LCDR BURTON F. HAKER, USN
Lucky Bag Yearbook
From the 1940 Lucky Bag:
BURTON FRANK HAKER
Lacrosse N.A., 3, 2, 1.
Loss
Burton was lost on August 19, 1948 when his Skyhawk Association A-4 Skyhawk crashed1 in the Atlantic Ocean while on approach to an aircraft carrier (likely USS Leyte (CV 32)).
He had taken command of Attack Squadron (VA) 72 only a few weeks easier, on July 6.
Other Information
From researcher Kathy Franz:
One week before the December 7 attack on Pearl Harbor, Burton left on the Lurline with Ensign Stanley Hindman (‘39).
His father, Roger, was proprietor of a bowling academy in Compton, California. His mother Hazel died in 1929. Burton married Agnes S. Worley in Camden, North Carolina, on 8/10/1946.
Burton was flying a fighter plane attached to the carrier Leyte on maneuvers when it fell into the sea.
Services were held in the Dixie Kiefer chapel at Quonsett, Rhode Island, where Burton’s wife Agnes lived.
Burton’s Find A Grave page.
Photographs
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.
June 1940
November 1940
April 1941
References
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Previously accessible at http://a4skyhawk.org/content/va-72-blue-hawks-0 ↩︎