Miguel Nava '17
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GEORGE C. CALNAN, LT, USN

From USNA Virtual Memorial Hall
George Calnan '20

Date of birth: January 18, 1900

Date of death: April 4, 1933

Age: 33

Lucky Bag

From the 1920 Lucky Bag:

1920 Calnan LB.jpg

George Charles Calnan

Boston, Massachusetts

IF you want to get the straight dope about George, just ask any Plebe in the Sixth company or in the Barracks and they will tell you all about him. In fact, his name and fame have spread far beyond his own deck;—George has gone in strong for the juvenile training stuff. But whenever you meet him he always comes down with this, "made a resolution to-day; am going to lay off the Plebes and treat 'em like brothers."

The Academic departments have always been ready to cry Kamerad to this Boston savior, and he takes their monthly offerings as a mental relaxation.

"Bilged cold, gentlemen, bilged cold, I tell you," is his standby after every exam, but he never gets less than a 3.4.

When "Cal" was a Plebe he was ever ready to catch us up for those little slips of language so common hereabouts. But a month on the U. S. S. Reina Mercedes slightly dulled his sensibilities.

"Oh, I just think that tall, handsome, black-haired boy from Massachusetts is splendid. Why doesn't he come to your hops more often?" This was on the occasion of his first and only appearance as a knight of the waxed floor, and the young lady spoke from her heart.

His Youngster year was spent in the old Eighth company, hence those diagonals at the start of First Class year.

However, sterling worth can not be hidden forever, so before many moons George was the proud possessor of a pair of buzzards.

Honors: Buzzard; Star, 3; Fencing fNt; Captain Fencing Team; Fencing Squad, 4, 3, 1; Academy Dueling Swords Champion, 3.


The Class of 1920 was graduated in June 1919 due to World War I. The entirety of 2nd class (junior) year was removed from the curriculum.

1920 Calnan LB.jpg

George Charles Calnan

Boston, Massachusetts

IF you want to get the straight dope about George, just ask any Plebe in the Sixth company or in the Barracks and they will tell you all about him. In fact, his name and fame have spread far beyond his own deck;—George has gone in strong for the juvenile training stuff. But whenever you meet him he always comes down with this, "made a resolution to-day; am going to lay off the Plebes and treat 'em like brothers."

The Academic departments have always been ready to cry Kamerad to this Boston savior, and he takes their monthly offerings as a mental relaxation.

"Bilged cold, gentlemen, bilged cold, I tell you," is his standby after every exam, but he never gets less than a 3.4.

When "Cal" was a Plebe he was ever ready to catch us up for those little slips of language so common hereabouts. But a month on the U. S. S. Reina Mercedes slightly dulled his sensibilities.

"Oh, I just think that tall, handsome, black-haired boy from Massachusetts is splendid. Why doesn't he come to your hops more often?" This was on the occasion of his first and only appearance as a knight of the waxed floor, and the young lady spoke from her heart.

His Youngster year was spent in the old Eighth company, hence those diagonals at the start of First Class year.

However, sterling worth can not be hidden forever, so before many moons George was the proud possessor of a pair of buzzards.

Honors: Buzzard; Star, 3; Fencing fNt; Captain Fencing Team; Fencing Squad, 4, 3, 1; Academy Dueling Swords Champion, 3.


The Class of 1920 was graduated in June 1919 due to World War I. The entirety of 2nd class (junior) year was removed from the curriculum.

Loss

George was lost when the airship USS Akron (ZRS 4) crashed off the coast of New Jersey on April 4, 1933.

Other Information

From researcher Kathy Franz:

George attended the Frederic W. Lincoln school and then graduated from English High school in 1915. Congressman James A. Gallivan nominated George as second alternate to the Naval Academy in March, 1916.

George represented the United States in the Olympics of 1920.

In the April, 1923, New England fencing championship, he won the foils championship. He came in second in the duelling sword contest and the saber contest.

His passport application in June, 1923, showed that he was going to England, Holland, France and Belgium. He was 6 feet tall with hazel eyes and dark brown hair. He had a large scar along his right arm.

George was the national foils champion for most of the years between 1925 and 1930.

In December, 1927, George was on board the steamship Penacook when he was summoned to the S4 disaster in Provincetown. Three special machines of German invention were sent from the Boston Navy Yard. The machines, called the “Inhabad,” could revive a suffocation victim even after 48 hours had elapsed. The victim’s arms were raised and lowered over the head at a breathing rate of 19 times per minute while oxygen was supplied through a mask fitting over the face. The heart was mechanically activated, and only George knew how to operate the machine.

In August, 1928, George competed in the individual epee championship competition at the Amsterdam Olympics finishing third.

On August 20, 1932, George married Lillian Collier in Swanton, Vermont. His best man was Col. Henry Breckenridge, a close friend of Charles A. Lindbergh.

In December that year, George was one of 10 finalists out of 100 nominees for the Sullivan memorial award. It was given annually by the Amateur Athletic Union to the athlete representing the highest ideals and attainment in amateur athletics.

On April 7, 1933, members of his high school cadet corps paid tribute to George at their annual prize drill.

A fencing trophy was named in George’s honor that went to the team winning the three weapon championship at a tournament in New York City in February, 1934. At the time of his death., George was vice president of the Amateur Fencers’ League of America. The A. F. L. A. approved the trophy.

George’s father Patrick was a brewery teamster, mother Lena, brother Charles, and sister Margaret. His parents were born in Ireland.

Fencing

From Find A Grave:

Lt. Calnan was a Champion swordsman, and competed in Fencing in the 1928 and 1932 Olympic Games. In Amsterdam in the 1928 Games, he won a bronze medal, which was a major upset in an era when American fencers were not usually competitive internationally. Calnan competed again in 1932 winning two team bronze medals, just a year before his death.

Additional information provided by contributor Dave & Joyce Humphrey

He is a member of the US Fencing Hall of Fame.

From Together We Served:

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 to 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.

He did not begin fencing until Plebe year.

Photographs

Video

Akron's executive officer, LCDR Herbert V. Wiley '15, one of only three survivors, was filmed shortly after the crash:

Navy Directories & Officer Registers

The "Register of Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps" was published annually from 1815 through at least the 1970s; it provided rank, command or station, and occasionally billet until the beginning of World War II when command/station was no longer included. Scanned copies were reviewed and data entered from the mid-1840s through 1922, when more-frequent Navy Directories were available.

The Navy Directory was a publication that provided information on the command, billet, and rank of every active and retired naval officer. Single editions have been found online from January 1915 and March 1918, and then from three to six editions per year from 1923 through 1940; the final edition is from April 1941.

The entries in both series of documents are sometimes cryptic and confusing. They are often inconsistent, even within an edition, with the name of commands; this is especially true for aviation squadrons in the 1920s and early 1930s.

Alumni listed at the same command may or may not have had significant interactions; they could have shared a stateroom or workspace, stood many hours of watch together… or, especially at the larger commands, they might not have known each other at all. The information provides the opportunity to draw connections that are otherwise invisible, though, and gives a fuller view of the professional experiences of these alumni in Memorial Hall.

January 1920
Ensign, USS Delaware

Others at this command:
January 1922
Ensign, under instruction, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

May 1923
Lieutenant (j.g.), under instruction, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Others at this command:
July 1923
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Others at this command:
September 1923
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Others at this command:
November 1923
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Others at this command:
January 1924
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Others at this command:
March 1924
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Others at this command:
May 1924
Lieutenant (j.g.), tempo, Navy Yard, New York
July 1924
Lieutenant (j.g.), tempo, Navy Yard, New York

Others at this command:
September 1924
Ensign, tempo, Navy Yard, New York
November 1924
Ensign, tempo, Navy Yard, New York
January 1925
Lieutenant (j.g.), tempo, Navy Yard, New York
March 1925
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, New York
May 1925
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, New York
July 1925
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, New York

Others at this command:
October 1925
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, New York
January 1926
Lieutenant (j.g.), Navy Yard, New York
October 1926
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York
January 1927
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York
April 1927
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York
October 1927
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York

Others at this command:

Others at or embarked at Navy Yard, New York:
2LT Lofton Henderson '26 (Marine Barracks)
January 1928
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York

Others at this command:
April 1928
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York

Others at this command:
July 1928
Lieutenant, Navy Yard, New York

Others at this command:
October 1930
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles

January 1931
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles

April 1931
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles

July 1931
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles

October 1931
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles

January 1932
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles

April 1932
Lieutenant, USS Los Angeles


Class of 1920

George is one of 27 members of the Class of 1920 on Virtual Memorial Hall.

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