National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol

The National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol (acronym: CAP/CC) is the highest senior official and commanding officer of the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) — a non-profit corporation that is congressionally chartered to operate as the civilian auxiliary of the United States Air Force. The national commander also serves as the chief executive officer of CAP.

National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol
Flag of the National Commander
Incumbent
Major General Edward D. Phelka
since August 26, 2021
Civil Air Patrol
StyleNational Commander
StatusChief executive officer
AbbreviationCAP/CC
Member ofCAP Command Council
CAP Senior Advisory Group
AppointerCAP Board of Governors
Term lengthThree years,
can be extended
Constituting instrumentCAP Constitution and Bylaws[1]
FormationDecember 1, 1941 (1941-12-01)
First holderMaj Gen John F. Curry, USAAF
DeputyNational Vice Commander of the Civil Air Patrol
Websitewww.gocivilairpatrol.com
The flag of a CAP brigadier general. It served as the flag of the national commander until 1 December 2002, when it became the flag of the national vice commander.

The national commander works in close collaboration with Civil Air Patrol–U.S. Air Force, a U.S. Air Force command whose commander is responsible for overseeing CAP programs, liaison between the CAP and U.S. Air Force and other United States Government agencies, and ensuring U.S. Air Force and other U.S. Government support to CAP.[2]

History

From its creation on 1 December 1941 until 31 August 1975, the national commander of CAP was an appointed active duty commissioned officer — typically a general officer — of the United States Army Air Forces (until September 1947) or the United States Air Force (after it became an independent service in September 1947). The national commander chaired the CAP National Board.

Upon adoption of the CAP Constitution and Bylaws on 26 May 1948, the CAP was incorporated and officially became the civilian auxiliary of the U.S. Air Force, the Chairman of the CAP National Board became the national commander, and the CAP National Board was redesignated as the National Executive Board (NEB), with the national commander as its chair. General Carl A. Spaatz, USAF, became the first chairman after the incorporation of the CAP after he retired from the Air Force in 1948.[3] The board became the National Executive Committee (NEC) on 26 April 1960, with the national commander continuing as its chair.

On 1 September 1975, the position of chairman of the national board was redesignated as national commander, held by an active civilian CAP member with the CAP rank of brigadier general,[4] with only sitting and former national commanders who served in the position on or after 1 September 1975 holding the CAP rank of brigadier general.[4] At the same time, the former U.S. Air Force-appointed national commander position was redesignated as the executive director of the CAP. On 8 March 1995, during a reorganization of CAP National Headquarters, the title of executive director was changed to senior Air Force advisor.

On 1 December 2002, the national commander position was elevated to the rank of major general, with the national vice commander becoming a brigadier general.[4] Current and former national commanders who held the position after 1 December 2002 are the only CAP members who hold the CAP rank of major general.[4] Former national commanders who held the position prior to 1 December 2002 and sitting national vice commanders and those who held the position of national vice commander on or after 1 December 2002 are the only CAP members who hold the CAP rank of brigadier general.[4]

Since 2012, the national commander of the CAP also has served as the chief executive officer of the CAP Corporation.[lower-alpha 1]

The current National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol is Major General Edward Phelka.[5]

Civil Air Patrol-United States Air Force

Civil Air Patrol-United States Air Force (CAP-USAF) is a U.S. Air Force command responsible for ensuring the CAP is organized, trained, and equipped to fulfill Air Force-assigned missions.[2] Operating alongiside the CAP's civilian leadership, CAP-USAF provides day-to-day support, advice, and liaison to the CAP’s more than 60,000 members and provides oversight for CAP programs, with emphasis on safety and program requirements.[2] CAP-USAF personnel are also the primary function interface between other federal agencies and the CAP.[2]

As of 2020, CAP-USAF was staffed with approximately 200 active-duty, United States Air Force Reserve, and civilian personnel at CAP National Headquarters at Maxwell Air Force Base and locations in New Jersey (Detachment 1, McGuire Air Force Base), Maryland (Detachment 2, Andrews Air Force Base), Ohio (Detachment 3, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base), Georgia (Detachment 4, Dobbins Air Reserve Base), Minnesota (Detachment 5), Texas (Detachment 6), Colorado (Detachment 7, Peterson Space Force Base), California (Detachment 8, Beale Air Force Base), and Florida, as well as in Puerto Rico and at several overseas Air Force installations.

List of officeholders

U.S. Army Air Forces/U.S. Air Force commanders

  • Maj Gen John F. Curry, USAAF, Dec 1941 – Mar 1942
  • Col Earle L. Johnson, USAAF, Mar 1942 – Feb 1947[6]
  • Brig Gen Frederic H. Smith Jr., USAAF/USAF, February 21, 1947 – September 30, 1947[7]
  • Maj Gen Lucas V. Beau, USAF, October 1, 1947 – May 1948

Chairman of the National Board (1948–1975)

  • Gen Carl A. Spaatz, USAF (Ret), Aug 1948 – Apr 1959
  • Col (later Brig Gen) D. Harold Byrd, CAP, Apr 1959 – Apr 1960
  • Col (later Brig Gen) William C. Whelen, CAP, Apr 1960 – Apr 1962
  • Col (later Brig Gen) Paul W. Turner, CAP, Sep 1962 – Oct 1965
  • Brig Gen Lyle W. Castle, CAP, Oct 1965 – Oct 1968[lower-alpha 2]
  • Brig Gen F. Ward Reilly, CAP, Oct 1968 – Oct 1970
  • Brig Gen Samuel H. DuPont, Jr., CAP, Oct 1970 – Oct 1973
  • Brig Gen William M. Patterson, CAP, Oct 1973 – Aug 1975

CAP National Commanders (1975–present)

No. Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office
Took office Left office Time in office
1 Brig Gen
William M. Patterson
September 1975 September 1976 1 year
2 Brig Gen
Thomas C. Casaday
(1918–2010)
September 1976 September 1979 3 years
3 Brig Gen
Johnnie Boyd
(1927–2013)
September 1979 August 1982 2 years, 11 months
4 Brig Gen
Howard L. Brookfield
(1929–2019)
August 1982 August 1984 2 years
5 Brig Gen
William B. Cass
(1934-2022)
August 1984 March 1986 1 year, 7 months
6 Maj Gen
Eugene E. Harwell
(1930–2020)
March 1986 August 1990 4 years, 5 months
7 Brig Gen
Warren J. Barry
(1922–2015)
August 1990 August 1993 3 years
8 Brig Gen
Richard L. Anderson
(born 1955)
August 1993 August 1996 3 years
9 Brig Gen
Paul M. Bergman
(1940–2012)
August 1996 March 1998 1 year, 7 months
10 Brig Gen
James C. Bobick
March 1998 August 2001 3 years, 5 months
11 Maj Gen
Richard L. Bowling
August 2001 August 2004[lower-alpha 3] 3 years
12 Maj Gen
Dwight H. Wheless
(1940–2017)
August 2004 July 2005 11 months
13 Maj Gen
Antonio J. Pineda[lower-alpha 4]
July 2005 October 2007 2 years, 3 months
14 Maj Gen
Amy Courter
(born 1961)
October 2, 2007[lower-alpha 5] August 7, 2008 10 months
August 7, 2008[lower-alpha 6] August 17, 2011 3 years
15 Maj Gen
Charles L. Carr Jr.
August 17, 2011 August 15, 2014 2 years, 11 months
16 Maj Gen
Joseph Vazquez
August 15, 2014 September 2, 2017 3 years
17 Maj Gen
Mark E. Smith
September 2, 2017 August 26, 2021 3 years, 11 months
18 Maj Gen
Edward D. Phelka
August 26, 2021 Incumbent 2 years

USAAF/CAP-USAF Commanders

U.S. Army Air Forces and U.S. Air Force national commanders of the CAP prior to its 1948 incorporation are considered part of the lineage of the command history of CAP-USAF.

  • Maj Gen John F. Curry, USAAF, Dec 1941 – Mar 1942
  • Col Earle L. Johnson, USAAF, Mar 1942 – Feb 1947[11]
  • Brig Gen Frederic H. Smith Jr., USAF, February 21, 1947 – September 30, 1947[12]
  • Maj Gen Lucas V. Beau, USAF, October 1, 1947 – December 31, 1955
  • Maj Gen Walter R. Agee, USAF, January 1, 1956 – March 31, 1959
  • Brig Gen Stephen D. McElroy, USAF, April 1, 1959 – December 15, 1961
  • Col Paul C. Ashworth, USAF, December 15, 1961 – July 31, 1964
  • Col Joe L. Mason, USAF, August 1, 1964 – April 30, 1967
  • Brig Gen William W. Wilcox, USAF, May 1, 1967 – October 31, 1968
  • Maj Gen Walter B. Putnam, USAF, November 1, 1968 – October 31, 1969
  • Brig Gen Richard N. Ellis, USAF, November 1, 1969 – October 31, 1972
  • Brig Gen Leslie J. Westberg, USAF, November 1, 1972 – August 28, 1975
  • Brig Gen Car S. Miller, USAF, August 29, 1975 – Nov 1977
  • Brig Gen Paul E. Gardner, USAF, Nov 1977 – July 31, 1980
  • Brig Gen H. W. Miller, USAF, August 1, 1980 – Aug 1981
  • Brig Gen David L. Patton, USAF, Aug 1981 – May 1984
  • Col John T. Massingale Jr., USAF, May 1984 – October 31, 1989
  • Col Clyde O. Westbrook Jr., USAF, November 1, 1989 – Jun 1990
  • Col Joseph M. Nall, USAF, Jun 1990 – Aug 1992
  • Col Ronald T. Sampson, USAF, Aug 1992 – Mar 1995
  • Col Garland W. Padgett Jr., USAF, Mar 1995 – May 1998
  • Col Dennis B. Parkhurst, USAF, May 1998 – Jul 2001
  • Col Albert A. Allenback, USAF, Jul 2001 – Jul 2002
  • Col George C. Vogt, USAF, Jul 2002 – Oct 2005
  • Col Russell D. Hodgkins Jr., USAF, Oct 2005 – Apr 2009
  • Col William R. (Bill) Ward, USAF, Apr 2009 – June 31, 2011
  • Col George H. Ross III, USAF, July 1, 2011 – October 4, 2011
  • Col Paul D. Gloyd II, USAF, October 4, 2011 – May 2014
  • Col Jay Updegraff, USAF, May 2014 – Aug 2014
  • Col Michael D. Tyynismaa, USAF, Aug 2014 – Apr 2019
  • Col Mark A. Wootan, USAF, Apr 2019 – Aug 2023[13]
  • Col Aaron D. Reid, USAF, Aug 2023 - Present[14]

Notes

  1. Change made upon adoption of the Constitution and Bylaws of the CAP Corporation made official on October 1, 2012.
  2. USAF approved the grade of Brigadier General, CAP, via order PANHQ 9, March 15, 1968
  3. On December 1, 2002, the Air Force Chief of Staff, General John P. Jumper, announced that the position of National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol would be promoted from a Brig Gen to a Maj Gen. Subsequently, the Vice National Commander Position was promoted from a Col to a Brig Gen.[8]
  4. On August 6, 2007, the Civil Air Patrol Board of Governors suspended the CAP national commander, Maj Gen Antonio J. Pineda, for a period of up to 180 days. Brig Gen Amy S. Courter, CAP national vice commander, assumed the duties of the National Commander during this period.[9]
  5. On October 2, 2007, the Civil Air Patrol Board of Governors voted 9-1 to remove Antonio Pineda from his position as National Commander. He was removed from the CAP and stripped of his two-star general's rank after NEWS OF THE FORCE, a military news e-zine based in Tampa, Fla., first broke the story that Pineda had cheated on his Air Force Air Command and Staff College tests.[10]
  6. Maj Gen Amy Courter was unanimously elected to the position of National Commander on August 7, 2008, during a live webcast. She is the first woman to be elected to the position by the National Board.

References

  1. "Constitution and Bylaws 2016" (PDF). gocivilairpatrol.com. August 27, 2021.
  2. af.mil Civil Air Patrol-U.S. Air Force Accessed 14 October 2022
  3. "Spaatz Award Fact Sheet" (PDF). gocivilairpatrol.com. March 2018.
  4. Grade & Position Pamphlet - Charles Composite Squadron Accessed 11 October 2022
  5. "Major General Edward D. Phelka" (PDF). gocivilairpatrol.com. August 26, 2021.
  6. Ohio Wing web page created by National Historian Bio of Gen Johnson
  7. "GENERAL FREDERIC H. SMITH JR. > U.S. Air Force > Biography Display". www.af.mil. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  8. "Upgraded: Civil Air Patrol Commanders". Aero News Network. November 30, 2002. Retrieved October 20, 2023.
  9. "U.S. Civil Air Patrol's Board of Governors suspends CAP national commander". CAP News Online. August 6, 2007. Retrieved August 7, 2007.
  10. Archived August 31, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  11. Ohio Wing web page created by National Historian Bio of Gen Johnson
  12. "GENERAL FREDERIC H. SMITH JR. > U.S. Air Force > Biography Display". www.af.mil. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  13. "Colonel Mark A. Wootan" (PDF). gocivilairpatrol.com. August 27, 2021.
  14. "Colonel Aaron D. Reid" (PDF). gocivilairpatrol.com. Retrieved October 20, 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.