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Pierpont Morgan Hamilton

Pierpont Morgan Hamilton
Pierpont Morgan Hamilton, Medal of Honor recipient.jpg
Hamilton as a brigadier general, circa 1949.
Born (1898-08-03)August 3, 1898
Tuxedo Park, New York
Died March 4, 1982(1982-03-04) (aged 83)
Place of burial Santa Barbara Cemetery, Santa Barbara, California
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Air Force
United States Army Air Forces
United States Army Air Service
Years of service 1917–1918, 1942–1959
Rank Major General
Battles/wars World War II
*Operation Torch
Awards Medal of Honor

Pierpont Morgan Hamilton (August 3, 1898 – March 4, 1982) was a general officer in the United States Air Force, and the scion of two illustrious families in American history.

As a United States Army Air Forces officer in World War II, he was the recipient of the United States military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor. Hamilton and Col. Demas T. Craw were the first Army Air Forces recipients of the Medal in the European-Mediterranean theater of World War II and the only AAF members to be awarded that decoration for valor not involving air combat.

Hamilton was born in Tuxedo Park, New York on August 3, 1898, to William Pierson Hamilton (great-grandson of Alexander Hamilton) and Juliet Pierpont Morgan (daughter of John Pierpont Morgan). His siblings included Helen Morgan Hamilton, Laurens Morgan Hamilton, Alexander Morgan Hamilton, and Elizabeth Hamilton. He attended the Groton School and Harvard University, where he eventually attained both his bachelor's (1920) and master's degree (1946).

On August 7, 1917, after the United States joined World War I, he left Harvard, where he was a sophomore, to enlist as an aviation cadet, and was assigned to ground training at the School of Military Aeronautics at Cornell University. Upon his graduation on October 13, 1917, he was transferred to the Aeronautical General Supply Depot and Concentration Barracks at Hazelhurst Field, Garden City, New York, and assigned to the foreign service detachment to complete his flight training overseas. Illness prevented him from sailing with his detachment, and he was reassigned to flight training at Ellington Field, Texas, on February 6, 1918.


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