Jarvis Offutt


Jarvis Jenness Offutt was an American aviator from Omaha, Nebraska, who died in World War I. Offutt Air Force Base is named in his honor.

Early life

Born and raised in Omaha, Offutt was the younger son of Charles and Bertha Offutt. Charles was an attorney and a former speaker of the Kentucky General Assembly, from He relocated to Omaha in 1888 and married four years later.
The middle of three children, Jarvis had an older brother and a younger sister. He attended Central High School and graduated from the Lawrenceville Preparatory School in New Jersey in 1913. He went to college at Yale University in Connecticut and graduated in 1917.
Offutt was a member of Yale's Varsity Club, Glee Club, Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, and was a Y track man, winning his honors in the high hurdles. He was also inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa Society, an organization which recognizes high academic achievement.

Military career

While at Yale in 1916, Offutt served as a company supply sergeant for the Yale Field Artillery on a summer deployment to Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania. Later in 1916, he entered officer training at Fort Snelling, Minnesota, but after a month he asked to be transferred to aviation. He was one of 300 candidates sent from the United States to Canada to be trained by the Royal Flying Corps Canada. Offutt was then sent to Fort Worth, Texas, where he received his commission as a first lieutenant in the aviation section of the U.S. Army Signal Corps in November 1916. He afterwards assigned to the 22nd Aero Squadron and after more training boarded transport L501 on 31 January 1918 with the squadron bound for Liverpool, England.
Upon its arrival the Squadron continued further training, after which he was assigned duties as a ferry pilot attached to the Royal Flying Corps. In August 1918, he was transferred to the front line. As a ferry pilot, Offutt's duties were to deliver aircraft from fresh from the factories and from holding fields in England to bases at the front in France. In the course of these duties, he crossed the English Channel almost daily.

Death and legacy

On 12 August 1918 1st Lieutenant Offutt was transferred to 56 Squadron. Sadly, the next day, at age 23, Offutt died on August 13, 1918, from injuries received while flying at :fr:Candas|Valheureux, France. He was killed in a crash whilst practicing an aggressive manoeuvre. He was Omaha’s first World War I air casualty. Unfortunately, his journey home was extended as he was mistakenly buried as Private Walter Heltman in Connelsville Pennsylvania. In December 1923 he was reinterred in the family plot at Forest Lawn Memorial Park
In 1924, six years after his death, the landing field at Fort Crook, south of Omaha at Bellevue, was renamed Offutt Field in his honor. The dedication ceremony on May 10, attended by Offutt's mother and brother Casper, featured an aerial salute from nineteen planes which circled the field; Major Charles Tinker commanded seven of the planes which flew from Fort Riley, Kansas, and dropped a dedicatory wreath to highlight the ceremony.
In 1948, both the airfield and Fort Crook were renamed Offutt Air Force Base on January 13; it became the headquarters for the Strategic Air Command that November, which was succeeded in 1992 by Strategic Command.