Augustine Warner Robins

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General Augustine Warner Robins (1882-1940) is often credited as the Father of Logistics in the modern United States Air Force, then known as the Army Air Corps. He was instrumental in the establishment of the first official and workable Air Force supply maintenance and accountability system, and helped establish official guidelines for the training of logistics officers, NCOs, and civilians working for the Air Force. He is also the namesake of the city of Warner Robins, Georgia.

A West Point cadet (1903-07), Warner Robins served under General John Pershing's punitive 1916 expedition into Mexico against Pancho Villa. In 1919, he was sent to the Supply Division of the fledgling Air Service at Wright Field, Ohio, where he spent the next twenty years playing his pivotal role in the development of air-based combat logistics. In 1935, he was promoted to Brigadier General, one of four in the Army Air Corps at that time, and was given command of the Materiel Division at Wright Field; for the next four years, he would push for increased funding for research and development, as well as key technologies such as B-17s, the Norden bombsight, and the high-octane gasoline that would later power the carriers of World War II across the Atlantic and Pacific. In 1939, he was reassigned to the command of the Air Training division in Texas; however, he died from a heart attack in June of the next year. Over a year after his death, the Army Air Corps began to make use of Warner Robins' contributions during its actions in World War II.

The Warner Robins Army Air Depot (now the Warner Robins Air Logistics Center, or WRALC) at Robins Field, later to become Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, was named in honor of General Warner Robins, and is also a major depot for Air Force logistics in its own right.

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