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{{short description|US Navy admiral}}
{{Infobox Military Person
{{other uses}}
|name= Hyman George Rickover
{{pp|small=yes}}
|lived= {{birth date|1900|1|27}} or {{birth date|1898|8|24}} &ndash {{death date|1986|7|8}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}}{{Use American English|date=December 2024}}
|placeofbirth= ], ]

|placeofdeath= ], ]
{{Infobox military person
|image= ]
| name = Hyman G. Rickover
|caption=
| image = Hyman Rickover 1955.jpg
|nickname= "Father of the Nuclear Navy"
| image_size =
|allegiance= ]
| alt =
|branch= ]
| caption = Official portrait, 1955
|serviceyears= 1918–1982
| birth_name = Chaim Godalia Rickover
|rank= ]
| nickname = "Father of the Nuclear Navy"; "The Kindly Old Gentleman," or simply "KOG"<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1981/11/14/rickover-is-forced-to-retire/aae1eb3a-b861-4162-bcd9-517598d3f1bf/|title=Rickover Is Forced To Retire|date=November 14, 1981|newspaper=The Washington Post}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/07/24/opinion/l-nuclear-power-plants-would-be-better-the-rickover-way-158986.html|title=Nuclear-Power Plants Would Be Better the Rickover Way|date=July 24, 1986|newspaper=The New York Times}}</ref>
|commands= ]<br/>]
| birth_date = {{birth date|1900|01|27|df=y}}
|unit=
|battles= ]<br/>] | birth_place = ], ]
| death_date = {{death date and age|1986|7|8|1900|1|27|df=y}}
|awards= ] (2)<br/>]<br/>]
| death_place = ], U.S.
|laterwork=
| placeofburial =
| allegiance = United States
| branch = ]
| serviceyears = 1918–1982
| rank = ]
| unit =
| commands = {{USS|Finch|AM-9|6}}<br/>]
| battles = ]
| awards = ] (3)<br/>] (2)<br/>] (2)<br/>]<br/>]
| alma_mater = ]<br/>] (])
| spouse = Ruth D. Masters (1931–1972 (her death); 1 child)<br>Eleonore A. Bednowicz (1974–1986 (his death))
| laterwork =
}} }}
'''Hyman G. Rickover''' (27 January 1900<ref name=USN-bio/> – 8 July 1986) was an ] in the ]. He directed the original development of naval nuclear propulsion and controlled its operations for three decades as director of the U.S. ] office. In addition, he oversaw the development of the ], the world's first commercial ] used for generating electricity. Rickover is also one of seven people who have been awarded two ].
] '''Hyman George Rickover''', ], (], ] or ], ] – ], ]) was known as the "Father of the ]", which as of July 2007 had produced 200 nuclear-powered ], and 23 nuclear-powered ] and ], though many of these U.S. vessels are now decommissioned and others under construction.


Rickover is known as the "Father of the Nuclear Navy," and his influence on the Navy and its warships was of such scope that he "may well go down in history as one of the Navy's most important officers."<ref>PhD dissertation, "Commanding Men and Machines: Admiralship, Technology, and Ideology in the 20th Century U.S. Navy," Hagerott, Mark (2004) http://drum.lib.umd.edu/bitstream/handle/1903/8525/umi-umd-5589.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y</ref> He served in a flag rank for nearly 30 years (1953 to 1982), ending his career as a four-star admiral. His years of service exceeded that of each of the U.S. Navy's five-star fleet admirals—], ], ] and ]—all of whom served on ] after their appointments. Rickover's total of 63 years of active duty service makes him the longest-serving naval officer, as well as the longest-serving member of the U.S armed forces in history.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z095cIB0coAC&pg=PA87 |title=Rickover|access-date=2014-12-12|isbn=978-1574887044|last1=Allen|first1=Thomas B.|last2=Polmar|first2=Norman|date=2007}}</ref><ref name=USN-bio>{{cite web|url=http://www.history.navy.mil/bios/rickover.htm|title=Admiral Hyman G. Rickover – Biography|publisher=History.navy.mil|access-date=2014-12-12|archive-date=February 10, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120210172002/http://www.history.navy.mil/bios/rickover.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="Lurie on Rickover"/>
With his unique personality, political connections, responsibilities and depth of knowledge regarding naval nuclear propulsion, Rickover became the longest-serving active duty military officer in U.S. history with 63 years of continuous service.


Having become a naval ] (EDO) in 1937 after serving as both a surface ship and ] ], his substantial legacy of technical achievements includes the United States Navy's continuing record of zero reactor accidents.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.atomicheritage.org/profile/hyman-g-rickover|title = Hyman G. Rickover}}</ref><ref name="bowman" />
Rickover's substantial legacy of technical achievements includes the United States Navy's continuing record of zero ], as defined by the uncontrolled release of ] subsequent to ] core damage.


==Early life and education==
==Childhood==
Rickover was born Chaim Gdala Rykower to Abraham and Rachel/Ruchla Lea (nee Unger) Rykower, a Polish Jewish family from ] in ]. His parents changed his name to "Hyman" which is derived from ], meaning "life". He did not use his middle name Godalia (a form of '']''), but he substituted "George" when at the Naval Academy.<ref name="auto2">{{cite web|url=https://www.cee.org/sites/default/files/media-pdfs/Admiral_Rickover_brought_the_nuclear_age_to_the_US_Navy.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.cee.org/sites/default/files/media-pdfs/Admiral_Rickover_brought_the_nuclear_age_to_the_US_Navy.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|via=The Center for Excellence in Education|website=examiner.com|date=2015-08-02|first=Karen|last=Holt|title=Admiral Rickover brought the nuclear age to the US Navy}}</ref>
Hyman Rickover was born to a ] family in ] of ], but at that time and prior to ] under ]n occupation. The surname Rickover is derived from the village and the estate of ], located within an hour of ] as is Maków Mazowiecki. The entire Jewish community of Ryki as well as that of Maków Mazowiecki were killed or otherwise died during ]. The Admiral's first name is derived from the Hebrew word חַיִּים (]) meaning "life."


In 1906 (aged six), Rickover made passage to New York City with his mother and sister, fleeing anti-Semitic Russian ]s<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=piQvAQAAIAAJ&q=pogroms|title=Notable Scientists from 1900 to the Present: N–S|access-date=2014-12-12|isbn=978-0787617554|last1=Narins|first1=Brigham|date=2001}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C49YAAAAYAAJ&q=rickover+pogroms|title=Encyclopedia of American Immigration: Paper sons |quote= Born to a Jewish family in a part of Poland under Russian rule in 1900, Rickover fled with his parents to the United States in 1905 in an effort to avoid Russian-instigated pogroms.|via=Books.goole.com|isbn=978-1587656026 |year=2010 |last1=Bankston |first1=Carl Leon }}</ref> during the ]. They joined Abraham, who had made earlier trips there beginning in 1897 to become established.<ref>{{cite book|last=Duncan|first=Francis|title=Rickover : the struggle for excellence|year=2001|publisher=Naval Inst. Press|location=Annapolis, Md.|isbn=1-55750-177-7|page=4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VVwJ9hOTGMMC&pg=PA4|edition=1. print.}}</ref> Rickover's family lived initially on the ] but moved two years later to ], which was a heavily Jewish neighborhood at the time, where Rickover's father continued work as a tailor. Rickover took his first paid job at age nine, earning three cents an hour ({{Inflation|US|0.03|1909|r=2|fmt=eq}}) for holding a light as his neighbor operated a machine. Later, he delivered groceries. He graduated from grammar school at 14.<ref name="time1954">{{Cite magazine | issn = 0040-781X | title = The Man in Tempo 3 | magazine = Time | access-date = 2009-03-06 | date = 1954-01-11 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,819338-2,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080423233511/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,819338-2,00.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = April 23, 2008 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-1-55750-177-6 | page = 7 | last = Duncan | first = Francis | title = Rickover: the struggle for excellence | year = 2001 | publisher = Naval Inst. Press | location = Annapolis, Md.}}</ref>
Escaping the fate of his fellow ethnic citizens, well before World War I the young Rickover immigrated to the ] with his parents, Abraham Rickover and Rachel (] Unger) Rickover, in 1905 after fleeing anti-Semitic ]s. Living initially on the seething East Side of ], the family moved two years later to ], a community of ], where his father continued his work as a tailor. Rickover began work to help support the family at nine years of age, and later said of his childhood that it was a time of "hard work, discipline, and a decided lack of good times."


While attending John Marshall High School in Chicago, where he graduated with honors in ], Rickover held a full-time job delivering Western Union telegrams, through which he became acquainted with ] ]. By way of the intervention of a family friend, Sabath, himself a Czech Jewish immigrant, nominated Rickover for appointment to the ]. Though only a third alternate for a coveted ] appointment, through disciplined self-directed study and good fortune the future four-star admiral passed the entrance exam and was accepted. Rickover attended ] in Chicago and graduated with honors in 1918. He then held a full-time job as a telegraph boy delivering ] telegrams, through which he became acquainted with Congressman ], a Czech Jewish immigrant. Sabath nominated Rickover for appointment to the ]. Rickover was only a third alternate for appointment, but he passed the entrance exam and was accepted.<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 0-471-12296-3 | page = 21 | last = Rockwell | first = Theodore | title = The Rickover Effect | year = 1995 | publisher = John Wiley & Sons | location = Brooklyn, NY }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-1-58566-068-1 | page = 23 | last = Adams | first = Chris | title = Inside the Cold War | year = 1999 | publisher = Air University Press | location = Maxwell Air Force Base, AL}}</ref>


==Early naval career through World War II== == Naval career through World War II ==
Rickover's naval career began in 1918 at the Naval Academy; at this time, attending military academies was considered active duty service, due in part to ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Holzwarth |first1=Larry |date=2022-03-31 |title=This Cantankerous Engineer Built the United States Nuclear Navy |url=https://historycollection.com/this-cantankerous-engineer-built-the-united-states-nuclear-navy/ |access-date=4 November 2023 |website=historycollection.com |publisher=History Collection}}</ref> On 2 June 1922, Rickover graduated 107th out of 540 midshipmen and was commissioned as an ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VVwJ9hOTGMMC&q=Rickover+graduated+540&pg=PA16|title=Rickover|access-date=2014-12-12|isbn=978-1557501776|last1=Duncan|first1=Francis|year=2001}}</ref> He joined the ] {{USS|La Vallette|DD-315|2}} on 5 September 1922. Rickover impressed his commanding officer with his hard work and efficiency, and was made engineer officer on 21 June 1923, becoming the youngest such officer in the ].<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-1-57488-704-4 | page = xiii | last = Allen | first = Thomas B. |author2=Norman Polmar | title = Rickover | year = 2007 | publisher = Brassey's | location = Dulles, VA}}</ref>
Rickover was commissioned as an ] after graduating 107th out of 540 midshipmen in 1922. While awaiting transportation to his first ship on the west coast via the Panama Canal, he received a scholarship to take courses in history and psychology at the ]. Before reporting to his first ship, he spent a brief time on the destroyer Percival because the La Vallette was out at sea. He subsequently reported to the new ] ], where shortly after reporting aboard he had so impressed his commanding officer that he was made engineer officer despite his lack of rank or experience, and became the youngest engineer officer in the squadron less than a year after leaving the Naval Academy.


He next served on board the ] ] before earning a ] (M.Sc.) in ] by way of a year at the ] at the Naval Academy, followed by further work at ]. At Columbia he met his future wife, Ruth D. Masters, a ] and graduate student in international law, whom he married in 1931 after she returned from her doctoral studies at the ] in Paris. Shortly after marrying, Rickover wrote to his parents of his decision to become an ], remaining so the remainder of his life. He next served on board the ] {{USS|Nevada|BB-36|2}} before earning a ] degree in ] from ] in 1930<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gsnbAgAAQBAJ&q=hyman+rickover+columbia&pg=PA107|title=A Lever Long Enough: A History of Columbia's School of Engineering and Applied Science Since 1864|first=Robert|last=McCaughey|date= 2014|publisher=Columbia University Press|via=Google Books|isbn=978-0231537520}}</ref> by way of a year at the ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nps.edu/About/NPSHistory/History.html|title=History of NPS – Naval Postgraduate School|website=www.nps.edu|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130701053235/http://www.nps.edu/About/NPSHistory/History.html|archive-date=2013-07-01}}</ref> and further coursework at Columbia. At the latter institution, he met Ruth D. Masters, a graduate student in international law, whom he married in 1931 after she returned from her doctoral studies at the ] in Paris. Shortly after marrying, Rickover wrote to his parents of his decision to become an ], remaining so for the remainder of his life.<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-0-7425-3699-9 | page = 29 | last = Domhoff | first = G. William |author2=Richard L. Zweigenhaft | title = Diversity in the Power Elite | year = 2006 | publisher = Rowman & Littlefield Pub. | location = Lanham, MD }}</ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20130413210314/http://uticaphoenix.net/voices-of-polonia-admiral-hyman-rickover/ |date=2013-04-13 }} February 8, 2013.</ref>


Rickover had a high regard for the quality of the education he received at Columbia, as demonstrated in this excerpt from a speech he gave at the university some 52 years after attending:
More fond of life on a small ship, and knowing that young officers in the submarine service were advancing quickly, Rickover went to Washington and volunteered for submarine duty. His application was turned down due to his age, at that time 29 years-old. As fate would have it, he ran into his former commanding officer from ''Nevada'' while leaving the building, who interceded successfully on Rickover's behalf. From 1929 to 1933 Rickover qualified for submarine duty and command aboard the ]s ] and ].


<blockquote>Columbia was the first institution that encouraged me to think rather than memorize. My teachers were notable in that many had gained practical engineering experience outside the university and were able to share their experience with their students. I am grateful, among others, to Professors Morecroft, Hehre, and Arendt. Much of what I have subsequently learned and accomplished in engineering is based on the solid foundation of principles I learned from them.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.validlab.com/administration/rickover.html|title=Doing a Job|publisher=Validlab.com|access-date=2014-12-12}}</ref></blockquote>
During 1933, while at the Office of the Inspector of Naval Material in ], Rickover translated the book ''Das Unterseeboot'' (''The Submarine''), by ] Admiral ]. Rickover's translation became a basic text for the U.S. submarine service.


Rickover preferred life on smaller ships, and he also knew that young officers in the ] service were advancing quickly, so he went to Washington and volunteered for submarine duty. His application was turned down due to his age, at that time 29 years. Fortunately for Rickover, he encountered his former commanding officer from ''Nevada'' while leaving the building, who interceded successfully on his behalf. From 1929 to 1933, Rickover qualified for submarine duty and command aboard the submarines {{USS|S-9|SS-114|2}} and {{USS|S-48|SS-159|2}}.<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-0-595-25270-1 | page = 29 | last = Rockwell | first = Theodore | title = The Rickover Effect | year = 2002 | publisher = IUniverse | location = Lincoln, NE }}</ref> While aboard S-48 he was addressed a letter of commendation from the Secretary of the Navy "for rescuing Augustin Pasis… from drowning at the Submarine Base, ], ]."<ref>{{cite web |title=Bureau of Navigation Bulletin No 159, 13 June 1931 |url=https://media.defense.gov/2019/Jul/25/2002162044/-1/-1/1/AH193106.PDF |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://media.defense.gov/2019/Jul/25/2002162044/-1/-1/1/AH193106.PDF |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |publisher=Bureau of Navigation |access-date=23 August 2021}}</ref> While at the Office of the Inspector of Naval Material in ], ] in 1933, Rickover translated ''Das Unterseeboot'' (''The Submarine'') by ] ] Admiral ]. Rickover's translation became a basic text for the U.S. submarine service.<ref name="auto2"/>
In June 1937, he assumed command of the ] ]. Later that year, he was selected as an ] and spent the remainder of his career serving in that specialty.


On 17 July 1937, he reported aboard the ] {{USS|Finch|AM-9|2}} at ], ], and assumed what would be his only ship command with additional duty as Commander, Mine Division Three, Asiatic Fleet. The ] had occurred ten days earlier. In August, ''Finch'' stood out for Shanghai to protect American citizens and interests from the conflict between Chinese and Japanese forces. On 25 September, Rickover was promoted to lieutenant commander, retroactive to 1 July. In October, his designation as an engineering duty officer became effective, and he was relieved of his three-month command of ''Finch'' at Shanghai on 5 October 1937.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00040789/00093|title=American submariner|website=ufdc.ufl.edu}}</ref>
After the December 1941 ] sank five battleships, beginning in April 1942 Rickover was key in the salvage operation of the re-floated ]. In that role he was "a leading figure in putting the ship's electric alternators and motors back into operating condition," enabling the battleship to sail under her own power from Pearl Harbor to Puget Sound Navy Yard. ''California'' completed her reconstruction and returned to combat operations against Japan in May 1944.


Rickover was assigned to the ] in the Philippines, and was transferred shortly thereafter to the Bureau of Engineering in Washington, D.C. Once there, he took up his duties as assistant chief of the Electrical section of the Bureau of Engineering on 15 August 1939.<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-1-55750-177-6 | pages = 63–71 | last = Duncan | first = Francis | title = Rickover | year = 2001 | publisher = Naval Inst. Press | location = Annapolis, MD}}</ref>
Later during the war, his service as head of the Electrical Section in the Bureau of Ships during ] brought him a ] and gave him experience in directing large development programs, choosing talented technical people, and working closely with private industry. During his wartime service, as noted later in a ] ] issue that featured him on its :


On 10 April 1942, after America's entry into ], Rickover flew to ] to organize repairs to the electrical power plant of {{USS|California|BB-44|6}}.<ref>{{cite web | title = Salvage and repair of USS California, December 1941 – October 1942 | access-date = 2009-03-06 | url = http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/ph-ca9.htm | archive-date = January 22, 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120122104549/http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/ph-ca9.htm | url-status = dead }}</ref> Rickover had been promoted to the rank of ] on 1 January 1942, and in late June of that year was made a temporary ]. In late 1944 he appealed for a transfer to an active command. He was sent to investigate inefficiencies at the naval supply depot at ], then was appointed in July 1945 to command of a ship repair facility on ].<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-1-55750-177-6 | pages = 71–77 | last = Duncan | first = Francis | title = Rickover | year = 2001 | publisher = Naval Inst. Press | location = Annapolis, MD}}</ref> Shortly thereafter, his command was destroyed by ], and he subsequently spent some time helping to teach school to Okinawan children.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2019/03/21/message-to-the-fleet-go-lead-yourself/|title=Message to the Fleet: Go lead yourself!|first=Lt Cmdr Jimmy|last=Drennan|date=April 18, 2019|website=Navy Times}}</ref>
<blockquote>"Sharp-tongued Hyman Rickover spurred his men to exhaustion, ripped through red tape, drove contractors into rages. He went on making enemies, but by the end of the war he had won the rank of captain. He had also won a reputation as a man ''who gets things done.''" </blockquote>


Later in the war, his service as head of the Electrical Section in the Bureau of Ships brought him a ] and gave him experience in directing large development programs, choosing talented technical people, and working closely with private industry. '']'' magazine featured him on the cover of its 11 January 1954 issue. The accompanying article described his wartime service:<ref>Polmar; Allen (1982). pp. 109–110; 671 pp.</ref>
==Naval Reactors and the Atomic Energy Commission==
]
In 1946 a project was begun at the ] nuclear-power focused Clinton Laboratory (now the ]) to develop a nuclear electric generating plant. The United States Navy decided to send eight men to this project, including three civilians and one senior and four junior naval officers. Realizing the potential that nuclear energy held for the Navy, Rickover applied.


<blockquote>Sharp-tongued Hyman Rickover spurred his men to exhaustion, ripped through red tape, drove contractors into rages. He went on making enemies, but by the end of the war he had won the rank of captain. He had also won a reputation as a man ''who gets things done.''<ref name=time1954/></blockquote>
Although he was not initially selected, through the intercession of his wartime boss, Admiral Earle Mills, who became the head of the Navy's ] that same year, Rickover was finally sent to Oak Ridge as the deputy manager of the entire project, granting him access to all facilities, projects and reports.


== Naval Reactors and the Atomic Energy Commission ==
Following efforts by physicists , ] and others in the Manhattan Project, he became an early convert to the idea of ] and more specifically, naval nuclear propulsion. Rickover worked with ], the Oak Ridge director of research, both to establish the Oak Ridge School of Reactor Technology and to begin the design of the ] for submarine propulsion. , ,(p. 39, ''The Rickover Effect'' (2002))


{{See also|Naval Reactors}}
In February 1949, he received an assignment to the Division of Reactor Development, ], and then assumed control of the Navy's effort as Director of the ] Branch in the Bureau of Ships, reporting to Mills. This twin role enabled him to both lead the effort to develop the world's first nuclear-powered submarine, ], which was launched and commissioned in 1954, as well as oversee the development of the ], the first commercial ] nuclear power plant.


]
The decision for selecting Rickover to head the development of the nation's nuclear submarine program ultimately rested with Admiral Mills. According to ] ], the primary military leader in charge of the Manhattan Project, Mills was anxious to have a very determined man involved, and &ndash; though he knew that Rickover was "not too easy to get along with" and "not too popular" &ndash; in his judgment Rickover was the man who the Navy could depend on "no matter what opposition he might encounter, once he was convinced of the potentialities of the atomic submarine."
In December 1945, Rickover was appointed ] of the ] on the west coast, and was assigned to work with ] at ], ], to develop a nuclear propulsion plant for destroyers. In 1946, an initiative was begun at the ]'s Clinton Laboratory (now the ]) to develop a nuclear electric generating plant. Realizing the potential that nuclear energy held for the Navy,<ref name="Lurie on Rickover">{{cite web |last1=Lurie |first1=Margaret |title=Recollection from Margaret Lurie |url=https://ussrickover.org/rcl-margaret-lurie |website=USS Hyman G. Rickover Commissioning Committee |access-date=27 July 2021}}</ref> Rickover applied. Rickover was sent to Oak Ridge through the efforts of his wartime boss, Rear Admiral Earle Mills, who became the head of the Navy's ] that same year.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.legion.org/distinguishedservicemedal/1983/adm-hyman-c-rickover|title=Adm. Hyman C. Rickover &#124; Distinguished Service Medal &#124; The American Legion|website=www.legion.org|access-date=December 7, 2019|archive-date=December 7, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191207195325/https://www.legion.org/distinguishedservicemedal/1983/adm-hyman-c-rickover|url-status=dead}}</ref>


Rickover became an early convert to the idea of ], and was the driving force for shifting the Navy's initial focus from applications on destroyers to submarines.<ref>{{cite web | title = Ross Gunn, May 12, 1897 – October 15, 1966 | author= Philip H. Abelson | access-date = 2009-03-08 | url = http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/biomems/rgunn.html }}</ref> Rickover's vision was not initially shared by his immediate superiors:<ref name="Lurie on Rickover"/> he was recalled from Oak Ridge and assigned "advisory duties" with an office in an abandoned ladies' room in the Navy Building. He subsequently went around several layers of superior officers, and in 1947 went directly to the Chief of Naval Operations, ], also a former submariner. Nimitz immediately understood the potential of nuclear propulsion in submarines and recommended the project to the Secretary of the Navy, ]. Sullivan's endorsement to build the world's first nuclear-powered vessel, {{USS|Nautilus|SSN-571|6}}, later caused Rickover to state that Sullivan was "the true father of the Nuclear Navy."<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rVMEAAAAMBAJ&q=Rickover&pg=PA104|title=Life|access-date=2014-12-12|date=1958-09-08}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20111216-ENTERTAIN-112160303|title=Rye resident writes biography / readings & signings|work=seacoastonline.com|access-date=2014-12-12|archive-date=January 12, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120112040925/http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20111216-ENTERTAIN-112160303|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="auto1">{{cite book|url=https://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2018/04/f50/DuncanRickoverandtheNuclearNavyComplete_1.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2018/04/f50/DuncanRickoverandtheNuclearNavyComplete_1.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |title=Rickover and the Nuclear Navy |via=Department of Energy |date=1990 |first=Francis |last=Duncan |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis, Maryland |isbn=0-87021-236-2}}</ref>
Rickover did not disappoint. The imagination, drive, creativity and engineering expertise demonstrated by Rickover and his team during that time-frame resulted in a highly reliable ] in a form-factor that would fit into a submarine hull with no more than a 28-foot ]. These were substantial technical achievements:


Subsequently, Rickover became chief of a new section in the ], the Nuclear Power Division reporting to Mills. He began work with ], the Oak Ridge director of research, to initiate and develop the ] and to begin the design of the ] for submarine propulsion.<ref>{{cite web | title = ORNL Review Vol. 25, Nos. 3 and 4, 2002 | access-date = 2009-03-08 | url = http://www.ornl.net/info/ornlreview/rev25-34/chapter3sb8.htm | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071021213713/http://www.ornl.net/info/ornlreview/rev25-34/chapter3sb8.htm | url-status = dead | archive-date = 2007-10-21 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.economist.com/node/21549101 | newspaper=The Economist | title=From squash court to submarine | date=2012-03-10}}</ref> In February 1949 he was assigned to the ]'s Division of Reactor Development, and then assumed control of the Navy's effort within the AEC as Director of the ] Branch.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dW4uAAAAIAAJ&q=%22H.+G.+Rickover%2C+head+of+the+Nuclear+Power+Division%2C+Bureau+of+Ships%2C+Department+of+Navy%2C+and+chief+of+the+Naval+Reactor+Branch%22&pg=SL4-PA65|title=Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress|first=United States|last=Congress|date=December 9, 1951|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office|via=Google Books}}</ref> This twin role enabled him to lead the effort to develop ''Nautilus''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/nhhc/research/library/research-guides/modern-biographical-files-ndl/modern-bios-r/rickover-hyman-g.html|title=Rickover, Hyman G.|website=NHHC}}</ref>
*In the early 1950s, a megawatt-scale nuclear reactor took up an area roughly the size of a city block.


The original selection of Rickover as head of development of the nation's nuclear submarine program ultimately rested with Admiral Mills. According to Lieutenant General ], director of the Manhattan Project, Mills was anxious to have a very determined man involved. He knew that Rickover was "not too easy to get along with" and "not too popular," but in his judgement Rickover was the man on whom the Navy could depend "no matter what opposition he might encounter".<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-0-306-80189-1 | page = 388 | last = Groves | first = Leslie R. |author2=Edward Teller | title = Now it can be told | year = 1983 | publisher = Da Capo Press | location = New York}}</ref>
*The prototype for the Nautilus propulsion plant was the world's first high-temperature nuclear reactor.


While his team and industry were completing construction of ''Nautilus'', Rickover was promoted to the rank of ] in 1953. However, this was anything but routine, and occurred only after an extraordinary chain of events:<ref>{{Cite web|title=Hyman G. Rickover|url=https://www.atomicheritage.org/profile/hyman-g-rickover|access-date=2020-06-27|website=Atomic Heritage Foundation|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Hyman-G-Rickover|title=Hyman G. Rickover &#124; United States admiral|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|date=July 4, 2023 }}</ref>
*The basic physics data needed for the reactor design were as yet unavailable.


<blockquote> peers in the Navy’s engineer branch thought to get rid of him through failure of promotion above captain. This would entail automatic retirement at the thirty-year mark. But someone made the case to the U.S. Senate, charged by the Constitution with formal confirmation of military promotions. In that year, 1953, two years before ''Nautilus'' first went to sea, the Senate failed to give its usual perfunctory approval of the Navy admiral promotion list, and the press was outraged because Rickover's name was not on it. ... Ultimately an enlightened Secretary of the Navy, ], ordered a special selection board to sit. With some shuffling of feet it did what it had been ordered to do.... Ninety-five percent of Navy captains must retire regardless of how highly qualified because there are only vacancies for 5 percent of them to become admirals, and although vindictiveness has sometimes played a part in determining who shall fail of selection for promotion (thus also violating the system), never before or since have pressures from outside the Navy overturned this form of career-termination.<ref name="auto1"/></blockquote>
*The reactor design methods had yet to be developed.


Regardless of the challenges faced in developing and operating brand-new technology, Rickover and the team did not disappoint: the result was a highly reliable nuclear reactor in a form-factor that would fit into a submarine hull with no more than a {{convert|28|ft|m|adj=on}} ].<ref>{{Cite book | page = 134 | last = Blair | first = Clay | title = The Atomic Submarine and Admiral Rickover | year = 1954 }}</ref> This became known as the ]. ''Nautilus'' was launched and commissioned with this reactor in 1954.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ne.anl.gov/About/reactors/lwr3.shtml|title=Light Water Reactors Technology Development|website=www.ne.anl.gov}}</ref>
*There were no available engineering data on the performance of water-exposed metals that were simultaneously experiencing high temperatures, pressures and multi-spectral radiation levels.


Later Rickover oversaw the development of the ], the first commercial pressurized water reactor nuclear power plant. ] of the AEC decided that the Rickover-Westinghouse pressurized-water reactor was "the best choice for a reactor to demonstrate the production of electricity" with Rickover "having a going organization and a reactor project under way that now had no specific use to justify it." This was a reference to the first core used at Shippingport originating from a cancelled ] ].<ref>J. C. Clayton, "", Westinghouse Report WAPD-T-3007, 1993.</ref> This was accepted by ] and the Commission in January 1954.<ref>{{cite book |last=Nichols |first=Kenneth |date=1987 |title=The Road to Trinity: A Personal Account of How America's Nuclear Policies Were Made |location=New York |publisher=William Morrow |isbn=068806910X |pages=326–27}}</ref>
*No nuclear power plant of any kind had ever been designed to produce steam.


Rickover was promoted to ] in 1958, the same year that he was awarded the first of two ]s.<ref>{{citation |url=http://sul-derivatives.stanford.edu/derivative?CSNID=00001534&mediaType=application/pdf |date=1959 |location=Washington, DC |title=Review of Naval Reactor Program and Admiral Rickover Award |publisher=United States Government Priniting Office |author=Joint Committee on Atomic Energy |via=Stanford University }}{{Dead link|date=January 2021 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> He exercised tight control for the next three decades over the ships, technology, and personnel of the nuclear Navy, interviewing and approving or denying every prospective officer being considered for a nuclear ship. Over the course of Rickover's career, these personal interviews numbered in the tens of thousands; over 14,000 interviews were with recent college-graduates alone. The interviewees ranged from midshipmen and newly commissioned ] destined for nuclear-powered submarines and surface combatants, to very senior combat-experienced ] ] who sought command of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. The content of most of these interviews has been lost to history, though some were later chronicled in several books on Rickover's career, as well as in a with ] in 1984.<ref name="people">{{cite web
*No ] had ever been designed for use in the widely varying sea temperatures and pressures experienced by the ] during submarine operations.
| title = Rickover Interview | url = http://www.people.vcu.edu/~rsleeth/Rickover.html|publisher=People.vcu.edu
| access-date = 2009-03-08 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title = Asking Tough Questions | access-date = 2009-03-08 | url = https://www.cbsnews.com/news/asking-tough-questions/ | publisher = Cbsnews.com – CBS News | date = 2003-05-16 | archive-date = October 18, 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121018065950/http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/05/16/60minutes/main554312.shtml | url-status = live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Rickover|first=Hyman G.|title=Doing a Job|url=http://www.validlab.com/administration/rickover.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170226221727/http://www.validlab.com/administration/rickover.html|archive-date=2017-02-26|access-date=2020-06-26|website=www.validlab.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last = Rayburn | first = Kevin | url = http://louisville.edu/ur/ucomm/mags/winter2007/rickover.html | title = The Rickover Effect: Speed grads remember working with 'Father of the Nuclear Navy' | journal = UofL | date = 2003-03-01 | volume = 25 | issue = 2 | publisher = University of Louisville | access-date = 2009-04-01 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110930090300/http://louisville.edu/ur/ucomm/mags/winter2007/rickover.html | archive-date = 2011-09-30 | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/abc/10_questions_for_diane_sawyer_158703.asp|title=10 Questions for Diane Sawyer|publisher=Mediabistro.com|access-date=2014-12-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100625154021/http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/abc/10_questions_for_diane_sawyer_158703.asp|archive-date=2010-06-25|url-status=dead}}</ref>


In 1973, though his role and responsibilities remained unchanged, Rickover was promoted to the rank of four-star ].<ref name="auto3">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-07-09-mn-14301-story.html|title=Rickover, Creator of U.S. Nuclear Navy, Dies at 86|date=July 9, 1986|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> This was the second time (after ]) in the history of the U.S. Navy that an officer with a career path other than an operational line officer achieved that rank. Because his responsibilities did not include direct command and control of combatant naval units, technically Rickover was appointed to the grade of admiral on the retired list so as to provide some clarity on this issue. This was also done to avoid affecting the maximum-authorized number of admirals (O-10) on the "active list."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/nhhc/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/r/rickover-promotion.html|title=Hyman G. Rickover's Promotion to Admiral |website=NHHC}}</ref>
*Components from difficult, exotic materials such as ] and ] would have to be extracted and manufactured with precision via techniques that were as yet unknown.


As head of Naval Reactors, Rickover's focus and responsibilities were dedicated to reactor safety rather than tactical or strategic submarine warfare training. However, this extreme focus was well known during Rickover's era as a potential hindrance to balancing operational priorities. One way that this was addressed after Rickover retired was that only the very strongest, former at-sea submarine commanders have held Rickover's now unique eight-year position as ], the longest chartered tenure in the U.S. military.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/45608main_NNBE_Progress_Report2_7-15-03.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/45608main_NNBE_Progress_Report2_7-15-03.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|title=NASA/Navy Benchmarking Exchange (NNBE) Volume II|publisher=Nasa.gov|access-date=2014-12-12}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/codification/executive-order/12344.html|title=Executive Orders|date=25 October 2010|publisher=Archives.gov|access-date=2014-12-12}}</ref> From Rickover's first replacement, ], to today's head of Naval Reactors, ],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=90649|title=Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program Change of Command|first=Tom Dougan, Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program Public|last=Affairs|access-date=August 22, 2015|archive-date=September 21, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180921153246/https://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=90649|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.defensenews.com/story/breaking-news/2015/07/22/nr-naval-nuclear-reactors-caldwell-richardson-greenert-rickover-submarine-navy/30539765/|title=Pentagon Names Next Director of Naval Nuclear Reactors|date=July 22, 2015 |publisher=defensenews.com|access-date=2015-08-16}}</ref> all have held command of nuclear submarines, their squadrons and ocean fleets, but none have been a long-term ] such as Rickover.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=70471|title=Navy Gets New Nuclear Propulsion Boss|author=Tom Dougan, Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program Public Affairs|publisher=Navy.mil|access-date=2014-12-12|archive-date=June 26, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190626131014/https://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=70471|url-status=dead}}</ref> In keeping with Rickover's promotion to four-star admiral, those who were subsequently selected for assignment to Director, Naval Reactors are promoted to this same rank, but also on active duty status.
Promoted to the rank of ] in 1958, the same year he was awarded the first of two ]s, for nearly the next three decades Rickover exercised tight control over the ships, technology, and personnel of the nuclear Navy, interviewing and approving or denying ''every'' prospective officer being considered for a nuclear ship. Over the course of Rickover's record-length career, these personal interviews amounted to tens of thousands of highly impressionable events; over 14,000 interviews were with recent college-graduates alone. Varying from arcane to combative to humorous (), and ranging from midshipmen to very senior naval aviators who sought command of aircraft carriers (which sometimes lapsed into ego battles), the content of most of these interviews has been lost to history, though some were later chronicled in the several books on Rickover's career, as well as in a rare, personal, ] interview with ] in 1984.


Historian Francis Duncan, who for over eight years was granted generous access to diverse numbers and levels of witnesses—including U.S. presidents—as well as Rickover himself,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/rickover-and-the-nuclear-navy-francis-duncan/1121795147|title=Rickover and the Nuclear Navy: The Discipline of Technology&#124;Hardcover|first=Barnes &|last=Noble|website=Barnes & Noble}}</ref> came to the conclusion that the man was best understood with respect to a guiding principle that Rickover invoked foremost for both himself and those who served in the U.S. Navy's nuclear propulsion program: "exercise of the concept of responsibility."<ref name="auto1" /> This is further evidenced by Rickover listing ''responsibility'' as his first ] in his final-years paper and speech, ''Thoughts on Man's Purpose in Life.''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/publications/archive/morgenthau/763|title = Thoughts on Man's Purpose in Life &#124; Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/publications/archive/morgenthau/763/_res/id=Attachments/index=0/763_2ndMML-H.G.Rickover.pdf|publisher=Council on Religion and International Affairs|location=New York|title=Thoughts on Man's Purpose in Life|first=Rickover|last=Hyman|date=1982|access-date=July 9, 2018|archive-date=July 10, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180710040709/https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/publications/archive/morgenthau/763/_res/id=Attachments/index=0/763_2ndMML-H.G.Rickover.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://nielsolson.us/Writing/RickoverRotaryAddress10FEB77.html|title=Rickover Rotary Address|website=nielsolson.us}}</ref>
Rickover's stringent standards and powerful focus on personal integrity are largely credited with being responsible for the United States Navy's continuing record of . During the mid-late 1950's, Rickover revealed the source of his obsession with safety in a personal conversation with a fellow Navy captain:


=== Safety record ===
<blockquote>"I have a son. I love my son. I want everything that I do to be so safe that I would be happy to have my son operating it. That's my fundamental rule." (p. 55, ''Power at Sea: A Violent Peace, 1946-2006'' (2006))</blockquote>
Rickover's stringent standards are largely credited with being responsible for the U.S. Navy's continuing record of zero reactor accidents (defined as the uncontrolled release of fission products to the environment resulting from damage to a reactor core).<ref name=bowman>{{cite web | title = Statement of Admiral F. L. "Skip" Bowman | date = 2003-10-29 | access-date = 2009-03-08 | url = http://www.navy.mil/navydata/testimony/safety/bowman031029.txt | archive-date = June 29, 2006 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060629082752/https://www.navy.mil/navydata/testimony/safety/bowman031029.txt | url-status = dead }}</ref> He made it a point to be aboard during the initial sea trial of almost every nuclear submarine completing its new-construction period.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Power at Sea, Vol 3: A Violent Peace, 1946–2006|url=https://archive.org/details/poweratseabreaki02libg|url-access=limited|last=Rose|first=Lisle A.|publisher=University of Missouri|year=2006|page=}}</ref> Following the ] on March 28, 1979, Admiral Rickover was asked to testify before Congress in the general context of answering the question as to why naval nuclear propulsion had succeeded in achieving a record of zero reactor-accidents, as opposed to the dramatic one that had just taken place.<ref name="bowman" />


The accident-free record of United States Navy reactor operations stands in some very stark contrast to those of the Soviet Union, which had ]. As stated in a retrospective analysis in October 2007:
He also made it a point to be aboard during the initial sea trial of almost every nuclear submarine completing its new-construction period, and by his presence both set his stamp of personal integrity that the ship was ready for the rigors of the open seas, and ensured adequate testing to either prove as much or to establish issues requiring resolution.


<blockquote>U.S. submarines far outperformed the Soviet ones in the crucial area of stealth, and Rickover's obsessive fixation on safety and quality control gave the U.S. nuclear Navy a vastly superior safety record to the Soviet one.<ref>{{Cite news | last = Sieff | first = Martin | title = BMD Focus: O'Reilly moves up&nbsp;– Part 1 | work = UPI Energy| date = 2007-10-04 }}</ref></blockquote>
As head of ], Rickover's focus and responsibilities were dedicated to reactor safety rather than tactical or strategic submarine warfare training. It could be argued that because of Rickover's singular focus on reactor operations, and direct line of communications with each nuclear submarine's captain, that this acted against the captains' warfighting abilities.


=== Views on nuclear power ===
Such a claim, however, does not hold up well in consideration of the highly-classified national security accomplishments of the submarine force, such as are allegedly chronicled in '']'' (1998). Moreover, the accident-free record of United States Navy reactor operations stands in stark contrast to those of America's primary competitor during the Cold War, the Soviet Union, which ] to reactor accidents in both its haste and chosen priorities for competing with superior U.S. technology.
Given Rickover's single-minded focus on naval nuclear propulsion, design, and operations, it came as a surprise to many<ref>{{cite web|url=http://atomicinsights.com/2010/11/admiral-rickovers-final-testimony-to-congress.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130628112919/http://atomicinsights.com/2010/11/admiral-rickovers-final-testimony-to-congress.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=2013-06-28|title=Admiral Rickover's Final Testimony to Congress |work=Atomic Insights|access-date=2014-12-12}}</ref> in 1982, near the end of his career, when he testified before the U.S. Congress that, were it up to him what to do with nuclear powered ships, he "would sink them all." At a congressional hearing Rickover testified that:


{{blockquote|I do not believe that nuclear power is worth it if it creates radiation. Then you might ask me why do I have nuclear powered ships. That is a necessary evil. I would sink them all. I am not proud of the part I played in it. I did it because it was necessary for the safety of this country. That's why I am such a great exponent of stopping this whole nonsense of war. Unfortunately limits—attempts to limit war have always failed. The lesson of history is when a war starts every nation will ultimately use whatever weapon it has available. ... Every time you produce radiation, you produce something that has a certain half-life, in some cases for billions of years. ... It is important that we control these forces and try to eliminate them.|Economics of Defense Policy: Hearing before the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, 97th Cong., 2nd sess., Pt. 1 (1982)}}
As stated in a retrospective analysis by ] in October 2007:


A few months later, following his retirement, Rickover spoke more specifically regarding the questions "Could you comment on your own responsibility in helping to create a nuclear navy? Do you have any regrets?":
<blockquote>"U.S. submarines far outperformed the Soviet ones in the crucial area of stealth, and Rickover's obsessive fixation on safety and quality control gave the U.S. nuclear Navy a vastly superior safety record to the Soviet one. This was especially crucial as in a democratic society, particularly after the Three Mile Island nuclear power station crisis in March 1979, a host of nuclear accidents or well-publicized near misses could have shut down the nuclear fleet completely."</blockquote>


<blockquote>I do not have regrets. I believe I helped preserve the peace for this country. Why should I regret that? What I accomplished was approved by Congress—which represents our people. All of you live in safety from domestic enemies because of security from the police. Likewise, you live in safety from foreign enemies because our military keeps them from attacking us. Nuclear technology was already under development in other countries. My assigned responsibility was to develop our nuclear navy. I managed to accomplish this.<ref>{{cite book |last= Rickover |first= Hyman George |title= Thoughts on Man's Purpose in Life |url= https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/publications/archive/morgenthau/763/_res/id=Attachments/index=0/763_2ndMML-H.G.Rickover.pdf |access-date= 2009-03-17 |series= Second Annual Morgenthau Memorial Lecture |date= 1982-05-12 |publisher= Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs |archive-date= July 10, 2018 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20180710040709/https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/publications/archive/morgenthau/763/_res/id=Attachments/index=0/763_2ndMML-H.G.Rickover.pdf |url-status= dead }}</ref></blockquote>
However, the extreme focus on nuclear propulsion plant operation and maintenance was well known during Rickover's era as a potential hindrance to balancing operational priorities. One way by which this was addressed after the Admiral retired was that only the very strongest, former at-sea submarine commanders have held Rickover's now uniquely eight-year position as ]. From Rickover's first replacement, ], to today's head of Naval Reactors, ], all have held command of nuclear submarines, their squadrons and ocean fleets; not one has been a long-term ] such as Rickover.

==Controversy==
Hyperactive, political, blunt, confrontational, insulting, flamboyant, and an unexcelled ] who was always demanding of others &ndash; without regard for rank or position &ndash; as well as himself, Admiral Rickover was a thundering force of nature and lightning rod for controversy. Moreover, he had "little tolerance for mediocrity, none for stupidity." "If a man is dumb," said a Chicago friend, "Rickover thinks he ought to be dead." Even while a Captain, Rickover did not conceal his opinions, and many of the officers he regarded as dumb eventually rose in rank to be admirals and were assigned to the Pentagon.

Rickover found himself frequently and loudly in bureaucratic combat with these senior naval officers, to the point that he nearly never became "Admiral" Rickover: two admiral-selection boards &ndash; exclusively made up of admirals &ndash; passed over the highly accomplished Captain Rickover for promotion even while he was in the process of becoming famous. One of these selection boards even met the day after ] had its keel-laying ceremony in the presence of ]. It eventually took the intervention of the White House, U.S. Congress and the Secretary of the Navy &ndash; and the very real threat of changing the Navy's admiral-selection system to include civilians &ndash; before the next flag-selection board welcomed the twice passed-over Rickover (normally a career-ending event) into their ranks.

Even Rickover's most senior, renowned and professionally-accomplished nuclear-trained officers that he had personally selected, such as ], had mixed feelings about "the kindly old gentleman" (or simply "KOG", as Rickover became euphemistically known in inner circles) and would at times refer to him quite seriously, decidedly and unaffectionately as a "tyrant" with "no account of his gradually failing powers" in his later years (p. 179, ''United States Submarines'', 2002).

However, ] comments upon awarding the admiral's ] in 1973 are germane:

<blockquote>"I don't mean to suggest...that he is a man who is without controversy. He speaks his mind. Sometimes he has rivals who disagree with him; sometimes they are right, and he is the first to admit that sometimes he might be wrong. But the greatness of the American military service, and particularly the greatness of the Navy, is symbolized in this ceremony today, because this man, who is controversial, this man, who comes up with unorthodox ideas, did not become submerged by the bureaucracy, because once genius is submerged by bureaucracy, a nation is doomed to mediocrity." </blockquote>

While both Rickover's military authority and congressional mandate with regard to the U.S. fleet's reactor operations was absolute, it was not infrequently a subject of Navy-internal controversy. As head of the Naval Reactors branch, and thus responsible for "signing off" on a crew's competence to operate the reactor safely, he had the power to effectively remove a warship from active service and did-so on several occasions, much to the consternation of those affected.

In short, Rickover was obsessed with a safe, details-focused and successful nuclear program. Coincident with this success, the perception became established among many observers that he sometimes used the raw exercise of power to occasionally settle scores or tweak noses.

===Full accountability===
In a distinct contrast to numerous examples of admirals and senior naval officers who would come to point their finger at individuals or groups of individuals in the fleet when something went seriously awry , Rickover adamantly took full responsibility for everything within the scope of the naval nuclear propulsion program (NNPP). Sample Rickover quote:

<blockquote>"My program is unique in the military service in this respect: You know the expression 'from the womb to the tomb'; my organization is responsible for initiating the idea for a project; for doing the research, and the development; designing and building the equipment that goes into the ships; for the operations of the ship; for the selection of the officers and men who man the ship; for their education and training. In short, I am responsible for the ship throughout its life &ndash; from the very beginning to the very end." (''Hearings on Military Posture and H.R. 12564'', U.S. G.P.O., 1974, page 1,392)</blockquote>

===Prophecies and warnings regarding fossil fuel depletion===
As early as ], Admiral Rickover began urging the development of alternate energy consumption paths to that of fossil fuels as their eventual depletion became evident, noting:

<blockquote>"A reduction of per capita energy consumption has always in the past led to a decline in civilization and a reversion to a more primitive way of life...Anyone who has watched a sweating Chinese farm worker strain at his heavily laden wheelbarrow, creaking along a cobblestone road, or who has flinched as he drives past an endless procession of human beasts of burden moving to market in Java - the slender women bent under mountainous loads heaped on their heads - anyone who has seen statistics translated into flesh and bone, realizes the degradation of man's stature when his muscle power becomes the only energy source he can afford. Civilization must wither when human beings are so degraded....High-energy consumption has always been a prerequisite of political power. The tendency is for political power to be concentrated in an ever-smaller number of countries. Ultimately, the nation which controls the largest energy resources will become dominant."</blockquote>

===Overprotection of civilian nuclear power===
Following the ] (TMI) power plant partial meltdown on March 28, 1979, President ] commissioned a study, "Report of the President's Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island (1979)," chaired by ], then-president of ]. It is claimed in an affidavit signed by Jane Rickover, the Admiral's daughter-in-law, that in her recollection of the Admiral's opinion "the report, if published in its entirety, would have destroyed the civilian nuclear power industry." According to her sworn statement, Rickover persuaded Carter to have the report diluted. She also reports that in November 1985, eight months before his death, "that he had come to deeply regret his action."

Subsequently, Admiral Rickover was asked to testify before Congress in the general context of answering the question as to why naval nuclear propulsion had succeeded in achieving a record of zero reactor-accidents (as defined by the uncontrolled release of fission products to the environment resulting from damage to a reactor core) as opposed to the dramatic one that had just taken place at Three Mile Island. In his testimony, he said:

<blockquote>"Over the years, many people have asked me how I run the Naval Reactors Program, so that they might find some benefit for their own work. I am always chagrined at the tendency of people to expect that I have a simple, easy gimmick that makes my program function. Any successful program functions as an integrated whole of many factors. Trying to select one aspect as the key one will not work. Each element depends on all the others.</blockquote>

===Willingness to "sink them all"===
Given Rickover's single-minded focus on naval nuclear propulsion, design and operations, it came as a surprise to many when in 1982, near the end of his career, he testified before the U.S. Congress that, were it up to him, he "would sink them all." A seemingly outrageous enigma of a statement &ndash; and perhaps one attributable to an old man beyond his time &ndash; in context, Rickover's personal integrity and honesty were such that he was lamenting the need for such war machines in the modern world, and specifically acknowledged as well that the employment of nuclear energy ran counter to the course of nature over time.

At a congressional hearing Rickover testified that:

<blockquote>"I do not believe that nuclear power is worth it if it creates radiation. Then you might ask me why do I have nuclear powered ships. That is a necessary evil. I would sink them all. I am not proud of the part I played in it. I did it because it was necessary for the safety of this country. That's why I am such a great exponent of stopping this whole nonsense of war. Unfortunately limits &ndash; attempts to limit war have always failed. The lesson of history is when a war starts every nation will ultimately use whatever weapon it has available."'' Further remarking: ''"Every time you produce radiation, you produce something that has a certain half-life, in some cases for billions of years. I think the human race is going to wreck itself, and it is important that we get control of this horrible force and try to eliminate it." (Economics of Defense Policy: Hearing before the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, 97th Cong., 2nd sess., Pt. 1 (1982))</blockquote>

However, after his retirement -- and only a few months later, in May of 1982 -- Admiral Rickover spoke more specifically regarding the questions "Could you comment on your own responsibility in helping to create a nuclear navy? Do you have any regrets?":

<blockquote>"I do not have regrets. I believe I helped preserve the peace for this country. Why should I regret that? What I accomplished was approved by Congress -- which represents our people. All of you live in safety from domestic enemies because of security from the police. Likewise, you live in safety from foreign enemies because our military keeps them from attacking us. Nuclear technology was already under development in other countries. My assigned responsibility was to develop our nuclear navy. I managed to accomplish this."
</blockquote>

===Willingness to forego all accomplishments===
As quoted by President ] during his 1984 interview with Diane Sawyer:

<blockquote>"One of the most remarkable things that he ever told me was when we were together on the submarine and he said that he wished that a nuclear explosive had never been evolved. And then he said, 'I wish that nuclear power had never been discovered.' And I said, 'Admiral, this is your life.' He said, 'I would forego all the accomplishments of my life, and I would be willing to forego all the advantages of nuclear power to propel ships, for medical research and for every other purpose of generating electric power, if we could have avoided the evolution of atomic explosives.'"</blockquote>


==Focus on education== ==Focus on education==
] and Rickover, White House, 11 February 1963<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.jfklibrary.org/asset-viewer/archives/JFKWHP/1963/Month+02/Day+11/JFKWHP-1963-02-11-B|title=Meeting with Vice Admiral Hyman G. Rickover|website=www.jfklibrary.org}}</ref> "...in addition to the multilateral POLARIS force, we discussed education and how he and I were brought up as boys"<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.jfklibrary.org/sites/default/files/archives/JFKOH/Rickover%2C%20Hyman%20G/JFKOH-HGR-01/JFKOH-HGR-01-TR.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.jfklibrary.org/sites/default/files/archives/JFKOH/Rickover%2C%20Hyman%20G/JFKOH-HGR-01/JFKOH-HGR-01-TR.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |title=Hyman G. Rickover Oral History Interview |website=John F. Kennedy Library Oral History Program|date=1964-08-17 |first=Arthur |last=Schlesinger Jr.}}</ref>]]
]
When he was a child still living in Russian-occupied Poland, Rickover was not allowed to attend public schools because of his Jewish faith. Starting at the age of four, he attended a religious school where the teaching was solely from the ] in ]. School hours were from sunrise to sunset, six days a week. When he was a child still living in Russian-occupied Poland, Rickover was not allowed to attend public schools because of his Jewish faith. Starting at the age of four, he attended a religious school where the teaching was solely from the '']'', i.e., '']'', in ].<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 0-595-25270-2 | page = 20 | last = Rockwell | first = Theodore | title = The Rickover Effect | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=U4kjnYL7-igC&q=Rickover,+Sabath&pg=PA21 | year = 2002 | publisher = IUniverse | location = Lincoln, NE }}</ref> Following his formal education in the United States,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://prairiefirenewspaper.com/2008/12/my-father-remembered|title=My father remembered|publisher=Prairiefirenewspaper.com|access-date=2014-12-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150218065332/http://prairiefirenewspaper.com/2008/12/my-father-remembered|archive-date=2015-02-18|url-status=dead}}</ref> Rickover developed a decades-long and outspoken interest in the educational standards of the US as being a national security issue, particularly as compared during the ] era to ] ].<ref>{{cite speech |last=Rickover |first=Hyman George |title=Energy resources and our future |url=http://www.energybulletin.net/node/23151 |event=Annual Scientific Assembly of the Minnesota State Medical Association |location=St. Paul, MN |date=14 May 1957 |access-date=21 March 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120503173011/http://www.energybulletin.net/node/23151 |archive-date=3 May 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


An example of his passion for education from his 1959 ''Report on Russia''<ref>H. G. Rickover, "Report on Russia", US GPO 1959 https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=uE0vAAAAMAAJ&rdid=book-uE0vAAAAMAAJ&rdot=1</ref> in the context of comparative educational systems:
Following his formal education in the U.S. as described above and the birth of his son, Robert, Admiral Rickover developed a decades-long and outspoken interest in the educational standards of the United States, stating in 1957:


<blockquote>There is no room here (in nuclear powerplant development) for lofty theories which do not work out in practice. We would not get anywhere if we had the loose, hazy thinking you encounter when you bring out the obvious failures of the American educational system. ... there are times when it is irresponsible to avoid criticizing something which one knows to be wrong and dangerous for the Nation as a whole. I feel that every one who has a position of responsibility in this country and who can see and understand what is happening not only has the right, he has the obligation and the duty to speak. ... This is why I feel so strongly about education—about our failure to give our children as good an education as they deserve and need. ... It is my considered opinion that there is no problem that faces the Congress or the country that is as important.</blockquote>
<blockquote>"I suggest that this is a good time to think soberly about our responsibilities to our descendents - those who will ring out the Fossil Fuel Age. Our greatest responsibility, as parents and as citizens, is to give America's youngsters the best possible education. We need the best teachers and enough of them to prepare our young people for a future immeasurably more complex than the present, and calling for ever larger numbers of competent and highly trained men and women."</blockquote>


Rickover was particularly of the opinion that U.S. standards of education were unacceptably low. His first book centered on education and was a collection of essays calling for improved standards of education, particularly in math and science, entitled ''Education and Freedom''. In this book, the Admiral states that, "education is the most important problem facing the United States today” and “only the massive upgrading of the scholastic standards of our schools will guarantee the future prosperity and freedom of the Republic." Rickover believed that US standards of education were unacceptably low. His first book centered on education was a collection of essays calling for improved standards of education, particularly in math and science, entitled ''Education and Freedom'' (1959). In it, he stated that "education is the most important problem facing the United States today" and "only the massive upgrading of the scholastic standards of our schools will guarantee the future prosperity and freedom of the Republic." A second book, ''Swiss Schools and Ours'' (1962) was a scathing comparison of the educational systems of Switzerland and America. He argued that the higher standards of Swiss schools, including a longer school day and year, combined with an approach stressing student choice and academic specialization produced superior results.<ref>{{cite thesis|url=http://ecommons.luc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3077&context=luc_diss |title=Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, USN: A Decade of Educational Criticism, 1955–64 |date=1982 |first=William J. |last=Haran |website=Loyola University Chicago}}</ref>


Recognizing that "nurturing careers of excellence and leadership in science and technology in young scholars is an essential investment in the United States national and global future," Rickover founded the ] following his retirement in 1983.<ref>{{cite web | title = The History of CEE: Center for Excellence in Education | access-date = 2009-03-21 | url = http://www.cee.org/about/history | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090318222622/http://www.cee.org/about/history | archive-date = 2009-03-18 | url-status = dead }}</ref> Additionally, Rickover founded the ] (formerly the Rickover Science Institute) in 1984, a summer science program hosted by the ] for high school seniors from around the world.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cee.org/events/rsi-2017-rickover-award|title=RSI 2017 Rickover Award &#124; Center for Excellence in Education|website=www.cee.org|access-date=2019-12-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191207195729/https://www.cee.org/events/rsi-2017-rickover-award|archive-date=2019-12-07|url-status=dead}}</ref>
His persistent interest in education led to some related discussions with President ]. While still on active duty, the Admiral had suggested that there are three things that a school must do: First, it must transmit to the pupil a substantial body of knowledge; second, it must develop in him the necessary intellectual skill to apply this knowledge to the problems he will encounter in adult life; and third, it must inculcate in him the habit of judging issues on the basis of verified fact and logical reasoning.


== General Dynamics scandal ==
Recognizing "that nurturing careers of excellence and leadership in science and technology in young scholars is an essential investment in the United States national and global future," following his retirement Admiral Rickover founded the in 1983.
In the early 1980s, structural welding flaws in submarines under construction were covered up by falsified inspection records, and the resulting scandal led to significant delays and expenses in the delivery of several submarines being built at the ] ] Division shipyard in ]. The yard tried to pass on the vast cost overruns to the Navy, while Rickover demanded that the yard make good on its "shoddy" workmanship. The Navy settled with General Dynamics in 1981, paying out $634 million of $843 million in {{sclass|Los Angeles|submarine|1}} cost overrun and reconstruction claims.<ref>{{Cite magazine | issn = 0040-781X | last = Van Voorst | first = Bruce |author2=Thomas Evans | title = Overrun Silent, Overrun Deep | magazine = Time | access-date = 2009-03-19 | date = 1984-12-24 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,951382,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20050113073258/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,951382,00.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = January 13, 2005 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite magazine | issn = 0040-781X | last = Alexander | first = Charles P. |author2=Christopher Redman |author3=John E. Yang | title = General Dynamics Under Fire | magazine = Time | access-date = 2009-03-20 | date = 1985-04-08 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965505-4,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080423234106/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965505-4,00.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = April 23, 2008 }}</ref> Secretary of the Navy ] was partly motivated to seek the agreement in order to continue to focus on achieving ]'s goal of a ]. But Rickover was extremely bitter over the General Dynamics yard being paid hundreds of millions of dollars,<ref>Oliver, Dave. ''Against the Tide: Rickover's Leadership Principles and the Rise of the Nuclear Navy''; Naval Institute Press; 2014; {{ISBN|978-1612517971}}; Chapter 15 notes; p. 156, note 2.</ref> and he lambasted both the settlement and Secretary Lehman. This was not Rickover's first clash with the defense industry; he was historically harsh in exacting high standards from defense contractors.<ref>{{cite magazine | title = Rickover's Attack on Defense Contractors | access-date = 2009-03-20 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,829357,00.html?iid=chix-sphere | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080423233553/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,829357,00.html?iid=chix-sphere | url-status = dead | archive-date = April 23, 2008 | magazine=Time | date=1962-11-09}}</ref> It was later publicly announced by a former General Dynamics employee on '']'' with ] that Rickover was right that General Dynamics was lying to the Navy, but by then Rickover's public image was already damaged.<ref>{{cite web |title=A chronology of events in the controversy over General Dynamic |url=https://apnews.com/article/a6282fa95dfd841b90f3c2b863253088 |website=apnews.com |publisher=The Associated Press |access-date=20 May 2023}}</ref>


A Navy Ad Hoc Gratuities Board determined that Rickover had received gifts from General Dynamics over a 16-year period valued at $67,628, including jewelry, furniture, exotic knives, and gifts that Rickover had in turn presented to politicians.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Shaw |first1=Gaylord |title=Navy freezes Contracts at General Dynamics : Firm Fined, Accused of Ignoring Public Trust; Rickover Censured for Accepting $67,000 in Gifts |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1985-05-22-mn-16733-story.html |website=] |date=May 22, 1985 |access-date=20 May 2023}}</ref> Charges were investigated that gifts were provided by ] and the ], both major nuclear ship contractors for the Navy. Secretary Lehman admonished him in a non-punitive letter and stated that Rickover's "fall from grace with these little trinkets should be viewed in the context of his enormous contributions to the Navy." Rickover released a statement through his lawyer saying his "conscience is clear" with respect to the gifts. "No gratuity or favor ever affected any decision I made."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://digital.library.unt.edu/govdocs/crs/permalink/meta-crs-9051:1|title=Congressional research service|date=July 12, 1985}} {{small|(1.65 MB CRS-13)}} Alleged fraud, waste, and abuse, 07/12/85. O'rourke, Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division.</ref> Senator ] of Wisconsin, a longtime supporter of Rickover, later publicly associated a debilitating stroke suffered by the admiral to his having been censured and "dragged through the mud by the very institution to which he rendered his invaluable service."<ref>{{Cite news | last = Keller | first = Bill | title = Rickover Stable in Naval Hospital | work = The New York Times | access-date = 2009-03-19 | url = https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9D04E3D61738F930A25754C0A963948260 | date=1985-07-13}}</ref>
Additionally, the ] (formerly the Rickover Science Institute), founded by Admiral Rickover in 1984, is a highly respected summer science program hosted by the ] for rising high school seniors from around the world.


==Forced retirement== ==Forced retirement==
By the late 1970s, Rickover's position seemed stronger than it had ever been. Over many years, powerful friends on both the House and Senate Armed Services Committees ensured that he remained on active duty long after most other admirals had retired from their second careers.<ref>{{cite news | title = Unsinkable Hyman Rickover |magazine=Time | access-date = 2009-03-20 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,911955,00.html?iid=chix-sphere | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090208233746/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,911955,00.html?iid=chix-sphere | url-status = dead | archive-date = February 8, 2009 | date=1977-05-23}}</ref> ]'s admiration for Rickover was shown by the fact that the title of Carter's autobiography was based on a question that Rickover had asked Carter when the latter was in the Navy ("Why Not The Best?").<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s8QrkpOEJlQC|title = Why Not the Best?: The First Fifty Years|isbn = 978-1610754606|last1 = Carter|first1 = Jimmy|date = August 1996}}</ref><ref>Carter, Why Not The Best? (introductory material)</ref> However, Secretary of the Navy ] felt that Rickover was hindering the well-being of the navy. As Lehman stated in his book, ''Command of the Seas'':
On ], ], in his 80's, and after 63 years of service to his country under 13 ] (] through ]), Rickover was forced to retire from the Navy as a full admiral by ] ], with the knowledge and consent of President Reagan.


<blockquote>One of my first orders of business as Secretary of the Navy would be to solve ... the Rickover problem. Rickover's legendary achievements were in the past. His present viselike grip on much of the navy was doing it much harm. I had sought the job because I believed the navy had deteriorated to the point where its weakness seriously threatened our future security. The navy's grave afflictions included loss of a strategic vision; loss of self-confidence, and morale; a prolonged starvation of resources, leaving vast shortfalls in capability to do the job; and too few ships to cover a sea so great, all resulting in cynicism, exhaustion, and an undercurrent of defeatism. The cult created by Admiral Rickover was itself a major obstacle to recovery, entwining nearly all the issues of culture and policy within the navy.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.johnflehman.com/books/books_commandseas.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120715043807/http://www.johnflehman.com/books/books_commandseas.html|url-status=dead|title=johnflehman.com|archive-date=July 15, 2012|website=www.johnflehman.com}}</ref>
In the early 1980s, structural welding flaws &ndash; whose nature and existence had been covered up by falsified inspection records &ndash; led to significant delays and expenses in the delivery of several submarines being built at the General Dynamics ] Division shipyard. In some cases the repairs resulted in practically dismantling and then rebuilding what had been a nearly-completed submarine. While the yard tried to pass the vast cost overruns directly onto the Navy, Rickover fought Electric Boat's general manager, P. Takis Veliotis, tooth and nail at every possible turn, demanding that the yard make good on its shoddy workmanship.
</blockquote>


Secretary Lehman eventually attained enough political clout to enforce his decision to retire Rickover. This was in part assisted by the admiral's nearly insubordinate stance against paying the General Dynamics submarine construction claims, as well as his advanced age and waning political leverage. On 27 July 1981, Lehman was handed the final impetus for ending Rickover's career by way of an operational error on the admiral's part: a "moderate" loss of ship control and depth excursion while performing a submerged "crash back" maneuver during the sea trials of the newly constructed {{USS|La Jolla}}. Rickover was the actual man-in-charge during this specific performance test, and his actions and inactions were judged to have been the causal factor.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1298&dat=19810822&id=pnIQAAAAIBAJ&pg=3287,1471323|title=The Free Lance-Star|via=Google News Archive Search|access-date=2014-12-12}}{{Dead link|date=September 2021 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1986/09/23/running-critical/8d9de415-33c3-465b-8ba3-0ad4637c6bbb/|title=Running Critical |date=23 September 1986|via=washingtonpost.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/military/sdut-navy-submarine-lajollasandiego-2014oct21-story.html|title=San Diego says goodbye to La Jolla|first=Gary|last=Robbins|date=October 22, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ky-3B5ARy2sC&q=%22la+jolla%22+rickover&pg=PA143|title=Fall From Glory: The Men Who Sank the U.S. Navy|first=Gregory|last=Vistica|year=1997|publisher=Simon and Schuster|via=Google Books|isbn=978-0684832265}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w6NnRc1lBdIC&q=%22la+jolla%22+rickover&pg=PA84|title=Rickover: Father of the Nuclear Navy|first1=Thomas B.|last1=Allen|first2=Norman|last2=Polmar|date=2017|publisher=Potomac Books, Inc.|via=Google Books|isbn=978-1574884456}}</ref> On 31 January 1982, five weeks after his 82nd birthday, Rickover was forced to retire from the Navy after 63 years of service under 13 ] (] through ]).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pauslon |first1=John |title=Admiral Rickover Observations |url=https://ussrickover.org/rcl-john-paulson |website=USS Hyman G. Rickover Commissioning Committee |access-date=27 July 2021}}</ref> According to Rickover, he first learned of his firing when his wife told him what she heard on the radio.<ref name="people" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.acm.com/team/adams_story.html|title=Joel's Story: Near the Ocean Floor|website=www.acm.com}}</ref>
Although the Navy eventually settled with General Dynamics in 1981, paying out $634 million of $843 million in ] cost-overrun and reconstruction claims, Rickover was bitter over the yard's having effectively and successfully sued the Navy for its own incompetence and deceit. Of no small irony, the United States Navy was also the yard's insurer &ndash; though the concept of reimbursing General Dynamics under these conditions was initially considered "preposterous" in the words of Secretary Lehman, the legal basis of General Dynamics' claims included insurance compensation.


According to former President ], several weeks following his retirement, Rickover "was invited to the Oval Office and decided to don his full dress uniform. He told me that he refused to take a seat, listened to the president ask him to be his special nuclear advisor, replied 'Mr. President, that is bullshit,' and then walked out."<ref>{{Cite book | pages = 492, 493 | last = Carter | first = Jimmy | title = White House Diary | year = 2010 | publisher = Farrar, Straus and Giroux | location = New York }}</ref> The Navy's official investigation of General Dynamics' Electric Boat division was ended shortly afterward. According to Theodore Rockwell, Rickover's Technical Director for more than 15 years, more than one source at that time stated that General Dynamics officials were bragging around Washington that they had "gotten Rickover."<ref>{{cite book|title=The Rickover Effect: How One Man Made a Difference|author=Rockwell, T.|date=2002|publisher=iUniverse|isbn=978-0595252701|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U4kjnYL7-igC&pg=RA1-PA363|pages=1–363|access-date=2015-08-16}}</ref>
Outraged, Rickover furiously lambasted both the settlement and Secretary Lehman, who was partly motivated to seek an agreement in order to continue to focus on achieving President Reagan's goal of a ]. This was hardly Rickover's first clash with the defense industry &ndash; he was historically hard, even harsh, in exacting high standards from these contractors &ndash; but now his relationship with Electric Boat took on the characteristics of an all-out, no-holds-barred war (''Running Critical: The Silent War, Rickover & General Dynamics'', 1986).


On 28 February 1983, a post-retirement party honoring Admiral Rickover was attended by all three living former U.S. Presidents at the time: ], ], and Carter, all formerly officers in the U.S. Navy. President Reagan was not in attendance.<ref>{{Cite news | last = Feinman | first = Elisabeth Bumiller and Barbara | title = Rickover at 83: Three-Gun Salute; Ex-Presidents Hail the Father of the Nuclear Navy | newspaper = The Washington Post}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = 96B05426.lowres.jpeg | access-date = 2009-03-06 | url = http://imglib.lbl.gov/ImgLib/COLLECTIONS/BERKELEY-LAB/images/96B05426.lowres.jpeg | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090325162838/http://imglib.lbl.gov/ImgLib/COLLECTIONS/BERKELEY-LAB/images/96B05426.lowres.jpeg | archive-date = 2009-03-25 | url-status = dead }}</ref>
Veliotis came to be indicted by a federal grand jury under racketeering and fraud charges in 1983 for demanding $1.3 million in kickbacks from a subcontractor. He nonetheless eventually escaped into exile and a life of luxury in his native Greece where he remains a fugitive from U.S. justice.


== Public image ==
Subsequent to accusations by the indicted Veliotis, a Navy Ad Hoc Gratuities Board determined that Rickover had received gifts from General Dynamics including jewelry, furniture and exotic knives valued at $67,628 over a 16-year period. Charges were investigated as well that gifts were provided by two other major nuclear ship contractors for the navy, ] and the ] division of ].<ref name=CRS>{{PDFlink| |1.65 ]<!-- application/pdf, 1,737,646 bytes --> CRS-13}} Alleged fraud, waste, and abuse, 07/12/85. O'rourke, Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division</ref> Most of these trinkets were redistributed by Rickover to congressmen, senators, and other government officials.{{fact|date=March 2008}}
Rickover has been called "the most famous and controversial admiral of his era."<ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 978-1612517971 | page = 1 | last = Oliver | first = Dave | title = Against the Tide | year = 2014 | publisher = Naval Institute Press | location = Annapolis, MD }}</ref> He was hyperactive, blunt, confrontational, insulting, and a workaholic, always demanding of others without regard for rank or position.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Toti |first1=William |title=The Wrath of Rickover |url=https://ussrickover.org/rcl-william-toti |website=USS Hyman G. Rickover Commissioning Committee |access-date=27 July 2021}}</ref> Moreover, he had "little tolerance for mediocrity, none for stupidity."<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=n9sLAQAAIAAJ&q=Rickover+%22he+ought+to+be+dead%22|title=Time|access-date=2014-12-12|last1=Hadden|first1=Briton|last2=Luce|first2=Henry Robinson|year=1954}}</ref> Even while a captain, Rickover did not conceal his opinions, and many of the officers whom he regarded as unintelligent eventually rose to be admirals and were assigned to the Pentagon.<ref>{{cite magazine| url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,819338-1,00.html | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080423233503/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,819338-1,00.html | url-status=dead | archive-date=April 23, 2008 | magazine=Time | title=Science: The Man in Tempo 3 | date=1954-01-11}}</ref> Rickover frequently found himself in bureaucratic combat with these senior naval officers, to the point that he almost missed becoming an admiral; two selection boards passed him over for promotion, and it took the intervention of the White House, U.S. Congress, and the Secretary of the Navy before he was promoted.<ref name="time1954" /><ref>{{Cite book | isbn = 0-595-25270-2 | page = 155 | last = Rockwell | first = Theodore | title = The Rickover Effect | year = 2002 | publisher = IUniverse | location = Lincoln, NE }}</ref>


Rickover's military authority and congressional mandate were absolute with regard to the U.S. fleet's reactor operations, but his controlling personality was frequently a subject of internal Navy controversy. He was head of the Naval Reactors branch, and thus responsible for signing off on a crew's competence to operate the reactor safely, giving him the power to effectively remove a warship from active service, which he did on several occasions. The view became established that he sometimes exercised power to settle scores.<ref>''Rickover and the Nuclear Navy: The Discipline of Technology'', p. 24.</ref> Author and former submariner ] referred to him as a "tyrant" with "no account of his gradually failing powers" in his later years.<ref>''United States Submarines'', 2002, p. 179.</ref>
Veliotis also charged, without providing substantiating evidence, that General Dynamics had given gifts to other senior naval officers, and had routinely underbid contracts with the intention of charging the government for cost overruns. These charges were not pursued by the Navy, at least in part due to Veliotis' flight from justice.


== Later life and death ==
Secretary Lehman, a ], admonished Rickover for this impropriety via a nonpunitive letter and stating that Rickover's "fall from grace with these little trinkets should be viewed in the context of his enormous contributions to the Navy."<ref name=CRS/> Rickover released a statement through his lawyer saying his "conscience is clear" with respect to the gifts. "No gratuity or favor ever affected any decision I made."<ref name=CRS/> Senator ] of Wisconsin, a longtime supporter of Rickover, later publicly associated a debilitating stroke suffered by the Admiral to his having been censured and "dragged through the mud by the very institution to which he rendered his invaluable service."
]
On 4 July 1985, Admiral Rickover suffered what was described as a "serious" stroke, and was admitted to Bethesda Naval Hospital, thereafter dealing with partial paralysis in his right arm.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Keller |first1=Bill |title=RICKOVER STABLE IN NAVAL HOSPITAL |work=The New York Times |date=July 13, 1985 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1985/07/13/us/rickover-stable-in-naval-hospital.html |access-date=2 June 2023}}</ref>


Rickover died at his home in Arlington, Virginia, on 8 July 1986, at age 86. He was buried on 11 July in a small, private ceremony at ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VVwJ9hOTGMMC&q=Rickover+stroke+pneumonia&pg=PA303|title=Rickover|access-date=2014-12-12|isbn=978-1557501776|last1=Duncan|first1=Francis|year=2001}}</ref> On 14 July, memorial services were led by Admiral ] at the ], with President Carter, Secretary of State ], Secretary Lehman, senior naval officers, and about 1,000 other people in attendance.<ref>{{cite news | last = Byrd | first = Lee | title = He Was Tough, Harsh ... But He Is Embedded In My Mind And My Heart | agency = Associated Press | date = 1986-07-14}}</ref> At the request of the admiral's widow, President Carter read ] sonnet '']''.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Halloran |first1=Richard |title=A 'Teacher' Recalled at Rickover Rite |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/07/15/us/a-teacher-recalled-at-rickover-rite.html |access-date=3 March 2020 |work=The New York Times |date=15 July 1986}}</ref>
Beyond any personal enmity or power struggles between the two naval leaders, it was Rickover's advanced age, singular focus and political clout regarding nuclear power, and strong, near-insubordinate stance against paying the fraudulently inflated submarine construction claims that gave Secretary Lehman substantial political capital to have Rickover retired. A moderate loss of ship control and subsequent depth excursion during the sea trials of the newly constructed ] &ndash; over which Rickover had direct supervisory control &ndash; provided Lehman with the final impetus for ending Rickover's career.


Secretary of the Navy Lehman said in a statement:
Upon being apprised of Lehman's decision that it was time for the admiral to finally retire, President Reagan asked to meet with Rickover. As quoted from Lehman's ''Command of the Seas'', Rickover was unhappy with the course of events and held forth in a tirade against Lehman, with ] ] in attendance, at the meeting with the President:


<blockquote>With the death of Adm. Rickover, the Navy and this nation have lost a dedicated officer of historic accomplishment. In his 63 years of service, Adm. Rickover took the concept of nuclear power from an idea to the present reality of more than 150 U.S. naval ships under nuclear power, with a record of 3,000 ship-years of accident-free operations.<ref name="auto3"/></blockquote>
<blockquote>(Rickover, referring to Lehman:) "Mr. President, that piss-ant knows nothing about the Navy." The admiral turned toward (Lehman) and raised his voice now to a fearsome shout. "You just want to get rid of me, you want me out of the program because you want to dismantle the program." Shifting now toward President Reagan, he roared on: "He's a goddamn liar, he knows he is just doing the work of the contractors. The contractors want me fired because of all the claims and because I am the only one in the government who keeps them from robbing the taxpayers."</blockquote>


And the then-Chief of Naval Operations:
<blockquote> (Lehman, as later quoted by CNN:) "...it was a difficult moment for the president in the Oval Office. And he was so concerned about the man, about Admiral Rickover and that he not be embarrassed, that he asked us all to leave. He said, "Admiral Rickover and I see things the same way. Could you leave us a while? We want to talk about policy." </blockquote>


<blockquote>"Most important," Admiral Watkins said, "he was a teacher. He set the standards. They were tough. That is the legacy and the challenge he left to all who study his contributions."<ref> Richard Halloran, The New York Times.</ref></blockquote>
Offering respectful words for Admiral Rickover's past service, but not encouragement for continued service, President Reagan eventually brought the meeting to a close and Rickover's 63-year career was at its end.


Rickover is buried in Section 5 at Arlington National Cemetery.<ref>{{cite web | title = Notable Graves – Prominent Military Figures – Section 5, Adm. Hyman G. Rickover| url =https://www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/Explore/Notable-Graves/Prominent-Military-Figures| publisher=Arlington Military Cemetery }}</ref> His first wife Ruth is buried with him and the name of his second wife Eleonore is inscribed on his gravestone.<ref name="auto">{{cite web|url=https://www.usni.org/magazines/navalhistory/2015-10/admirals-letters-his-son|title=An Admiral's Letters to His Son – U.S. Naval Institute|website=www.usni.org|date=October 10, 2015}}</ref> Eleonore passed away on 5 July 2021, and was buried in Arlington Cemetery.<ref>{{cite web |title=Obituary of Eleonore B. Rickover |url=https://adventfuneral.com/tribute/details/214282/Eleonore-Rickover/obituary.html |website=Advent Funeral & Cremation Services |access-date=27 July 2021}}</ref> Rickover is survived by Robert Rickover, his sole son by his first wife.<ref name="auto"/>
The Navy's official investigation of General Dynamics' Electric Boat division was ended shortly afterwards. According to Theodore Rockwell, Rickover's Technical Director for more than 15 years, more than one source at that time stated that General Dynamics officials were bragging around Washington that they had "gotten Rickover."


==In Memoriam== ==Honors==
On ], ], a post-retirement party honoring Admiral Rickover was attended by ]. President Reagan was not in attendance.


The ''Los Angeles''-class submarine {{USS|Hyman G. Rickover|SSN-709}} was named for him. She was commissioned two years before his death, and was, at that time, one of only two Navy ships to be ] since 1900 (there have been 16 more since). The submarine was launched on 27 August 1983, sponsored by his second wife Eleonore, commissioned on 21 July 1984, and deactivated on 14 December 2006. In 2015, the Navy announced a {{sclass|Virginia|submarine|1}} named {{USS|Hyman G. Rickover|SSN-795}} in his honor.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.defense.gov/releases/release.aspx?releaseid=17102|title=Navy Names New Virginia-Class Attack Submarine |publisher=defense.gov|access-date=2015-08-16}}</ref> The submarine's christening took place on 31 July 2021.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://iscbubbly.com/2021/07/isc-wine-to-christen-navy-submarine/#:~:text=The%20christening%20will%20take%20place%20on%20July%2031%2C,known%20as%20the%20%E2%80%9CFather%20of%20the%20Nuclear%20Navy.%E2%80%9D|title=ISC Wine to Christen Navy Submarine|date=July 22, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://gdebchristenings.com/|title=General Dynamics Electric Boat|website=gdebchristenings.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://eblanding.com/2021/07/06/july-6-2021-view-the-hyman-g-rickover-ssn-795-saturday-july-31/|title=July 6, 2021 - VIEW the Hyman G. Rickover (SSN 795) Saturday, July 31|date=July 6, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2021/08/01/navy-christens-2nd-submarine-in-honor-of-adm-rickover/|title=Navy christens 2nd submarine in honor of Adm. Rickover|agency=Associated Press|date=August 1, 2021|website=Navy Times}}</ref>
Subsequent to a ], Admiral Rickover died at his home, located in Arlington, Virginia, on ], ]. Memorial services were led by Admiral ] at the ], with President Carter, ] ], Secretary Lehman, senior naval officers and about 1,000 other people in attendance. Mrs. Rickover had asked President Carter to read from ] "." Carter said he was at first puzzled by her choice, but then came to believe that the last line had special meaning for all wives and family members of submariners who were away at sea: ''"They also serve who only stand and wait."''


Rickover Hall at the ] houses the departments of Mechanical Engineering, Naval Architecture, Ocean Engineering, and Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering. Rickover Center at Naval Nuclear Power Training Command is located at Joint Base Charleston, where Navy personnel begin their engineering training. In 2011, the ] included Rickover as part of the ''Technology for the Nuclear Age: Nuclear Propulsion'' display for its Cold War exhibit, which featured the following quotation:
Admiral Rickover was at ]. His first wife, Ruth Masters Rickover (1903-1972), is buried with him and the name of his second wife, Eleonore A. Bednowicz Rickover, whom he met and married while she was serving as a Commander in the Navy Nurse Corps, is also inscribed on his gravestone. He was survived by Robert Rickover, his sole son by his first wife, who is today a teacher of the ].


{{blockquote|Good ideas are not adopted automatically. They must be driven into practice with courageous impatience.<ref>{{cite web | title= Technology for the Nuclear Age: Nuclear Propulsion | url= http://usnavymuseum.org/Ex1_NuclearPropulsion.asp | work= Cold War Gallery | publisher= ] | year= 2011 | access-date= 2011-10-12 | archive-date= November 16, 2012 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121116021035/http://usnavymuseum.org/Ex1_NuclearPropulsion.asp | url-status= dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://bebekim.wordpress.com/2010/08/27/doing-a-job-by-admiral-hyman-g-rickover-u-s-navy-retired/|title=Doing a Job|work=Simple ideas, taken seriously|date=August 27, 2010|publisher=Bebekim.wordpress|access-date=2014-12-12}}</ref>}}
At Arlington, Rickover's burial site overlooks the ] at President ]'s grave site. Of note, it was Rickover who gave President Kennedy the , which states, “O God, thy sea is so great and my boat is so small.” The plaque is on display in the as part of the Oval Office exhibit.


Other things named in his honor include the Admiral Hyman Rickover Fellowship at M.I.T.,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mit.edu/ans/www/resources.html|title=MIT ANS Resources|website=mit.edu|access-date=March 21, 2009|archive-date=February 18, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120218203837/http://mit.edu/ans/www/resources.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> ],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rickovernaval.org/|title=Admiral Hyman George Rickover Naval Academy|website=www.rickovernaval.org}}</ref> and Rickover Junior High School.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.d168.org/rickover/ |title=Home Page |access-date=2006-11-07 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070205084528/http://d168.org/rickover/ |archive-date=2007-02-05 }}</ref>
During the last century, only a few names naturally come to mind of those who have made a truly major impact on both their navies and their nations: ], ] and ]. Rickover joined them. Creating a detail-focused pursuit of excellence to a degree previously unknown, he redirected the United States Navy’s ship propulsion, quality control, personnel selection, and training and education, and has had far reaching effects on the defense establishment and the civilian nuclear energy field.


==Named in his honor== == Awards ==
] ]
The ]
]
was named for him. She was commissioned two years before
the Admiral's death, making her one of the relatively few ] ships to be
].


===Warfare insignia===
USS ''Hyman G. Rickover'' was launched on August 27, 1983, sponsored by the Admiral's second wife, Mrs. Eleonore Ann Bednowicz Rickover, commissioned on July 21, 1984, and inactivated on December 14, 2006.
{|
|-
|]
|] (Dolphins)<ref name="auto1" />{{rp|9}}
|}


===Decorations and medals===
''Rickover Hall'' at the ], housing the departments of Mechanical Engineering, Naval Ocean Engineering, Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering, and ''Rickover Center'' at the , Goose Creek, South Carolina are also named in his honor.
{|
|{{Ribbon devices|number=2|type=award-star|ribbon=Navy_Distinguished_Service_Medal_ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|] with two ]s (1961, 1964, 1982)
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=1|type=award-star|ribbon=Legion of Merit ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|] with ] (1945, 1952)
|-
|{{ribbon devices|number=|type=award-star|other_device=|ribbon=Navy_and_Marine_Corps_Commendation_Medal_ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|] (1945)
|-
|{{ribbon devices|number=|type=award-star|other_device=|ribbon=Army Commendation Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|] (1949) (Conversion award from Letter of Commendation from the Secretary of the Army in 1946.)
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=|type=oak|ribbon=Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg|width=80}}
|] (1980)
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=World War I Victory Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|]
|-
|{{ribbon devices|number=|type=service-star|ribbon=China_Service_Medal_ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|]
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=1|type=service-star|ribbon=American Defense Service Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|]
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=0|type=service-star|ribbon=American Campaign Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|]
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=|type=service-star|ribbon=Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|]
|-
|{{Ribbon devices|number=0|type=service-star|ribbon=World War II Victory Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|]
|-
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=service-star|ribbon=Army of Occupation ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|] with "ASIA" clasp
|-
|{{ribbon devices|number=1|type=service-star|ribbon=National Defense Service Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}}
|] with one {{frac|3|16}}" ]
|}
* ]&nbsp;– 2 awards (1958, 1982)


===Foreign order===
Others:
{|
*
|{{Ribbon devices|number=|type=service-star|ribbon=Order of the British Empire (Military) Ribbon.png|width=80}}
*
| Honorary ] (1946)
|}


In recognition of his wartime service, he was invested as an Honorary Commander of the Military Division of the Most Excellent ] in 1946 by ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.military.com/history/admiral-hyman-g-rickover-taking-the-atom-undersea.html|title=Admiral Hyman G. Rickover: Taking the Atom Undersea|date=November 8, 2017}}</ref>
==Awards==
]


===Other awards===
Admiral Rickover's personal decorations included the ], the ] with Gold ], the ] with Gold Award Star, the ], the ]. His campaign and service medals included the ], ], ], ], ], ], and the ].
Admiral Rickover was twice awarded the ] for exceptional public service; the first in 1958, and the second 25 years later in 1983, becoming one of only three persons to be awarded more than one.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0510/36758.html|title=Taylor receives third Congressional Gold Medal, May 5, 1848|author=Andrew Glass|date=May 5, 2010 |publisher=Politico|access-date=2014-12-12}}</ref> In 1980, President Jimmy Carter presented Admiral Rickover with the ], the United States' highest non-military honor, for his contributions to world peace.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1980/06/10/archives/carter-gives-medal-of-freedom-to-his-mentor-rickover-and-13.html|title=Carter Gives Medal of Freedom to His Mentor, Rickover, and 13|newspaper=The New York Times|date=June 10, 1980}}</ref>


He also received 61 civilian awards and 15 honorary degrees, including the ] ''"For engineering and demonstrative leadership in the development of safe and reliable nuclear power and its successful application to our national security and economic needs."''<ref>{{cite web | title = The Enrico Fermi Award&nbsp;– H.G. Rickover, 1964 | access-date = 2009-03-06 | url = http://www.er.doe.gov/fermi/html/Laureates/1960s/hgrickover.htm | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090212160830/http://www.er.doe.gov/fermi/html/Laureates/1960s/hgrickover.htm | archive-date = 2009-02-12 | url-status = dead }}</ref> Some of the most notable other awards include:<ref>{{cite book | title = Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering, Volume 3 | year = 1989 | access-date = 2009-03-06 | url = http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=1384&page=297|publisher=Nap.edu| doi = 10.17226/1384 | isbn = 978-0-309-03939-0 }}</ref>
In recognition of his wartime service, he was made Honorary Commander of the Military Division of the Most Excellent ].
* the Egleston Medal Award of ] Alumni Association (1955)
* the ] from the ] (ASME) (1955)
* the ] 100th Anniversary Medal (1958)
* the Golden Omega Award from the ] (IEEE) (1959)
* the Prometheus Award from the ] (NEMA) (1965)
* the ] (1968)
* the ] from the Western Society of Engineers<ref>{{cite web | title = Western Society of Engineers | access-date = 2009-03-20 | url = http://www.wsechicago.org/washington_award.asp | publisher = Wsechicago.org | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090212155513/http://www.wsechicago.org/washington_award.asp | archive-date = 2009-02-12 }}</ref> (1970)


Some of his honorary degrees included:
Admiral Rickover was twice awarded the ] for exceptional public service; the first in 1958, and the second 25 years later in 1983. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter presented Admiral Rickover with the ], the nation's highest non-military honor, for his contributions to world peace.
* ]: ] (1954);<ref>{{Cite magazine | issn = 0040-781X | title = Kudos | magazine = Time | access-date = 2009-03-21 | date = 1954-06-21 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,860818-1,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080423233648/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,860818-1,00.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = April 23, 2008 }}</ref> ] (1958);<ref>{{Cite magazine | issn = 0040-781X | title = The $1,000 Word | magazine = Time | access-date = 2009-03-21 | date = 1958-06-23 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,810381-2,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080423233452/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,810381-2,00.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = April 23, 2008 }}</ref> Columbia University (1960)<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.columbia.edu/cu/secretary/pdf_and_word/honorary_degree_recipients.pdf | title = Honorary Degree Recipients: 1945–2007| access-date = 2009-03-21 | last = Haswell | first = Hollee |date=April 2008 | publisher = Columbia University }}</ref>
He also received 61 civilian awards and 15 honorary degrees, including the prestigious ] ''"For engineering and demonstrative leadership in the development of safe and reliable nuclear power and its successful application to our national security and economic needs."'' . In addition to the Enrico Fermi Award, some of the most notable awards include:


==Publications==
*the ''Egleston Medal Award'' of ] Alumni Associaton (1955),
Hyman was a writer who penned several books about education and naval history. His major works are as follows:
*the ''] Gold Medal'' from the ] (ASME) (1955),
* ''Education and Freedom''. (1959). ]: ]
*the ''] 100th Anniversary Medal'' (1958),
* ''Swiss Schools and Ours: Why Theirs Are Better''. (1962). ]: ]
*the ''Golden Omega Award'' from the ] (IEEE) (1959),
* ''American Education''. (1963). ]: ]
*the ''Prometheus Award'' from the ] (NEMA) (1965)
* ''Liberty, Science, and Law''. (1969). ]: ]
*the '']'' from the Western Society of Engineers (1970)
* ''Eminent Americans: Namesakes of the Polaris Submarine Fleet''. (1972). ]: ]
* '']''. (1976). ]: ]
* ''No Holds Barred: The Final Congressional Testimony of Admiral Hyman G. Rickover''. (1982). ]: ]


==Documentaries==
Some of his ] included:
* ''Admiral Rickover'' – ] interview by ] (1984)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://nuclearstreet.com/pro_nuclear_power_blogs/b/science-history-nuclear/archive/2014/03/09/admiral-hyman-rickover-a-vintage-television-interview-and-some-thoughts#.XJq6rtFOmu4|title=Admiral Hyman Rickover: a vintage television interview and some thoughts |website=nuclearstreet.com}}</ref> with an excerpt from a 1957 interview with ]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.people.vcu.edu/~rsleeth/Rickover.html|title=Rickover Interview|website=www.people.vcu.edu}}</ref>
*]: ] (1954);<ref>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,860818-1,00.html</ref> ] (1958);<ref>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,810381-2,00.html</ref> Columbia University (1960)<ref>http://www.columbia.edu/cu/secretary/pdf_and_word/honorary_degree_recipients.pdf</ref>
* ''Rickover: The Birth of Nuclear Power'' by ] – documentary screened at the GI Film Festival in the District of Columbia on 24 May 2014,<ref>'' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140529150521/http://gifilmfestival.com/portfolios/admiral-rickover-the-father-of-nuclear-power/#sg1 |date=2014-05-29 }}'' at GI Film Festival.</ref> and broadcast on 9 December 2014, on ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://local.ans.org/wilmington/sites/default/files/flyers/20130221%20Rockwell-Rickover-Announcement.pdf|title='Dinner & A Rickover Movie' with Ted Rockwell : Author of 'The Rickover Effect'|publisher=Local.ans.org|access-date=2014-12-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714185559/http://local.ans.org/wilmington/sites/default/files/flyers/20130221%20Rockwell-Rickover-Announcement.pdf|archive-date=2014-07-14|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==See also== == Further reading ==
* Hewlett, Richard G., and Francis Duncan. ''''. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1974. {{ISBN|0-226-33219-5}}.
*] (Jewish admiral of the United States Navy and the 25th Chief of Naval Operations)
* Wortman, Marc. ''Admiral Hyman Rickover: Engineer of Power''. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2022. {{ISBN|9-780300-24310-9}}.
*] (and the role of Admiral Rickover)
*] (first Jewish Commodore of the United States Navy and a veteran of the War of 1812)
*]


== See also ==
==References and resources==
* ]
Of the plethora of articles and books written about Admiral Rickover, likely the most informed and accurate products are those by Francis Duncan. As noted in a 2003 review of Duncan's ''Rickover: The Struggle for Excellence'' written by Malcolm Muir:
* ]

* ]
<blockquote>"Hyman G. Rickover was without question one of the most controversial officers ever to wear the uniform of the United States Navy...His productivity was legendary, as was his irascibility. He made nuclear propulsion a reality and made enemies by the score. In this volume, Francis Duncan tries to present a balanced picture of Rickover. The author of a 1990 study of Rickover's engineering methodology, Duncan is uniquely qualified for the task at hand, not least because he enjoyed a longtime personal association with the admiral. Unlike earlier biographers, he had access to Rickover's extensive private papers, including his fitness reports, his naval academy records, and much of his correspondence. He also tapped documents in private collections and interviewed a myriad of individuals associated with Rickover and his programs."</blockquote>
* ]

References and resources in order of publication:

*'''' cover story on Rickover in ] (January, 1954)
*], ''The Atomic Submarine and Admiral Rickover'' (H. Holt, 1954)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''Nuclear Power and the Navy'' (Navy League of the United States, 1955)
*Stanford, Neal, '''' (The Christian Science Monitor, 1957)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''Education and Freedom'' (Dutton, 1959)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''Swiss Schools and Ours: Why Theirs are Better'' (Little, Brown, 1962)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''American Education, a National Failure; The problem of our schools and what we can learn from England'' (Dutton, 1963)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''Liberty, Science and Law'' (Newcomen Society in North America, 1969)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''Nuclear Warships and the Navy's Future'' ({s.n.}, 1974)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', '''', speech, (1974)
*], ''Now It Can Be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project'' (Da Capo PR, 1975)
*], ''On Watch: A Memoir'' (Quadrangle/New York Times Co., 1976) includes a chapter on Rickover
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', '''' speech presented at the San Diego Rotary Club (1977)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', ''No Holds Barred: The Final Congressional Testimony of Admiral Hyman Rickover'' (Center for Study of Responsive Law, 1982)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', '''' 1981 management philosophy speech at Columbia University School of Engineering (CoEvolution Quarterly, 1982)
*], '''' (Air University Review, July-August 1983) -- opinion piece from a WWII diesel boat commander
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', on ] by ] and ] (1984)
*Tyler, Patrick, ''Running Critical: The Silent War, Rickover & General Dynamics'' (Harper Trade, 1986)
* (1989)
*Duncan, Francis, ''Rickover and the Nuclear Navy: The Discipline of Technology'' (Naval Institute Press, 1990)
*Rockwell, Theodore, ''The Rickover Effect: The Inside Story of How Adm. Hyman Rickover Built the Nuclear Navy '' (John Wiley & Sons, 1995)
*Beaver, William, '''' (Business Forum, 1998)
*Sontag, Sherry; Drew, Christopher; Drew, Annette Lawrence; '']'' (PublicAffairs, 1998)
*Gordon, Robert B., ''Working for Admiral Rickover: Memoir'' (Naval Historical Foundation Memoir program, 2000)
*Duncan, Francis, ''Rickover: The Struggle for Excellence'' (Naval Institute Press, 2001)
*], ''The Silent War: The Cold War Battle Beneath the Sea'' (Simon & Schuster, 2001)
*], ''Command of the Seas'', (US Naval Institute Press, 2nd rev. ed., 2001)
*Rockwell, Theodore, ''The Rickover Effect: How One Man Made a Difference'' (Backinprint.com, 2002)
*], ''Submarine: A Guided Tour Inside a Nuclear Warship'' (Berkley, 2002)
*Hinkle, David, ''United States Submarines'' (Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, 2002)
*Polmar, Norman; Allen, Thomas; ''Rickover &ndash; Admiral of the Fleet &ndash; Controversy and Genius, A Biography'' (Ross & Perry, 2003)
*David, Heather M., ''Admiral Rickover and the Nuclear Navy'' (Putnam Pub Group, 2004)
*Zweigenhaft, Richard L., ''Diversity in the Power Elite: How It Happened, Why It Matters'' (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006)
*'''Rickover, Hyman G.''', '''', 1957 speech, (Energy Bulletin, 2006)
*Rose, Lisle A., ''Power at Sea: A Violent Peace, 1946-2006'' (University of Missouri Press, 2006)
*Allen, Thomas; Polmar, Norman; ''Rickover: Father of the Nuclear Navy'' (Potomac Books, 2007)
*Meyer, CM, '''', Part 1, PDF document, (''energize'' magazine, April 2007)
*Meyer, CM, '''', Part 3, PDF document, (''energize'' magazine, June 2007)

==External links==
* &ndash; formerly Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory; conducts ] for the United States Navy nuclear propulsion program
* made-for-TV movie history of American submarine espionage (2001)
*
* &ndash; KAPL, a civilian-run support organization for the United States Navy nuclear propulsion program
*
*
* &ndash; the U.S. nuclear submarine officer career path
*] &ndash; précis of Rickover-related materials
* video of arrival in New York City following world transit (YouTube)
*
* library of publications by Rickover
*{{findagrave|8496952}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}} {{Reflist}}


== External links ==
==Further reading==
{{Commons category|Hyman Rickover}}
*White, Garry, '''', article citing Rickover's prescience, (''MoneyWeek'' magazine, July 18, 2007)
* Current commentary and discussion on Rickover's warnings regarding fossil fuel depletion
*Stephens, Edward C., ''Blow Negative!'' (], New York, 1962); Samson (Sam) Griece, a thinly disguised Rickover, is the hero of this novel about his struggle to develop the first nuclear submarine. A blurb on a 1966 paperback edition quotes the old ] as calling it "The best novel of the navy since '']''... as fascinating and revealing... as '']''." The year-by-year time frame of the submarine's development, however, is dramatised, however, and does not follow that of the actual events of the late 1940s and early 1950s.

{{Commons|Hyman G. Rickover}}
{{wikiquote}} {{wikiquote}}
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210224040945/http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/viewItem.do?ark=21198%2Fzz0002rzmv |date=February 24, 2021 }} ] Photographic Archive (Collection 1429). UCLA Library Special Collections, ], ].
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Latest revision as of 20:40, 30 December 2024

US Navy admiral For other uses, see Hyman G. Rickover (disambiguation).

Hyman G. Rickover
Official portrait, 1955
Birth nameChaim Godalia Rickover
Nickname(s)"Father of the Nuclear Navy"; "The Kindly Old Gentleman," or simply "KOG"
Born(1900-01-27)27 January 1900
Maków Mazowiecki, Vistula Land
Died8 July 1986(1986-07-08) (aged 86)
Arlington County, Virginia, U.S.
AllegianceUnited States
Service / branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1918–1982
RankAdmiral
CommandsUSS Finch
Naval Reactors
Battles / warsWorld War II
AwardsNavy Distinguished Service Medal (3)
Legion of Merit (2)
Congressional Gold Medal (2)
Presidential Medal of Freedom
Enrico Fermi Award
Alma materUnited States Naval Academy
Columbia University (MSEE)
Spouse(s)Ruth D. Masters (1931–1972 (her death); 1 child)
Eleonore A. Bednowicz (1974–1986 (his death))

Hyman G. Rickover (27 January 1900 – 8 July 1986) was an admiral in the United States Navy. He directed the original development of naval nuclear propulsion and controlled its operations for three decades as director of the U.S. Naval Reactors office. In addition, he oversaw the development of the Shippingport Atomic Power Station, the world's first commercial pressurized water reactor used for generating electricity. Rickover is also one of seven people who have been awarded two Congressional Gold Medals.

Rickover is known as the "Father of the Nuclear Navy," and his influence on the Navy and its warships was of such scope that he "may well go down in history as one of the Navy's most important officers." He served in a flag rank for nearly 30 years (1953 to 1982), ending his career as a four-star admiral. His years of service exceeded that of each of the U.S. Navy's five-star fleet admirals—Leahy, King, Nimitz and Halsey—all of whom served on active duty for life after their appointments. Rickover's total of 63 years of active duty service makes him the longest-serving naval officer, as well as the longest-serving member of the U.S armed forces in history.

Having become a naval engineering duty officer (EDO) in 1937 after serving as both a surface ship and submarine-qualified unrestricted line officer, his substantial legacy of technical achievements includes the United States Navy's continuing record of zero reactor accidents.

Early life and education

Rickover was born Chaim Gdala Rykower to Abraham and Rachel/Ruchla Lea (nee Unger) Rykower, a Polish Jewish family from Maków Mazowiecki in Vistula Land. His parents changed his name to "Hyman" which is derived from Chayyim, meaning "life". He did not use his middle name Godalia (a form of Gedaliah), but he substituted "George" when at the Naval Academy.

In 1906 (aged six), Rickover made passage to New York City with his mother and sister, fleeing anti-Semitic Russian pogroms during the Revolution of 1905. They joined Abraham, who had made earlier trips there beginning in 1897 to become established. Rickover's family lived initially on the East Side of Manhattan but moved two years later to North Lawndale, Chicago, which was a heavily Jewish neighborhood at the time, where Rickover's father continued work as a tailor. Rickover took his first paid job at age nine, earning three cents an hour (equivalent to $1.02 in 2023) for holding a light as his neighbor operated a machine. Later, he delivered groceries. He graduated from grammar school at 14.

Rickover attended John Marshall Metropolitan High School in Chicago and graduated with honors in 1918. He then held a full-time job as a telegraph boy delivering Western Union telegrams, through which he became acquainted with Congressman Adolph J. Sabath, a Czech Jewish immigrant. Sabath nominated Rickover for appointment to the United States Naval Academy. Rickover was only a third alternate for appointment, but he passed the entrance exam and was accepted.

Naval career through World War II

Rickover's naval career began in 1918 at the Naval Academy; at this time, attending military academies was considered active duty service, due in part to World War I. On 2 June 1922, Rickover graduated 107th out of 540 midshipmen and was commissioned as an ensign. He joined the destroyer La Vallette on 5 September 1922. Rickover impressed his commanding officer with his hard work and efficiency, and was made engineer officer on 21 June 1923, becoming the youngest such officer in the squadron.

He next served on board the battleship Nevada before earning a Master of Science degree in electrical engineering from Columbia University in 1930 by way of a year at the Naval Postgraduate School and further coursework at Columbia. At the latter institution, he met Ruth D. Masters, a graduate student in international law, whom he married in 1931 after she returned from her doctoral studies at the Sorbonne in Paris. Shortly after marrying, Rickover wrote to his parents of his decision to become an Episcopalian, remaining so for the remainder of his life.

Rickover had a high regard for the quality of the education he received at Columbia, as demonstrated in this excerpt from a speech he gave at the university some 52 years after attending:

Columbia was the first institution that encouraged me to think rather than memorize. My teachers were notable in that many had gained practical engineering experience outside the university and were able to share their experience with their students. I am grateful, among others, to Professors Morecroft, Hehre, and Arendt. Much of what I have subsequently learned and accomplished in engineering is based on the solid foundation of principles I learned from them.

Rickover preferred life on smaller ships, and he also knew that young officers in the submarine service were advancing quickly, so he went to Washington and volunteered for submarine duty. His application was turned down due to his age, at that time 29 years. Fortunately for Rickover, he encountered his former commanding officer from Nevada while leaving the building, who interceded successfully on his behalf. From 1929 to 1933, Rickover qualified for submarine duty and command aboard the submarines S-9 and S-48. While aboard S-48 he was addressed a letter of commendation from the Secretary of the Navy "for rescuing Augustin Pasis… from drowning at the Submarine Base, Coco Solo, Canal Zone." While at the Office of the Inspector of Naval Material in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1933, Rickover translated Das Unterseeboot (The Submarine) by World War I German Imperial Navy Admiral Hermann Bauer. Rickover's translation became a basic text for the U.S. submarine service.

On 17 July 1937, he reported aboard the minesweeper Finch at Qingdao, China, and assumed what would be his only ship command with additional duty as Commander, Mine Division Three, Asiatic Fleet. The Marco Polo Bridge Incident had occurred ten days earlier. In August, Finch stood out for Shanghai to protect American citizens and interests from the conflict between Chinese and Japanese forces. On 25 September, Rickover was promoted to lieutenant commander, retroactive to 1 July. In October, his designation as an engineering duty officer became effective, and he was relieved of his three-month command of Finch at Shanghai on 5 October 1937.

Rickover was assigned to the Cavite Navy Yard in the Philippines, and was transferred shortly thereafter to the Bureau of Engineering in Washington, D.C. Once there, he took up his duties as assistant chief of the Electrical section of the Bureau of Engineering on 15 August 1939.

On 10 April 1942, after America's entry into World War II, Rickover flew to Pearl Harbor to organize repairs to the electrical power plant of USS California. Rickover had been promoted to the rank of commander on 1 January 1942, and in late June of that year was made a temporary captain. In late 1944 he appealed for a transfer to an active command. He was sent to investigate inefficiencies at the naval supply depot at Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, then was appointed in July 1945 to command of a ship repair facility on Okinawa. Shortly thereafter, his command was destroyed by Typhoon Louise, and he subsequently spent some time helping to teach school to Okinawan children.

Later in the war, his service as head of the Electrical Section in the Bureau of Ships brought him a Legion of Merit and gave him experience in directing large development programs, choosing talented technical people, and working closely with private industry. Time magazine featured him on the cover of its 11 January 1954 issue. The accompanying article described his wartime service:

Sharp-tongued Hyman Rickover spurred his men to exhaustion, ripped through red tape, drove contractors into rages. He went on making enemies, but by the end of the war he had won the rank of captain. He had also won a reputation as a man who gets things done.

Naval Reactors and the Atomic Energy Commission

See also: Naval Reactors
Admiral Rickover aboard USS Nautilus, the world's first nuclear-powered vessel. "I did not recruit extraordinary people. I recruited people who had extraordinary potential—and then I trained them"

In December 1945, Rickover was appointed Inspector General of the 19th Fleet on the west coast, and was assigned to work with General Electric at Schenectady, New York, to develop a nuclear propulsion plant for destroyers. In 1946, an initiative was begun at the Manhattan Project's Clinton Laboratory (now the Oak Ridge National Laboratory) to develop a nuclear electric generating plant. Realizing the potential that nuclear energy held for the Navy, Rickover applied. Rickover was sent to Oak Ridge through the efforts of his wartime boss, Rear Admiral Earle Mills, who became the head of the Navy's Bureau of Ships that same year.

Rickover became an early convert to the idea of nuclear marine propulsion, and was the driving force for shifting the Navy's initial focus from applications on destroyers to submarines. Rickover's vision was not initially shared by his immediate superiors: he was recalled from Oak Ridge and assigned "advisory duties" with an office in an abandoned ladies' room in the Navy Building. He subsequently went around several layers of superior officers, and in 1947 went directly to the Chief of Naval Operations, Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz, also a former submariner. Nimitz immediately understood the potential of nuclear propulsion in submarines and recommended the project to the Secretary of the Navy, John L. Sullivan. Sullivan's endorsement to build the world's first nuclear-powered vessel, USS Nautilus, later caused Rickover to state that Sullivan was "the true father of the Nuclear Navy."

Subsequently, Rickover became chief of a new section in the Bureau of Ships, the Nuclear Power Division reporting to Mills. He began work with Alvin M. Weinberg, the Oak Ridge director of research, to initiate and develop the Oak Ridge School of Reactor Technology and to begin the design of the pressurized water reactor for submarine propulsion. In February 1949 he was assigned to the Atomic Energy Commission's Division of Reactor Development, and then assumed control of the Navy's effort within the AEC as Director of the Naval Reactors Branch. This twin role enabled him to lead the effort to develop Nautilus.

The original selection of Rickover as head of development of the nation's nuclear submarine program ultimately rested with Admiral Mills. According to Lieutenant General Leslie Groves, director of the Manhattan Project, Mills was anxious to have a very determined man involved. He knew that Rickover was "not too easy to get along with" and "not too popular," but in his judgement Rickover was the man on whom the Navy could depend "no matter what opposition he might encounter".

While his team and industry were completing construction of Nautilus, Rickover was promoted to the rank of rear admiral in 1953. However, this was anything but routine, and occurred only after an extraordinary chain of events:

peers in the Navy’s engineer branch thought to get rid of him through failure of promotion above captain. This would entail automatic retirement at the thirty-year mark. But someone made the case to the U.S. Senate, charged by the Constitution with formal confirmation of military promotions. In that year, 1953, two years before Nautilus first went to sea, the Senate failed to give its usual perfunctory approval of the Navy admiral promotion list, and the press was outraged because Rickover's name was not on it. ... Ultimately an enlightened Secretary of the Navy, Robert B. Anderson, ordered a special selection board to sit. With some shuffling of feet it did what it had been ordered to do.... Ninety-five percent of Navy captains must retire regardless of how highly qualified because there are only vacancies for 5 percent of them to become admirals, and although vindictiveness has sometimes played a part in determining who shall fail of selection for promotion (thus also violating the system), never before or since have pressures from outside the Navy overturned this form of career-termination.

Regardless of the challenges faced in developing and operating brand-new technology, Rickover and the team did not disappoint: the result was a highly reliable nuclear reactor in a form-factor that would fit into a submarine hull with no more than a 28-foot (8.5 m) beam. This became known as the S1W reactor. Nautilus was launched and commissioned with this reactor in 1954.

Later Rickover oversaw the development of the Shippingport Atomic Power Station, the first commercial pressurized water reactor nuclear power plant. Kenneth Nichols of the AEC decided that the Rickover-Westinghouse pressurized-water reactor was "the best choice for a reactor to demonstrate the production of electricity" with Rickover "having a going organization and a reactor project under way that now had no specific use to justify it." This was a reference to the first core used at Shippingport originating from a cancelled nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. This was accepted by Lewis Strauss and the Commission in January 1954.

Rickover was promoted to vice admiral in 1958, the same year that he was awarded the first of two Congressional Gold Medals. He exercised tight control for the next three decades over the ships, technology, and personnel of the nuclear Navy, interviewing and approving or denying every prospective officer being considered for a nuclear ship. Over the course of Rickover's career, these personal interviews numbered in the tens of thousands; over 14,000 interviews were with recent college-graduates alone. The interviewees ranged from midshipmen and newly commissioned ensigns destined for nuclear-powered submarines and surface combatants, to very senior combat-experienced Naval Aviator captains who sought command of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. The content of most of these interviews has been lost to history, though some were later chronicled in several books on Rickover's career, as well as in a rare personal interview with Diane Sawyer in 1984.

In 1973, though his role and responsibilities remained unchanged, Rickover was promoted to the rank of four-star admiral. This was the second time (after Samuel Murray Robinson) in the history of the U.S. Navy that an officer with a career path other than an operational line officer achieved that rank. Because his responsibilities did not include direct command and control of combatant naval units, technically Rickover was appointed to the grade of admiral on the retired list so as to provide some clarity on this issue. This was also done to avoid affecting the maximum-authorized number of admirals (O-10) on the "active list."

As head of Naval Reactors, Rickover's focus and responsibilities were dedicated to reactor safety rather than tactical or strategic submarine warfare training. However, this extreme focus was well known during Rickover's era as a potential hindrance to balancing operational priorities. One way that this was addressed after Rickover retired was that only the very strongest, former at-sea submarine commanders have held Rickover's now unique eight-year position as NAVSEA-08, the longest chartered tenure in the U.S. military. From Rickover's first replacement, Kinnaird R. McKee, to today's head of Naval Reactors, William J. Houston, all have held command of nuclear submarines, their squadrons and ocean fleets, but none have been a long-term Engineering Duty Officer such as Rickover. In keeping with Rickover's promotion to four-star admiral, those who were subsequently selected for assignment to Director, Naval Reactors are promoted to this same rank, but also on active duty status.

Historian Francis Duncan, who for over eight years was granted generous access to diverse numbers and levels of witnesses—including U.S. presidents—as well as Rickover himself, came to the conclusion that the man was best understood with respect to a guiding principle that Rickover invoked foremost for both himself and those who served in the U.S. Navy's nuclear propulsion program: "exercise of the concept of responsibility." This is further evidenced by Rickover listing responsibility as his first principle in his final-years paper and speech, Thoughts on Man's Purpose in Life.

Safety record

Rickover's stringent standards are largely credited with being responsible for the U.S. Navy's continuing record of zero reactor accidents (defined as the uncontrolled release of fission products to the environment resulting from damage to a reactor core). He made it a point to be aboard during the initial sea trial of almost every nuclear submarine completing its new-construction period. Following the Three Mile Island accident on March 28, 1979, Admiral Rickover was asked to testify before Congress in the general context of answering the question as to why naval nuclear propulsion had succeeded in achieving a record of zero reactor-accidents, as opposed to the dramatic one that had just taken place.

The accident-free record of United States Navy reactor operations stands in some very stark contrast to those of the Soviet Union, which had fourteen known reactor accidents. As stated in a retrospective analysis in October 2007:

U.S. submarines far outperformed the Soviet ones in the crucial area of stealth, and Rickover's obsessive fixation on safety and quality control gave the U.S. nuclear Navy a vastly superior safety record to the Soviet one.

Views on nuclear power

Given Rickover's single-minded focus on naval nuclear propulsion, design, and operations, it came as a surprise to many in 1982, near the end of his career, when he testified before the U.S. Congress that, were it up to him what to do with nuclear powered ships, he "would sink them all." At a congressional hearing Rickover testified that:

I do not believe that nuclear power is worth it if it creates radiation. Then you might ask me why do I have nuclear powered ships. That is a necessary evil. I would sink them all. I am not proud of the part I played in it. I did it because it was necessary for the safety of this country. That's why I am such a great exponent of stopping this whole nonsense of war. Unfortunately limits—attempts to limit war have always failed. The lesson of history is when a war starts every nation will ultimately use whatever weapon it has available. ... Every time you produce radiation, you produce something that has a certain half-life, in some cases for billions of years. ... It is important that we control these forces and try to eliminate them.

— Economics of Defense Policy: Hearing before the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, 97th Cong., 2nd sess., Pt. 1 (1982)

A few months later, following his retirement, Rickover spoke more specifically regarding the questions "Could you comment on your own responsibility in helping to create a nuclear navy? Do you have any regrets?":

I do not have regrets. I believe I helped preserve the peace for this country. Why should I regret that? What I accomplished was approved by Congress—which represents our people. All of you live in safety from domestic enemies because of security from the police. Likewise, you live in safety from foreign enemies because our military keeps them from attacking us. Nuclear technology was already under development in other countries. My assigned responsibility was to develop our nuclear navy. I managed to accomplish this.

Focus on education

President Kennedy and Rickover, White House, 11 February 1963 "...in addition to the multilateral POLARIS force, we discussed education and how he and I were brought up as boys"

When he was a child still living in Russian-occupied Poland, Rickover was not allowed to attend public schools because of his Jewish faith. Starting at the age of four, he attended a religious school where the teaching was solely from the Tanakh, i.e., Old Testament, in Hebrew. Following his formal education in the United States, Rickover developed a decades-long and outspoken interest in the educational standards of the US as being a national security issue, particularly as compared during the Cold War era to Soviet Russia.

An example of his passion for education from his 1959 Report on Russia in the context of comparative educational systems:

There is no room here (in nuclear powerplant development) for lofty theories which do not work out in practice. We would not get anywhere if we had the loose, hazy thinking you encounter when you bring out the obvious failures of the American educational system. ... there are times when it is irresponsible to avoid criticizing something which one knows to be wrong and dangerous for the Nation as a whole. I feel that every one who has a position of responsibility in this country and who can see and understand what is happening not only has the right, he has the obligation and the duty to speak. ... This is why I feel so strongly about education—about our failure to give our children as good an education as they deserve and need. ... It is my considered opinion that there is no problem that faces the Congress or the country that is as important.

Rickover believed that US standards of education were unacceptably low. His first book centered on education was a collection of essays calling for improved standards of education, particularly in math and science, entitled Education and Freedom (1959). In it, he stated that "education is the most important problem facing the United States today" and "only the massive upgrading of the scholastic standards of our schools will guarantee the future prosperity and freedom of the Republic." A second book, Swiss Schools and Ours (1962) was a scathing comparison of the educational systems of Switzerland and America. He argued that the higher standards of Swiss schools, including a longer school day and year, combined with an approach stressing student choice and academic specialization produced superior results.

Recognizing that "nurturing careers of excellence and leadership in science and technology in young scholars is an essential investment in the United States national and global future," Rickover founded the Center for Excellence in Education following his retirement in 1983. Additionally, Rickover founded the Research Science Institute (formerly the Rickover Science Institute) in 1984, a summer science program hosted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for high school seniors from around the world.

General Dynamics scandal

In the early 1980s, structural welding flaws in submarines under construction were covered up by falsified inspection records, and the resulting scandal led to significant delays and expenses in the delivery of several submarines being built at the General Dynamics Electric Boat Division shipyard in Groton, Connecticut. The yard tried to pass on the vast cost overruns to the Navy, while Rickover demanded that the yard make good on its "shoddy" workmanship. The Navy settled with General Dynamics in 1981, paying out $634 million of $843 million in Los Angeles-class submarine cost overrun and reconstruction claims. Secretary of the Navy John Lehman was partly motivated to seek the agreement in order to continue to focus on achieving President Reagan's goal of a 600-ship Navy. But Rickover was extremely bitter over the General Dynamics yard being paid hundreds of millions of dollars, and he lambasted both the settlement and Secretary Lehman. This was not Rickover's first clash with the defense industry; he was historically harsh in exacting high standards from defense contractors. It was later publicly announced by a former General Dynamics employee on 60 Minutes with Mike Wallace that Rickover was right that General Dynamics was lying to the Navy, but by then Rickover's public image was already damaged.

A Navy Ad Hoc Gratuities Board determined that Rickover had received gifts from General Dynamics over a 16-year period valued at $67,628, including jewelry, furniture, exotic knives, and gifts that Rickover had in turn presented to politicians. Charges were investigated that gifts were provided by General Electric and the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock, both major nuclear ship contractors for the Navy. Secretary Lehman admonished him in a non-punitive letter and stated that Rickover's "fall from grace with these little trinkets should be viewed in the context of his enormous contributions to the Navy." Rickover released a statement through his lawyer saying his "conscience is clear" with respect to the gifts. "No gratuity or favor ever affected any decision I made." Senator William Proxmire of Wisconsin, a longtime supporter of Rickover, later publicly associated a debilitating stroke suffered by the admiral to his having been censured and "dragged through the mud by the very institution to which he rendered his invaluable service."

Forced retirement

By the late 1970s, Rickover's position seemed stronger than it had ever been. Over many years, powerful friends on both the House and Senate Armed Services Committees ensured that he remained on active duty long after most other admirals had retired from their second careers. Jimmy Carter's admiration for Rickover was shown by the fact that the title of Carter's autobiography was based on a question that Rickover had asked Carter when the latter was in the Navy ("Why Not The Best?"). However, Secretary of the Navy John Lehman felt that Rickover was hindering the well-being of the navy. As Lehman stated in his book, Command of the Seas:

One of my first orders of business as Secretary of the Navy would be to solve ... the Rickover problem. Rickover's legendary achievements were in the past. His present viselike grip on much of the navy was doing it much harm. I had sought the job because I believed the navy had deteriorated to the point where its weakness seriously threatened our future security. The navy's grave afflictions included loss of a strategic vision; loss of self-confidence, and morale; a prolonged starvation of resources, leaving vast shortfalls in capability to do the job; and too few ships to cover a sea so great, all resulting in cynicism, exhaustion, and an undercurrent of defeatism. The cult created by Admiral Rickover was itself a major obstacle to recovery, entwining nearly all the issues of culture and policy within the navy.

Secretary Lehman eventually attained enough political clout to enforce his decision to retire Rickover. This was in part assisted by the admiral's nearly insubordinate stance against paying the General Dynamics submarine construction claims, as well as his advanced age and waning political leverage. On 27 July 1981, Lehman was handed the final impetus for ending Rickover's career by way of an operational error on the admiral's part: a "moderate" loss of ship control and depth excursion while performing a submerged "crash back" maneuver during the sea trials of the newly constructed USS La Jolla. Rickover was the actual man-in-charge during this specific performance test, and his actions and inactions were judged to have been the causal factor. On 31 January 1982, five weeks after his 82nd birthday, Rickover was forced to retire from the Navy after 63 years of service under 13 presidents (Woodrow Wilson through Ronald Reagan). According to Rickover, he first learned of his firing when his wife told him what she heard on the radio.

According to former President Jimmy Carter, several weeks following his retirement, Rickover "was invited to the Oval Office and decided to don his full dress uniform. He told me that he refused to take a seat, listened to the president ask him to be his special nuclear advisor, replied 'Mr. President, that is bullshit,' and then walked out." The Navy's official investigation of General Dynamics' Electric Boat division was ended shortly afterward. According to Theodore Rockwell, Rickover's Technical Director for more than 15 years, more than one source at that time stated that General Dynamics officials were bragging around Washington that they had "gotten Rickover."

On 28 February 1983, a post-retirement party honoring Admiral Rickover was attended by all three living former U.S. Presidents at the time: Nixon, Ford, and Carter, all formerly officers in the U.S. Navy. President Reagan was not in attendance.

Public image

Rickover has been called "the most famous and controversial admiral of his era." He was hyperactive, blunt, confrontational, insulting, and a workaholic, always demanding of others without regard for rank or position. Moreover, he had "little tolerance for mediocrity, none for stupidity." Even while a captain, Rickover did not conceal his opinions, and many of the officers whom he regarded as unintelligent eventually rose to be admirals and were assigned to the Pentagon. Rickover frequently found himself in bureaucratic combat with these senior naval officers, to the point that he almost missed becoming an admiral; two selection boards passed him over for promotion, and it took the intervention of the White House, U.S. Congress, and the Secretary of the Navy before he was promoted.

Rickover's military authority and congressional mandate were absolute with regard to the U.S. fleet's reactor operations, but his controlling personality was frequently a subject of internal Navy controversy. He was head of the Naval Reactors branch, and thus responsible for signing off on a crew's competence to operate the reactor safely, giving him the power to effectively remove a warship from active service, which he did on several occasions. The view became established that he sometimes exercised power to settle scores. Author and former submariner Edward L. Beach Jr. referred to him as a "tyrant" with "no account of his gradually failing powers" in his later years.

Later life and death

Headstone of Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, Arlington National Cemetery

On 4 July 1985, Admiral Rickover suffered what was described as a "serious" stroke, and was admitted to Bethesda Naval Hospital, thereafter dealing with partial paralysis in his right arm.

Rickover died at his home in Arlington, Virginia, on 8 July 1986, at age 86. He was buried on 11 July in a small, private ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery. On 14 July, memorial services were led by Admiral James D. Watkins at the Washington National Cathedral, with President Carter, Secretary of State George Shultz, Secretary Lehman, senior naval officers, and about 1,000 other people in attendance. At the request of the admiral's widow, President Carter read Milton's sonnet When I Consider How My Light is Spent.

Secretary of the Navy Lehman said in a statement:

With the death of Adm. Rickover, the Navy and this nation have lost a dedicated officer of historic accomplishment. In his 63 years of service, Adm. Rickover took the concept of nuclear power from an idea to the present reality of more than 150 U.S. naval ships under nuclear power, with a record of 3,000 ship-years of accident-free operations.

And the then-Chief of Naval Operations:

"Most important," Admiral Watkins said, "he was a teacher. He set the standards. They were tough. That is the legacy and the challenge he left to all who study his contributions."

Rickover is buried in Section 5 at Arlington National Cemetery. His first wife Ruth is buried with him and the name of his second wife Eleonore is inscribed on his gravestone. Eleonore passed away on 5 July 2021, and was buried in Arlington Cemetery. Rickover is survived by Robert Rickover, his sole son by his first wife.

Honors

The Los Angeles-class submarine USS Hyman G. Rickover (SSN-709) was named for him. She was commissioned two years before his death, and was, at that time, one of only two Navy ships to be named after a living person since 1900 (there have been 16 more since). The submarine was launched on 27 August 1983, sponsored by his second wife Eleonore, commissioned on 21 July 1984, and deactivated on 14 December 2006. In 2015, the Navy announced a Virginia-class submarine named USS Hyman G. Rickover (SSN-795) in his honor. The submarine's christening took place on 31 July 2021.

Rickover Hall at the United States Naval Academy houses the departments of Mechanical Engineering, Naval Architecture, Ocean Engineering, and Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering. Rickover Center at Naval Nuclear Power Training Command is located at Joint Base Charleston, where Navy personnel begin their engineering training. In 2011, the U.S. Navy Museum included Rickover as part of the Technology for the Nuclear Age: Nuclear Propulsion display for its Cold War exhibit, which featured the following quotation:

Good ideas are not adopted automatically. They must be driven into practice with courageous impatience.

Other things named in his honor include the Admiral Hyman Rickover Fellowship at M.I.T., Hyman G. Rickover Naval Academy, and Rickover Junior High School.

Awards

The second of two Congressional Gold Medals awarded to Rickover

Warfare insignia

Submarine Warfare Insignia (Dolphins)

Decorations and medals

Gold starGold star Navy Distinguished Service Medal with two 5⁄16" Gold Stars (1961, 1964, 1982)
Gold star Legion Of Merit with 5⁄16" Gold Star (1945, 1952)
Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal (1945)
Army Commendation Medal (1949) (Conversion award from Letter of Commendation from the Secretary of the Army in 1946.)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (1980)
World War I Victory Medal
China Service Medal
Bronze star American Defense Service Medal
American Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
Navy Occupation Service Medal with "ASIA" clasp
Bronze star National Defense Service Medal with one 3⁄16" Bronze Star

Foreign order

Honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire (1946)

In recognition of his wartime service, he was invested as an Honorary Commander of the Military Division of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 1946 by King George VI.

Other awards

Admiral Rickover was twice awarded the Congressional Gold Medal for exceptional public service; the first in 1958, and the second 25 years later in 1983, becoming one of only three persons to be awarded more than one. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter presented Admiral Rickover with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States' highest non-military honor, for his contributions to world peace.

He also received 61 civilian awards and 15 honorary degrees, including the Enrico Fermi Award "For engineering and demonstrative leadership in the development of safe and reliable nuclear power and its successful application to our national security and economic needs." Some of the most notable other awards include:

Some of his honorary degrees included:

Publications

Hyman was a writer who penned several books about education and naval history. His major works are as follows:

Documentaries

  • Admiral Rickover60 Minutes interview by Diane Sawyer (1984) with an excerpt from a 1957 interview with Edward R. Murrow
  • Rickover: The Birth of Nuclear Power by Michael Pack – documentary screened at the GI Film Festival in the District of Columbia on 24 May 2014, and broadcast on 9 December 2014, on PBS.

Further reading

See also

References

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  4. PhD dissertation, "Commanding Men and Machines: Admiralship, Technology, and Ideology in the 20th Century U.S. Navy," Hagerott, Mark (2004) http://drum.lib.umd.edu/bitstream/handle/1903/8525/umi-umd-5589.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
  5. Allen, Thomas B.; Polmar, Norman (2007). Rickover. ISBN 978-1574887044. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  6. ^ Lurie, Margaret. "Recollection from Margaret Lurie". USS Hyman G. Rickover Commissioning Committee. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
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  10. Narins, Brigham (2001). Notable Scientists from 1900 to the Present: N–S. ISBN 978-0787617554. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  11. Bankston, Carl Leon (2010). Encyclopedia of American Immigration: Paper sons. ISBN 978-1587656026 – via Books.goole.com. Born to a Jewish family in a part of Poland under Russian rule in 1900, Rickover fled with his parents to the United States in 1905 in an effort to avoid Russian-instigated pogroms.
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