
28 October 1925: The court martial of Colonel William (“Billy”) Mitchell, Air Service, United States Army, began at Washington, D.C. For his criticism of the U.S. Navy’s leadership in regard to a number of deadly aviation accidents, he was charged with eight counts of insubordination.
(Mitchell had been returned to his permanent rank of colonel after completing his term as Assistant Chief of the Air Service, during which he retained the temporary rank of brigadier general that he had held during World War I.)
Billy Mitchell had been the senior American air officer in France during World War I. He was a determined advocate for the advancement of military air power and encouraged his officers to compete in air races and attempt to set aviation records to raise the Air Service’ public profile. He gained great notoriety when he bombed and sank several captured German warships to demonstrate the effectiveness of airplanes against ships.

His outspoken advocacy resulted in the famous Court Martial of Billy Mitchell, in which a military court consisting of twelve senior Army officers found Mitchell guilty of insubordination. He was reduced in rank and suspended for five years without pay.
Major General Douglas MacArthur (later, General of the Army, a five-star rank) said that the order to serve on the court was, “. . . one of the most distasteful orders I ever received.”
Mitchell resigned from the Army and continued to advocate for air power. He died in 1936.
After his death, President Franklin D. Roosevelt elevated Billy Mitchell to the rank of Major General on the retired officers list. The North American Aviation B-25 twin-engine medium bomber was named “Mitchell” in recognition of General Mitchell’s efforts to build up the military air capabilities of the United States.

© 2016, Bryan R. Swopes
The biggest problem I can see with General Mitchell`s court-martial is that he was right about what he was trying to prove and the Army brass knew it. They had a real bad case of the denials.
Thanks, Jim. General MacArthur wrote, “That he was wrong in the violence of his language is self-evident; that he was right in his thesis is equally true and incontrovertible.”
Love these articles. Keep them coming. Any Code?
Milwaukee, Wisconsin airport is named in honor of General Mitchell.
So is the cadet’s dining hall at the US Air Force Academy – Mitchell Hall. Food’s pretty good too!
If you got a chance to eat between the incessant questioning of the upperclassmen.
Great story on a great man. I loved the movie