Jack Carter
Horton 1915 – 1970
Jack Carter Horton, born in Camden, Texas, in
1915, was a much adored only child of his parents. Perhaps his mother
had a premonition of later years, because her young son was nearly
always photographed in a sailor suit. The young Carter (as he was
called then) wrote home from YMCA camp in 1929 that he had passed his
canoe test and was now in sailing class. He got his first ocean
experience in the summer of 1936 when he worked as a crew member of
the Lykes Bros. Steamship Company, and sailed as far as Antwerp. He
wrote of cleaning holds, and striping and painting the ship from stem
to stern. Following that he began his career as a salesman while also
going to Rice Institute in Houston. In late 1940 Jack began his career with the US
Naval Reserve as an Apprentice Seaman on the USS Quincy. Following
that he was sent to the US Naval Reserve midshipmen’s school at
Northwestern University in Chicago. He was one of 738 graduating and
receiving the commission of Ensign. From there, March 1941, he went
to Cornell University in Ithaca, NY for diesel engine instruction.
While there he married his hometown sweetheart in the University
Chapel. In late, ’41, while waiting for his ship to be completed, he
was stationed in New Orleans and worked at the Aviation Base. In
early 1942, Jack was in Seabrook, TX for the christening of SC-501,
and did service there. He received promotion to Lieutenant (junior
grade) in June of that year. He was then sent to Philadelphia to
await the completion of his next assignment – the USS SC-630, where he
served from August, 1942 to July, 1943. After that, he went to a
Naval Training Center in Miami for instruction in new tactics and
equipment. In August of ’43 he wrote home that he was disappointed
because “they wouldn’t let me be an engineering officer. Instead I
have been put into the Command Group.” Soon his daughter was born,
and he received news that he had been selected as Executive Officer
for a Destroyer Escort, one of the fastest of its class – the USS
Whitehurst, DE-634. The ship was being built in San Francisco, but he
first had to go to Norfolk, VA where the crew was training. The
Whitehurst was commissioned on November 19, 1943 and from there – the
rest is history, as they say, as others have written extensively of
her duty. Lt.Cmdr Jack C. Horton left the Whitehurst and
was mustered out in December, 1945. He joyfully returned home to
Houston, Texas and his wife and 2 year old daughter. In 1946, Jack
picked up his chosen pre-war career as a salesman. The family moved
to San Antonio and then Harlingen, TX while Jack was an appliance
sales manager for the General Electric Supply Corporation. During
this time a son was added to the family and Jack was then promoted to
manager of advertising and sales promotion at the firm’s Houston
office.
In 1956, the family moved to Atlanta, Ga., where
Jack sold Friden mechanical calculators and then Strick trailers.
1961 saw the family back in Houston where Jack worked for Univac,
selling large main frame computers, and later was a manager for the
Houston branch of Honeywell, Electronic Data Processing Division. In
the 60s Jack encouraged his son, then in his teens, to take classes in
computer programming. Jack obviously had a vision as a man ahead of
his time, and was in a partnership selling “mini-computers” – a
predecessor to early desktop computers, when he died. Wouldn’t he
have been amazed at where technology has taken us today! Jack continued his enjoyment of classical and
jazz music, photography, and sailing. He was enjoying sharing his
sailboat with a friend on July 4, 1970, when a sudden squall capsized
the boat. After hanging on the overturned vessel for some time, he
saw his guest safely to a rescue boat, and then succumbed. He is
missed. Webmaster's note: Many
thanks to Michele and Donald Horton who located the Whitehurst Web
Site, and provided the excellent photos and Biographical Sketch.
mc
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USS Whitehurst Logo by: Pat Stephens, Webmaster, DESA
Prepared by his son, Donald, and daughter-in-law,
Michele, 2012
Jack and wife Dorothy
Donald and Elaine
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