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Revision as of 00:59, 7 June 2017

Morton T. Seligman (July 1, 1895 – July 9, 1967) was an American naval aviator. A two-time awardee of the Navy Cross. Seligman was involved in a security breach in 1942 that stopped his naval career and forced his retirement in 1944.

Early life and naval career

Morton Tinslar Seligman was born on July 1, 1895 in Salt Lake City, Utah, in a family of New Mexico pioneers. Seligman graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1919. Immediately following World War I Lieutenant (j.g.) Seligman commanded the former [[submarine chaser SC-272 on minesweeping operations in the [{North Sea]]. He was awarded the Navy Cross for this work. He then became a naval aviator and was assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga by 1929. Promoted to Lieutenant Commander, he was commander of the Tophatters fighter squadron in 1933-34. In 1940 Selgman was a technical advisor in a Hollywood movie production. Promoted to Commander, he became the executive officer of the USS Lexington in 1941. He served in that post through the Battle of the Coral Sea in which the Lexington was sunk and was awarded a gold star decoration for his Navy Cross for his service in that action, in lieu of a second award of the Navy Cross. Seligman was credited with effective management of the ship's damage control parties in an ultimately hopeless effort, allowing the ship to be abandoned in an orderly manner with relatively small loss of life.[1] He was one of the last men to leave the ship.

Tribune incident

Many of the survivors of the Lexington were repatriated back to the United States aboard the USS Barnett. Among the Barnett's passengers was Australian-American journalist Stanley Johnston, who had been the sole journalist present about the Lexington during the Coral Sea action. Reporting for the Chicago Tribune, Johnston was on his way back to file his stories about those events. Seligman knew Johnston and may have shared a cabin with him aboard the Barnett. Johnston obtained access to a fleet dispatch containing an intelligence estimate of Japanese forces immediately before the 1942 Midway action that indicated clear foreknowledge of Japanese intentions and movements, a document to which Seligman had access. Johnston's subsequent story in the Tribune raised alarm in the White House and Navy that the Japanese, reading the story, would realize that their codes were broken and that they would change ciphers.[1][2]

At the urging of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who viewed the Tribune and its publisher as an enemy, and Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox, Attorney General Francis Biddle was pressed to prosecute Johnston and others at the Tribune for harm to national security under the Espionage Act. At the same time the Navy investigated the source of the breach. No indictments were forthcoming from the grand jury that was convened, in part because the necessary evidence was too sensitive for use in a trial. Investigators established that officers on board the Barnett were careless in their handling of sensitive material, and that Johnston was able to see some of it. Seligman was blamed for the leak, but due to wartime secrecy was not brought before any formal hearing. Instead, Seligman was assigned to shore duty, an unusual situation for a high-ranking decorated officer who up to that time had been on a track to flag rank. Promotion to Captain, the expected next step, was denied after the Chief of Naval Operations, Fleet Admiral Ernest King, personally intervened with the selection board to prevent promotion, an unprecedented action. After almost two years ashore, Seligman retired in 1944.[1]

Although promotion was denied Seligman on active service, on his retirement Seligman was granted a "tombstone promotion" to Captain. In 1945 he was a technical advisor on the movie A Bell for Adano. Seligman died at age 71 at the Naval Hospital Balboa in San Diego on July 9, 1967.

References

  1. ^ a b c Brennan, Lawrence B. (January 2013). "Spilling the Secret – Captain Morton T. Seligman, U.S. Navy (Retired), U.S. Naval Academy Class of 1919". navyhistory.org. Naval Historical Foundation. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  2. ^ Ruane, Michael E. (June 5, 2017). "Unsealed 75 years after the Battle of Midway: New details of an alarming WWII press leak". Washington Post. Retrieved 6 June 2017.