 1949, but like all five star fleet admirals, he remained on active duty in an advisory capacity to the Secretary of the Navy. William Daniel Leahy was born on May 6, 1875, in Hampton, Iowa. His 1897 Naval Academy class graduated in time to see ...

  5. Dec 2, 2019 · In early January 1944, an increasingly weak President Franklin Roosevelt turned to William Leahy in the White House and told his longtime friend that he wanted to make Leahy, since 1942 the president’s chief of staff, America’s only serving five-star military officer.

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  7. Jul 20, 1998 · Role In: Vichy France. World War II. Battle of Iwo Jima. Pacific War. William Daniel Leahy (born May 6, 1875, Hampton, Iowa, U.S.—died July 20, 1959, Bethesda, Maryland) was an American naval officer who served as personal chief of staff to President Franklin D. Roosevelt during World War II.