Source: https://www.usna.edu/Library/sca/man-findingaids/view.php?f=MS_384
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 20:56:09+00:00

Document:
Abstract: The papers of Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery span the years 1907-1977. The collection consists of correspondence, publications of Rear Admiral Gallery and others, government documents, legal documents, photographs, drawings, audiovisual materials and certificates. The papers focus on Gallery's Navy experiences and career as a writer.
Daniel Vincent Gallery was born in Chicago, Illinois, on July 10, 1901, entered the Naval Academy in 1917, and graduated with the class of 1921 on June 3, 1920. He advanced through the ranks until 1960, when he retired from the Navy with the rank of Rear Admiral.
As a midshipman, Gallery was a member of the United States Olympic wrestling team and participated in the Olympic Games of 1920 in Antwerp, Belgium. In 1927 he was ordered to Pensacola for flight training. He was in command of the U.S. Navy Fleet Air Base in Iceland when World War II broke out. In 1943, Gallery took command of the U.S.S. Guadalcanal. In June 1944, Gallery captured the German submarine U-505 off Cape Blanco, French West Africa, the first boarding and capture at sea of an enemy naval vessel since 1815.
In 1928, Gallery married Vera Lee Dunn. They subsequently adopted three children, James J., Daniel V. III, and Beatrice Constance.
In 1945, he assumed command of the U.S.S. Hancock, and when the formal surrender of the Japanese imperial government was signed on board the Missouri, Hancock's planes flew overhead.
Gallery later served as Assistant Chief of Naval Operations (guided missiles), commanded Carrier Division Six during the Korean conflict, commanded the Naval Air Reserve Training Command at Glenview, and served as commandant of the 10th Naval District, with headquarters at San Juan, Puerto Rico. While in San Juan, Gallery set up the first Navy steel band.
During his career, Gallery accumulated over 6,000 hours flying time in all types of naval aircraft, including single-seat jets. He was a prolific writer of books, articles, and short stories, and a skilled cartoonist. Among the works authored by Gallery are Twenty Million Tons Under the Sea (1956), Eight Bells and All's Well and Now, Hear This (1965), Stand By-y-y to Start Engines (1966), The Brink (1968), Cap'n Fatso (1969), and The Pueblo Incident (1970).
Admiral Daniel V. Gallery died on January 16, 1977 at the Bethesda Naval Hospital.
The papers of Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery (1901-1977) span the years 1907-1977. The collection consists of correspondence, publications of Rear Admiral Gallery and others, government documents, legal documents and papers. Most materials are original although there are a small number of photocopies. There is an extensive collection of photographs, awards, honors and audiovisual materials. The bulk of the material is centered on his Navy experiences and his career as a writer.
The strengths of the collection are shown in the extensive documentation of Rear Admiral Gallery's career and subsequent publishing, as well as the variety of his contacts.
The Daniel V. Gallery Papers are the physical property of Nimitz Library. Copyright belongs to the authors or creators of the works, or their legal representatives. For further information, consult the Head, Special Collections & Archives.
Collection contains audio recordings on LP and magnetic tape and materials on 16mm motion picture film and undeveloped Kodak Ektachrome slide film.
Gift of Rear Admiral Gallery and his wife, Mrs. Vera D. Gallery in 1 May 1980.
DVDs of the following materials are housed in the Audiovisuals area of Nimitz Library, United States Naval Academy: ,Birth of the Carrier Task Force: A Saga of U.S. Naval Aviation by CDR Eugene E. Wilson, Admiral Dan's Pandemoniacs written by Rear Admiral D. V. Gallery, USN, Capture of U-505 by U.S.S. Guadalcanal directed by Oscar Rudolph (created and produced by Sam Gallu; screenplay by Rear Admiral D.V. Gallery, USN), To Tell the Truth (segment with Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery, also available in Nimitz Library Audiovisual Area), Away boarders [Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery (Ret.) reminisces about the capture of the U-505] from NBC with cooperation of the Navy Department of the United States.
Also available in the Special Collections and Archives Department, Nimitz Library, is the transcript of a U.S. Naval Institute Oral History with Rear Admiral Gallery (Reminiscences of Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery, U.S. Navy (Retired), 1976).
This collection was processed by Ruth Hennessy in July 2005. Finding aid written by Ruth Hennessy in July 2005. Edited by David D'Onofrio in November 2008.
This series contains personal and professional correspondence. The correspondence within this series is both incoming and outgoing. It is divided into six subseries.
The bulk of this correspondence relates to current news, Navy interests and writing. Material is arranged chronologically, 1927-1974.
This group of correspondents consists primarily of author Herman Wouk, with whom Gallery carried on an extensive discussion of “good” writing. Presidents and political leaders include Presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dwight David Eisenhower, and Richard Milhous Nixon, as well as Louis Ferre of Puerto Rico and Musician Pablo Casals. Most letters are originals. Photocopies of these originals are filed chronologically in the General category.
The correspondence in this sub-series involves well known military personnel and historians, and follows Gallery's interests and verification of material for his writing. Includes letters from Captain Axel Lowe, Admiral Doenitz, and Admiral Nimitz. Also included in this sub-series are opinions on UCMJ, Brainwashing, and the Secretary of the Navy (SecNav).
As well as the correspondence with Gallery's agent and the major publishers of his work, this sub-series contains correspondence with editors and staff of various periodicals concerning articles he had written.
Extensive correspondence with Gallery's parents, offering insight into his childhood, career and family relationships.
The correspondence in this sub-series is with his wife, children, siblings, and other family members. These letters are personal and some refer to children's school, camp and other activities.
This sub-series contains bills, finances, medical records, and retirement information.
This correspondence discusses Gallery's material at Boston University, and its transfer to Nimitz Library. Includes lists of various donations and publications.
This series documents Gallery's education from the beginnings in parochial school to the Naval War College correspondence course.
Papers, compositions and notebooks from St. Patrick's Academy and St. Ignatius Academy, 1909-1912.
Arranged chronologically by school attended.
Documents in this sub-series relate to United States Naval Academy admissions, examinations, faculty contacts, notes, compositions and fight with the son of the Secretary of the Navy.
This series consists of sets of official orders and dispatches from several ships, and papers incidental to retirement, recall to duty, and professional information.
Official orders and related documents.
Included in this sub-series are documents and papers incidental to Gallery's career, including professional information, aviator log books, diaries, weather, and ship information.
Contains verification of Gallery's many patent holdings, including gun sight, a synchronous anti-aircraft range keeping system, and laying chemical screens.
Includes notes on aircraft carriers and aerodynamics.
Includes material on steel band, Little League, and the USS Idaho Yarn.
This series contains books, proofs and manuscripts, as well as reviews, edits, articles, and criticism by and about Rear Admiral Gallery. Both published and unpublished materials are included. Book titles are arranged chronologically by publication date.
Also included in this series are copies of the War Diaries of the commanding officer of U-505.
Primarily arranged chronologically by book publication date. Periodical articles arranged alphabetically by periodical title.
Scrapbooks and fragments of war materials and souvenirs, such as bomb fragments, drafting compasses used in navigation, insignia, and mementos from ships. The scrapbooks, while focusing on Gallery's career in the United States Navy, also cover his childhood and family history.
Clippings, athletic letters autographs and photographs.
Primarily on Carriers, Prisoners of War, Iceland.
This series contains a large variety of photographs taken during Rear Admiral Gallery's tours of duty, as well as his family photographs. Many photographs are unidentified.
Includes portraits and other images of Gallery and his family, as well as other high ranking officers in the United States Navy.
Includes images of U.S.S. Guadalcanal.
Audio recordings on LP and magnetic tape, largely relating to the capture and exhibition of German submarine U-505.
16mm films of motion picture adaptations of Away Boarders and Steel Band, as well as appearances by Gallery on the television game show To Tell the Truth.
Two rolls of undeveloped Kodak Ektachrome slide film.
Certificates for various awards presented to Gallery, both during and after his career. The awards originate from such organizations as the Navy League of the United States, the Military Order of the World Wars, the Navy of the State of Texas, and the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Official United States Navy Awards and Citations are filed in NAVAL CAREER DOCUMENTS.
Arranged alphabetically by presenting organization.
Black-and-white and color drawings, primarily cartoons, drawn by Gallery. The cartoons humorously depict various aspects of life in the Navy. Also included in the series are drawings depicting the steps involved in dry-docking a submarine.

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