Spring, Arthur F.
United States Naval Academy
1971
When Arthur F. Spring was 16, he represented Laconia, N.H., in
the State Oratorical High School Championship and was awarded first
prize, which consisted of a gold medal and his choice of an appointment
to the Naval Academy or the Military Academy. Having never previously
heard of either institution, he selected the Naval Academy based
on an encyclopedia's description of its summer cruises to Europe.
In preparation for Annapolis, he enrolled at the Severn School in
1926, where he lettered in football, basketball and baseball, but
did not play lacrosse.
Spring entered the Naval Academy with the class of 1930. In his
Plebe year, he lettered in football, basketball and baseball. In
his sophomore year, he acquired national prominence as Navy's starting
halfback when he scored the first Navy touchdown ever scored against
Notre Dame. This game marked the inception of the Navy-Notre Dame
football series which today, for both schools, is their longest
continuous football rivalry. He received Honorable Mention All-American
honors in football in 1927. In the spring of 1928, Spring began
to play lacrosse. In his first year of playing the game, he was
selected a First Team All-American for the first defense position
and led Navy to the National Championship. He earned First Team
All-American honors again in 1929 and 1930.
A career officer, Spring's early career consisted of tours in destroyers,
cruisers, and post graduate school. He was Executive Officer, USS
Missouri (BB-63), at the end of World War II, and later commanded
USS Mount Katmai (AE-16), USS Renvill (APA-227) and the USS Helena
(CA-75). In 1958, as Chief of Staff of the Seventh Fleet, he was
selected for Rear Admiral. His first flag tour was as Commander
Naval Base, Subic Bay, Philippines, which he assumed in the spring
of 1959. Spring and his wife, the former Clare Murphy, were killed
in an airplane accident in the Phillipines on November 14, 1960.
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