Eagle Biography
Ramsay D. Potts
Ramsay Potts, at age 26, led a bomber force during one of World War II's most historic
missions! Originally from Memphis, Tennessee, Potts attended the University of North
Carolina, and in 1941 graduated Phi Beta Kappa. In May, he enlisted as an aviation cadet
and went through flight training at Randolph and Brooks Fields, Texas. Potts earned his
pilot wings and commission just days after the Japanese attacked Hawaii. Assigned to the
330th Bomb Squadron in the 93rd Bomb Group (BG), he flew Consolidated B-24
Liberators and by August 1942 became squadron Operations Officer. The 93rd BG was
known as the "Traveling Circus" because it was detached from Eighth Air Force
three times.
In mid-1943, the Group moved to North Africa and on 1 August participated
in the first, and most famous, raid on the refineries at Ploesti, Rumania, the major
source of petroleum that fueled the Axis war machine. Potts, now a squadron commander,
led Force B of the Liberators. When the lead plane of the raid turned at the
wrong initial point, he tried to warn the mission commander, but to no avail. Potts'
force attacked the Astra Romana refinery as a target of opportunity. He received the
Distinguished Service Cross, was promoted, and later became Group Operations Officer. In
March 1944, Potts took command of the 453rd Bomb Group, with movie star Jimmy Stewart as
his executive officer. Five months later, Potts assumed command of the 389th Bomb Group,
and in November 1944 moved to the Eighth Air Force staff.
In January 1945, he became
Director for Bomber Operations and when the Germans surrendered he became Executive
Officer of the Military Analysis Division for the US Strategic Bombing Survey. He
interrogated many of the former leaders of both Germany and Japan and wrote reports for
presentation to U.S. political and military leaders. Leaving active duty as a colonel in
February 1946, Potts returned to civilian life, but remained in the reserves. He served
on the faculty of the Air War College and as Chairman, Secretary of the Air Force's Air
Reserve Policy Committee. He earned a law degree from Harvard in 1948 and later became a
founding partner and managing director of a major law firm in Washington, D.C.
In
addition to his law practice, he has written many articles for the Air Force Magazine
and served as publisher of Air Power History. He served as Director, Emerson
Electric CO., has been active on the boards of numerous public organizations in the
fields of education, transportation, finance, and national security resources. He has
also been Associate Counsel, Senate Armed Services Subcommittee. Retired from the Air
Force Reserve as a major general, he enjoys tennis and divides his time between homes in
Virginia and Florida.
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1999
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