Wittmann, Otto, Jr., MAJ

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Major
Last Service Branch
US
Last Primary MOS
00X-Unknown MOS
Last MOS Group
Unknown MOS
Primary Unit
1945-1945, 0002, Office of Strategic Services
Service Years
1941 - 1945
US
Major
Two Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
Missouri
Missouri
Year of Birth
1911
 
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Contact Info
Home Town
Kansas City, Missouri
Last Address
Montecito, California
Burial location unknown.
Date of Passing
Jul 14, 2001
 

 Official Badges 




 Unofficial Badges 

Order of the Crown of Italy




 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Otto Wittmann, world-renowned director of the Toledo Museum of Art, began his military career in 1941 upon being drafted into the U.S. Army. For nearly a year he worked as an interviewer of incoming draftees, then was granted reserve status for several months, at which time he moved to the Portland Art Museum to become an Assistant Director. Following the invasion of Pearl Harbor, Wittmann was once again called to service but was soon offered the opportunity to attend officer’s training school in Miami Beach. In December of 1942, he joined the Air Transport Command as part of the first worldwide airline, built specifically to move troops and supplies by plane. While stationed in Washinton, D.C. towards the end of the war, Wittmann learned from his friend Charles Sawyer of the formation of the Art Looting Investigation Unit (ALIU) in the Office of Strategic Services. He was granted a transfer to the department and became the officer in charge of the OSS Washington Office. Wittman also traveled to Europe to conduct investigations on the looting of artworks, perhaps most notable the dealings of the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (ERR) and their theft of French Jewish collections. Along with MFAA officer Bernard Taper, he interviewed the art dealer Hans Wendland, who was involved in the transfer of ERR looted artworks to the infamous Fischer Gallery sale in Lucerne. During his time in Europe, Wittmann gained an extensive knowledge of the European museum collections and built relationships with many European museum officials and scholars that would prove useful in his later career as a museum director. For his work with the ALIU, he was named Officer, Legion of Honor of France, Officer, Order of Orange-Nassau of The Netherlands, and Commander, Order of Merit of Italy. The Otto Wittmann collection of papers relating to the Art Looting Investigation Unit of the U.S. War Department’s Office of Strategic Services, 1945-1946 can be found at The Getty Research Institute in California.

Prior to his military service, Wittmann was graduated from Harvard University in 1933. He then returned to his home in Kansas City for several years where he worked at the Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art (now the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art) as the Curator of Prints. Due to the depression, Wittmann could not afford to reenroll at Harvard for graduate studies, but in 1937 Paul Sachs offered him a position as his assistant so that Wittmann might take his museum studies course. From 1938 to 1941, he was an instructor of art history at Skidmore College, as well as curator of the Hyde Collection, both in upstate New York. The Hyde Collection was a privately owned collection of largely Renaissance and 18th century artworks housed in a private residence in Glen Falls, New York. At this time, Wittmann worked with Mrs. Hyde to turn her home into a small museum where her collection could be preserved.

Upon returning home from World War II, Wittmann commenced his career at the Toledo Museum of Art. He was named Associate Director in 1946, and in 1959 became the museum’s third Director. During his lengthy tenure, Wittmann built the museum into a world-class institution, tripled the museum’s collection, and became internationally recognized for his community and education programs, as well as outstanding connoisseurship. He expanded weak areas in the collection, and paid particular interest to American art, Dutch art, and 17th century Italian and French painting. It was said that Wittmann “always gave higher priority to the quality of the pieces he purchased than in their monetary worth,” an indication of his talent as a museum director, his keen eye, and his intimate understanding of the art market. Never a director afraid to defy convention, he was also the first to integrate furniture, sculpture, and decorative arts into the painting galleries. Wittmann organized many special exhibitions, including “France: The Splendid Century” in 1961, “The Age of Rembrandt” in 1966, and “Treasures for Toledo” which displayed works he acquired for the museum and was exhibited in 1976, the year he retired.

The Toledo Museum of Art published Otto Wittmann: A Museum Man For All Seasons in 2001, the centennial celebration of the museum, as a tribute to the director who truly built the institution into an exemplary museum. Wittmann remained at the Toledo Museum of Art as a trustee after his retirement, and also served on the boards of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the J. Paul Getty Museum. He was a founding member of the National Council on the Arts, and also an advisor to the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Wittmann served twice as president of the American Association of Art Museum Directors, from 1961-62 and 1971-72, and served as the director of the College Art Association. He was a member of the American Association of Museums, and received their Distinguished Service to Museums award in 1987. Wittmann died in 2001 at the age of 89 in Montecito, California.

http://www.monumentsmenfoundation.org/the-heroes/the-monuments-men/wittmann-maj.-otto-jr.

   

   1945-1945, 0002, Office of Strategic Services

Major
From Month/Year
- / 1945
To Month/Year
- / 1945
Unit
Office of Strategic Services Unit Page
Rank
Major
MOS
0002-General Officer
Base, Fort or City
Not Specified
State/Country
Germany
 
 
 Patch
 Office of Strategic Services Details

Office of Strategic Services
Shadow Warriors: The OSS The Office of Strategic Services was the product of Major General William O. Donovan, an energetic visionary whose propensity for freewheeling activity earned him the nickname ?Wild Bill.? Donovan was a tough and smart veteran of World War I who received the Medal of Honor for heroism on the Western Front in October 1918, and who made a fortune as a Wall Street lawyer during the 1920s and ?30s. When World War II erupted in Europe and threatened to engulf the United States, Donovan convinced President Franklin D. Roosevelt that a new type of organization was needed, one that would collect intelligence and wage secret operations behind enemy lines. In 1941, President Roosevelt directed Donovan to form this agency, called the Coordinator of Information, or COI, and Donovan, who had been a civilian since World War I, was reinstated as a colonel. COI blossomed quickly, establishing operational sites in England, North Africa, India, Burma and China. In 1942, the agency was renamed the OSS. Donovan became a major general in 1944. The primary combat operations of the OSS in Europe were those of the Jedburgh?s missions and the Operational Groups. The Jedburgh mission consisted of parachuting three-man multinational teams into France, Belgium and Holland, where they trained partisan resistance movements and conducted guerrilla operations against the Germans. The OGs were 34-man elements designed to operate in two sections and perform sabotage missions and raids behind enemy lines. Other OSS operations took place in Asia, most spectacularly in Burma, where OSS Detachment 101 organized 11,000 Kachin tribesmen into a force that eventually killed 10,000 Japanese with a minimal loss of its own. Other OSS detachments operated in China and Southeast Asia. Soldiers John K. Singlaub, Caesar Civitella and Herbert Brucker were among the many former OSS members who later served in Special Forces. After the war, President Harry S. Truman disbanded the OSS, but not before creating a legacy still felt today. Many veterans of OSS were part of the cadre of the early SF groups.
Type
Joint
 
Parent Unit
Joint Chiefs of Staff
Strength
Command
Created/Owned By
SF Cooper, Mark E, MAJ 47
   

Last Updated: Nov 1, 2018
   
   
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45 Members Also There at Same Time
Office of Strategic Services

Buxton, Gonzalo, COL, (1901-1932) MI 9668 Colonel
Vujnovich, George Mane, MAJ, (1943-1946) IN 1542 Major
Bank, Aaron, COL, (1938-1958) IN 1542 Captain
Redstone, Sumner, CPT, (1942-1946) MI 9640 Captain
Wilpers, John J., Jr., COL, (1942-1979) MI 9666 First Lieutenant
Amundson, Rolande Frenchy, COL, (1943-1997) MI 9668 Special Agent
Donovan, William Joseph, MG, (1912-1946) Major General
Colby, William Egan, MAJ, (1941-1945) Major
Peers, William Ray, LTG, (1938-1971) Major
Singlaub, John Kirk, MG, (1943-1978) Captain
Trumps, Shirly Ray, COL, (1940-1975) Captain
WerBell, Mitchell Livingston, CPT, (1942-1945) Captain
Mess, Walter, 1LT First Lieutenant
Singlaub, John Kirk, MG, (1943-1978) First Lieutenant
Katz, Warner, S/SGT, (1941-1945) Staff Sergeant
Rocco, Anthony, T/5, (1941-1945) Technician Fifth Grade
2677th OSS Regiment (Provisional)

Knowles, Robert G, CPT, (1940-1960) MI Second Lieutenant
Company A

Brucker, Herbert, MAJ, (1940-1960) IN 1542 Second Lieutenant
Detachment 202

Cyr, Paul, MAJ, (1938-1945) IN 1542 Major
Intelligence & Operations - Far East Theater

Magruder, John, BG, (1910-1946) MI 9666 Brigadier General
Jedburgh Teams

Bangsboll, Leif, LTC, (1943-1963) IN First Lieutenant
OSS Operational Groups

Brown, John Nicholas, LTC, (1918-1946) CA 8105 Lieutenant Colonel
Dewey, A. Peter, LTC, (1942-1945) MI 9300 Major
Rader, Stephanie Czech, MAJ, (1941-1946) MI 9666 Major
Buchman, Julius Henry, CPT, (1941-1948) MI 9330 Captain
Hancock, Walter Kirtland, CPT, (1942-1945) CA 8105 Captain
Standen, Edith Appleton, CPT, (1943-1947) CA 8105 Captain
Boardman, Edward Thorpe, 1LT, (1943-1946) CA 8105 First Lieutenant
Bonilla y Norat, Felix José, 1LT, (1942-1945) SC 0210 First Lieutenant
Armstrong, Robert Gelston, S/SGT, (1942-1946) MP 677 Staff Sergeant
Podoski, Barbara, SGT, (1942-1945) AG 274 Sergeant
Prunier, Harry Arthur, Cpl, (1942-1946) IN 745 Corporal
Boruch, Edward J., T/5, (1942-1945) AG 55 Technician Fifth Grade
Bleecker, Paul O., PFC, (1942-1945) AG 55 Private First Class
Sawyer, Charles Henry, PFC, (1943-1946) AG 55 Private First Class
Duke, Florimond Joseph D, COL, (1917-1963) IM Colonel
Bangsboll, Leif, LTC, (1943-1963) IN First Lieutenant
Bernholz, Charles H., T/5, (1942-1945) EN Technician Fifth Grade
Bilodeau, Francis Waterhouse, PFC, (1941-1946) EN Private First Class
Merlet, Carl, LTC, (1941-1954) Lieutenant Colonel
SSO India-Burma Theater

Terry, Thomas, MG, (1908-1946) USA 0002 Major General
Reeder, William, MG, (1917-1953) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Thompson, John M., BG, (1911-1948) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Warden, John, BG, (1908-1947) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Wilson, Walter, LTG, (1929-1965) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Reeder, William, MG, (1917-1953) SC 0210 Brigadier General
Osmun, Russell, BG, (1910-1946) USA Brigadier General
Neyland, Robert, BG, (1916-1946) EN Brigadier General

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