Jeremiah Denton, U.S. Senator

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Jeremiah Andrew Denton, Jr.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, United States
Death: March 28, 2014 (89)
Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States
Place of Burial: Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Jeremiah Andrew Denton, Sr.; Jeremiah Andrew Denton and Irene Claudia Steele Denton
Husband of Private
Father of Private; Private; Private; Private; Private and 3 others
Brother of Peyton Steele Denton

Occupation: Senator / Rear Admiral
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Jeremiah Denton, U.S. Senator

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremiah_Denton

Jeremiah Andrew Denton, Jr. (July 15, 1924 – March 28, 2014) was a Rear Admiral and Naval Aviator in the United States Navy and, following his retirement from naval service, was a United States Senator from the state of Alabama.

He spent almost eight years as a prisoner of war (POW) in North Vietnam and later wrote a book that became a film about those experiences. Denton is best known from this period of his life for the 1966 televised press conference in which he was forced to participate as an American POW by his North Vietnamese captors. He used the opportunity to communicate successfully and to confirm for the first time to the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence and Americans that American POWs were being tortured in North Vietnam. He repeatedly blinked his eyes in Morse code during the interview, spelling out the word, "T-O-R-T-U-R-E". http://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeremiah-denton-ex-senator-and-vietnam-...

Early life and military career

The oldest of three brothers, Denton was the son of Jeremiah, Sr. and Irene (Steele) Denton.

Denton attended McGill Institute and Spring Hill College in Mobile, Alabama. In June 1943, he entered the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, and graduated three years later in the accelerated Class of 1947. His 34-year naval career included service on a variety of ships and on aircraft, including airships (blimps). His principal field of endeavor was naval operations. He also served as a test pilot, flight instructor, and commanding officer of an attack squadron flying the A-6 Intruder.

In 1957, he was credited with revolutionizing naval strategy and tactics for nuclear war as architect of the "Haystack Concept." This strategy called for concealing aircraft carriers from radar by intermingling with commercial shipping and avoiding formations suggestive of a naval fleet. The strategy was simulated in maneuvers and demonstrated effectiveness, allowing two aircraft carrier fleets thirty-five simulated atomic launches before aggressor aircraft and submarines could repel them. He went on to serve on the staff of the Commander, U.S. Sixth Fleet at the rank of Commander (O-5) as Fleet Air Defense Officer.

Denton graduated from the Armed Forces Staff College and the Naval War College, where his thesis on international affairs received top honors by earning the prestigious President's Award. In 1964, he received the degree of Master of Arts in International Affairs from George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

Prisoner of war (POW)

Denton served as United States Naval Aviator during the Vietnam War and was the Commanding Officer of Attack Squadron Seventy-Five (VA-75) aboard the aircraft carrier USS Independence (CVA-62). On 18 July 1965, then-Commander Denton was flying an A-6A Intruder (Bureau Number 151577) off the Independence with Lieutenant (JG) Bill Tschudy, his navigator/bombardier, leading twenty-eight planes on a bombing mission. They ejected when their jet was shot down over the city of Thanh Hoa in North Vietnam, and they were captured and taken prisoner by the North Vietnamese.

Denton and Tschudy were both held as prisoners of war for almost eight years, four of which were spent in solitary confinement. Denton is best known from this period of his life for the 1966 televised press conference in which he was forced to participate as an American POW by his North Vietnamese captors. He used the opportunity to communicate successfully and to confirm for the first time to the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence and Americans that American POWs were being tortured in North Vietnam. He repeatedly blinked his eyes in Morse code during the interview, spelling out the word, "T-O-R-T-U-R-E". He was also questioned about his support for the U.S. war in Vietnam, to which he replied: "I don't know what is happening, but whatever the position of my government is, I support it fully. Whatever the position of my government, I believe in it, yes sir. I am a member of that government, and it is my job to support it, and I will as long as I live." While a prisoner, he was promoted to the rank of Captain. Denton was later awarded the Navy Cross and several other decorations, mostly for heroism while a prisoner of war.

Denton was put in the "Hanoi Hilton" and the "Zoo" prison and prison camp and "Little Vegas" and "Alcatraz" prisons. In "Alcatraz", he became part of a group of American POWs known as the "Alcatraz Gang". The group consisted of James Mulligan, George Thomas Coker, George McKnight, James Stockdale, Harry Jenkins, Sam Johnson, Howard Rutledge, Robert Shumaker, Ronald Storz and Nels Tanner. They were put in "Alcatraz" and solitary confinement to separate them from other POWs because their strong resistance led other POWs in resisting their captors. "Alcatraz" was a special facility in a courtyard behind the North Vietnamese Ministry of National Defense, located about one mile away from Hoa Lo Prison. Each of the American POWs spent day and night in windowless 3-by-9-foot (0.91 m × 2.74 m) cells mostly in irons.

On February 12, 1973, both Denton and Tschudy were released in Hanoi by the North Vietnamese along with numerous other American POWs during Operation Homecoming. Stepping off the jet back home in uniform, Denton said: "We are honored to have had the opportunity to serve our country under difficult circumstances. We are profoundly grateful to our Commander-in-Chief and to our nation for this day. God bless America." The speech has a prominent place in the 1987 documentary, Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam.

Post captivity

Denton was hospitalized briefly at the Naval Hospital Portsmouth, Virginia, and then was assigned to the staff of Commander, Naval Air Forces, U.S. Atlantic Fleet. In January 1974, Denton became the commandant of the Armed Forces Staff College, now known as the Joint Forces Staff College. He stepped down as commandant in April 1975 and continued to work at the college until June 1977. He finished his active duty service at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, and retired from the Navy on November 1, 1977 with the rank of Rear Admiral.

He wrote his book in 1976, When Hell was in Session, detailing his detention as an American POW in North Vietnam. The book was later turned into a television movie of the same title, starring Hal Holbrook as Denton. He accepted a position with the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN) as a consultant to CBN founder and friend, Pat Robertson, from 1978 to 1980. During his time with CBN, both Denton and Robertson repeatedly expressed military support for the Contra forces in Nicaragua. In 1981, he founded and chaired the National Forum Foundation.

Political career

Denton ran as a Republican for a U.S. Senate seat from his home state of Alabama and achieved a surprise victory over Democrat Jim E. Folsom, Jr., who had defeated the incumbent, Donald W. Stewart, in the Democratic primary. In doing so, he became the only retired admiral to be elected to the United States Senate, as well as the first Republican since Reconstruction to represent Alabama in the U.S. Senate, and the first Catholic to be elected to statewide office in Alabama. In the U.S. Senate, he compiled a solidly conservative voting record. He was featured in a 1981 article in Time Magazine called, "The Admiral from Alabama".

In 1986, he narrowly lost his bid for reelection to 7th District Congressman Richard Shelby, who later became a Republican in 1994.

Personal life

In 2007, his wife, Jane, died. They had been married for sixty-one years.

Denton died of complications from an heart ailment at a hospice in Virginia Beach on March 28, 2014. He was 89 years old.

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A native of Mobile, Mobile County, Jeremiah A. Denton Jr. (1924-2014) was the first Republican senator elected from Alabama since the end of the Reconstruction era. While in the U.S. Senate and during his career thereafter, Denton advocated positions based in his conservative Catholic upbringing, working to restrict funding for abortions, eliminate teenage pregnancy, and allow prayer in public schools. He is also widely remembered for his lengthy time spent as a prisoner of war (POW) in North Vietnam while serving in the U.S. Navy and his strong advocacy for national defense.

Denton was born in Mobile on July 15, 1924, to Jeremiah Denton Sr. and Irene Claudia Steele Denton, whose family traced its heritage back to the French Catholic founders of Mobile. During Denton's childhood, his father held a variety of jobs and moved the family often, prompting his mother to return to Mobile with Jeremiah and his two brothers and later divorce his father. Denton graduated from McGill Institute, where he excelled at sports and was voted class president. He also attended Spring Hill College in Mobile, joining the ROTC program and successfully working for an appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy. He graduated with honors on June 5, 1946, and married Jane Maury, whom he met shortly after high school, the following day. The couple would have seven children. While in the Navy, Denton served as a test pilot, flight instructor, and squadron leader. He was stationed in many places, including Florida, Hawaii, Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia, and France as part of the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean Sea. He also developed nuclear weapons strategies and tactics for the Navy. In 1963, he returned to school, attending the Naval War College in Newport Rhode Island and earning a masters' degree in international relations from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. in 1964. The following year in June, he was assigned to the USS Independence (CVA-62), which was deployed off the coast of North Vietnam.

Days after assuming command of an attack squadron, on July 18, 1965, Denton led a bombing mission over North Vietnam and was shot down and captured. He spent 48 of his 91 months of imprisonment in solitary confinement, one of the longest periods of any American POW. Denton gained national attention in 1966 when he was observed blinking T-O-R-T-U-R-E in Morse Code while being interviewed by a Japanese television film crew for a North Vietnamese propaganda film. The film was smuggled out and sold by the film crew to a U.S. television network and played on national television; it confirmed that American POWs were being subjected to torture. Denton subsequently received the worst of many torture sessions that had occurred during the early years of his confinement.

While in prison, Denton urged other prisoners to resist their captors to maintain morale and discipline and was promoted to captain. During this time, Jane Denton became a vocal advocate for improving the treatment of POWs and was credited with helping to hasten their release. After the Paris Peace Accords were signed, Denton was on the first planeload of U.S. prisoners released February 12, 1973, and as the ranking officer, was the first to exit the plane at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. He was greeted there by Commander in Chief of the United States Pacific Command and fellow Alabamian Noel Gayler. In April 1973, he was promoted to rear admiral and after arriving in his hometown of Mobile, received a hero's welcome with one of the largest parades in the city's history. Denton then served as commandant of the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia, until he retired, with numerous military decorations, from the Navy in 1977. He also wrote a book, When Hell Was in Session, recounting his POW experiences, that was made into an NBC television movie in 1979 starring Hal Holbrook. Denton strongly defended most of America's actions in Vietnam.

Shortly after returning to Mobile in 1977, Denton founded the Coalition for Decency in response to a perceived decline in America's moral values. Denton targeted the entertainment industry and was particularly distressed by the legalization of abortion and the increase in illicit drug use and the sexual revolution that had occurred during the time of his imprisonment. In 1983, he would reinvent the Coalition for Decency as the National Forum Foundation, and it would serve as a platform to promote conservative social views and increased military spending. In 1979, Alabama Republicans asked Denton to run for the Senate against the increasingly vulnerable incumbent, Democrat Donald W. Stewart, but he declined. After the party recruited former Democratic congressman Armistead I. Selden, Denton changed his mind and declared his candidacy for the primary, claiming he did so because he believed that Pres. Jimmy Carter's response to the recent Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was inadequate. In somewhat of an upset, he eliminated Selden and went on to defeat James Folsom Jr., who had beaten Stewart in the Democratic primary.

In the Senate, Denton served on the Labor and Human Resources Committee and chaired its subcommittee on aging, family, and human services, as well as the Senate Judiciary, Veterans Affairs, and Armed Services committees. He supported legislation promoting abstinence education for unmarried teenagers and authored the Adolescent Family Life Act, which provided services for pregnant teenagers while also involving the teens' parents and promoting adoption as an option. A staunch opponent of abortion, he helped pass legislation prohibiting the use of federal money to fund the procedure for participants in certain federal health care programs. He promoted the Equal Access Act, which has enabled religious organizations to use school property on equal terms with other organizations, and he spoke out against the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Wallace vs. Jaffree, which overturned Alabama's law allowing for one minute of silence in public schools.

On the Judiciary Committee, Denton was involved in the Senate hearings to confirm Sandra Day O'Connor as Supreme Court justice. He expressed frustration that O'Connor would not say how she would vote on abortion and right-to-life cases, possibly setting a precedent for future nomination hearings. Denton ultimately abstained from voting and was the only senator who did not vote in favor of O'Connor's confirmation. In contrast to Alabamian Howell Heflin, Denton supported future senator Jeff Sessions in a failed bid for a federal judgeship. In addition, he opposed an extension and amendment of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 because he claimed it unfairly penalized the South and had subjected Mobile to a lengthy lawsuit, Mobile v. Bolden (1980). Denton served as chair of its subcommittee on security and terrorism, successfully sponsoring numerous pieces of anti-terrorist legislation. He also created a program to supply humanitarian assistance to civil-war-torn El Salvador that was implemented in other countries and pushed reforms to ease the route to U.S. citizenship for children in Asia who were born out of wedlock to U.S. servicemen. Throughout his career in the Senate, Denton frequently worked with Democrats to find solutions without sacrificing his principles.

Finding little time to campaign in Alabama for his reelection, Denton was narrowly defeated in the 1986 election by U.S. congressman Richard Shelby, who was then a Democrat. After leaving the Senate, Denton remained active promoting conservative views and advocating for strong national defense. He continued to lead the National Forum Foundation, which became the Admiral Jeremiah Denton Foundation in 2004, headquartered in Mobile. It now has several affiliate offices. The organization provides humanitarian assistance and development programs overseas and advocates against the separation of church and state in the United States. In September 2007, Denton and his wife moved to Williamsburg, Virginia, where Jane died the following November. In 2011, he married Mary Belle Bordone. Denton continued to serve on a number of college and foundation boards and attend speaking engagements until his death on March 28, 2014. Denton was buried with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, on July 22, 2014. Denton's senatorial and campaign papers are housed at Auburn University's Special Collections and Archives in the Ralph Brown Draughon Library. In 2019, the U.S. Navy named a destroyer in Denton's honor.

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Jeremiah Denton, U.S. Senator's Timeline

1924
July 15, 1924
Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, United States
2014
March 28, 2014
Age 89
Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States