Alfred Goldberg – Author of the Warren Report Dies
Alfred Goldberg DOD Historian - Washington Post Photo
Alfred
Goldberg, the US Air Force and Pentagon historian, who wrote the Warren Report,
dies at the age of 102.
Years
ago, when I called him at the Pentagon, Goldberg told me that he was about to
retire. As he had also wrote the history
of the Air Force during WWII and the Pentagon on 9/11, I told him my father had
served as a waist gunner on a B-17 in the 8th Army Air Force during
the war, and my godmother’s brother, Admiral William Fallon, was in the
Pentagon when it was hit on 9/11.
When I
asked him about his role on the Warren Commission he explained to me that
Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren had called him in and told him he didn’t want
the final report to read like a lawyer’s brief, as each chapter would be
written by different attorneys, so Gold berg was hired to write the narrative
of the report so normal people could read and understand it.
Goldberg
said he also wrote the entire Appendex 12 called Speculations and Rumors that
he tries to set straight, although Joachim Joestein had a few words to say
about that.
Joachim Joestein: https://jfkcountercoup.blogspot.com/2015/?m=1
Washington Post Obit: Washington Post
Boston
Globe Obit: https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/09/10/metro/alfred-goldberg-historian-who-helped-probe-jfk-assassination-dies-105/
WR
Appendex 12 - Speculation and Rumors: https://www.archives.gov/research/jfk/warren-commission-report/appendix-12.html
JFKCountercoup
2013 – DOD Historians Alfred Goldberg and Rudolph Winnacker: https://jfkcountercoup.blogspot.com/2013/09/alfred-goldberg-and-rudolph-winnacker.html?m=1
Alfred
Goldberg (Col. USAFR)
http://www.history.defense.gov/goldberg.shtml
Chief DOD Historian 34
years
Alfred
Goldberg
Past
Chief Historian
October
28, 1973 – November 28, 2007
Dr.
Alfred Goldberg, an eminent and respected military historian, served as the
Chief Historian for the Office of the Secretary of Defense for 34 years. He
began his service to the United States in 1942 with the U.S. Army, rising from
the rank of private to captain and deploying overseas with the Army Air Forces
to England and France. He worked in various capacities, ultimately as a field
historian. He left active duty in 1946, but remained in the reserves and
retired from the Air Force in 1978 as a colonel.
From
1946 to 1965, Dr. Goldberg worked for the U.S. Air Force Historical Division as
a senior historian. During that period, in addition to earning a Ph.D. in
history from The Johns Hopkins University in 1950, he was a Visiting Fellow at
Kings College, University of London in 1962–63; a lecturer at the University of
Maryland for many years; and a recipient of a Social Science Research Council
Fellowship. In 1964 Chief Justice Earl Warren brought him onto the Warren
Commission staff, where Dr. Goldberg served as a historical advisor and as
co-author and co-editor of the Warren Commission Report. From 1965 to 1973, Dr.
Goldberg was a senior staff member at RAND and also lectured at the
University of Southern California and the University of California at Los
Angeles.
In 1973,
Dr. Goldberg assumed duties as the chief historian with OSD. He received the
Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award and the Presidential
Meritorious Award. He was a long-time member of the National Historical Publications
and Records Commission, whose members include distinguished historians,
archivists, and members of the House of Representatives, the Senate, and the
Supreme Court. Keenly aware of the historic significance of the attack on the
Pentagon on September 11, 2001, Dr. Goldberg joined with other military
historians in documenting the event and its effect on the Pentagon and the
military and civilian workforce.
Dr.
Goldberg is the author or editor of numerous historical books and articles,
many of which have earned special recognition and prizes. Most notably, he is
co-author of the Army Air Forces in World War II (7 volumes); editor
and co-author of A History of the U.S. Air Force 1907–1957; co-editor of
the Department of Defense: Documents on Establishment and Organization,
1947–1978; co-author of The Department of Defense, 1947-1997—Organization
and Leaders; author of The Pentagon: The First Fifty Years; general
editor, History of the Office of the Secretary of Defense (5
volumes); and co-author of Pentagon 9/11. In 2011, Dr. Goldberg received
the American Historical Association's Herbert Feis Award for distinguished
contributions to public history.
Billkelly3@gmail.com
1 comment:
another escapee
Post a Comment