Edwin T. Layton

Birthday April 7, 1903

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Nauvoo, Illinois, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1984, Carmel, California, U.S. (81 years old)

Nationality United States

#53570 Most Popular

1903

Edwin Thomas Layton (April 7, 1903 – April 12, 1984) was a rear admiral in the United States Navy.

Layton is most noted for his work as an intelligence officer before and during World War II.

He was also the father of the historian Edwin T. Layton, Jr.

Edwin Thomas Layton was born on April 7, 1903, in Nauvoo, Illinois, as a son of George E. Layton and his wife Mary C. Layton.

1924

Layton attended the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, and graduated in 1924.

Layton spent the next five years with the Pacific Fleet aboard the battleship USS West Virginia (BB-48) and destroyer USS Chase (DD-323).

"Then there was a person — a very special person — who did not serve in the Dungeon with us but who deserves a very high ranking place in the list of five expanded to make it six. He, luckily, worked above ground in fresh Hawaiian air. He was another human dynamo, sharp, quick thinking, fast acting, intuitive, fast to comprehend, and extremely aggressive. In prior assignments he had been a Tokyo Japanese language student and later a code breaker. And, on December 31, he moved from Admiral Kimmel's staff to continue on as Admiral Nimitz's young intelligence officer. He was (Lieutenant) Commander Edwin T. Layton, Naval Academy Class of 1924. Layton and I found many intelligence interests in common having almost nothing to do with Dungeon work, so I came to know him very well and to appreciate fully his tremendous contributions to our results.

Joe Rochefort and Eddie Layton were close friends of long standing.

1929

In 1929, Layton was one of a small number of naval officers selected to go to Japan for language training.

Significantly, on his voyage to Japan he met another young naval officer, Joseph J. Rochefort, assigned to the same duty.

Both became intelligence officers, Rochefort specializing in decryption efforts, Layton in using intelligence information in war planning.

Layton and Rochefort, both of whom were in Pearl Harbor, worked closely together in the months before the attack, among other things trying to work out aspects of the larger international context which Washington had decided would be handled by Washington alone, and even more closely after the war began, especially in the month before the Battle of Midway.

They both made significant contributions to that victory.

Layton was assigned to the American Embassy in Tokyo as a naval attaché, where he remained for three years.

While in Japan, he met Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto on several occasions.

The last four months he spent in Beijing as assistant naval attaché at the American Legation.

His linguistic ability and fluency in Japanese proved to be assets as his career progressed, even more so as World War II began in Europe.

They had studied the Japanese language together in Tokyo from 1929 to 1932.

Here at Pearl Harbor they worked together in complete harmony, forming an almost perfect team.

Rochefort gave Layton remarkably clear and reliable estimates and analyses.

The quick-witted Layton might then add comments and suggestions or more analysis.

After that he had to sell the final product to Admiral Nimitz.

Thank Heavens a very hard-pressed Admiral Nimitz quickly learned to trust the Rochefort/Layton duo that brought him this very restricted, highly secret information which some others on his staff at first were prone to put down as guesswork — even as dangerous guesswork."

1930

During the 1930s, Layton served two tours of duty in the Navy Department's Office of Naval Intelligence, in 1933 and again from 1936 to 1937, but he also saw sea duty.

He had a three-year stint in the battleship USS Pennsylvania (BB-38), where he received commendations for gunnery excellence.

1937

In 1937, he returned to Tokyo for two years as assistant naval attaché at the American Embassy.

This was followed by a one-year tour of duty as commanding officer of USS Boggs (DD-136).

Exactly one year to the day before the attack on Pearl Harbor, Layton became combat intelligence officer on the staff of Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, Commander-in-Chief of the United States Pacific Fleet, which had recently been moved from its base in San Diego, California, to Pearl Harbor — over the objections of Admiral James O. Richardson, whom Kimmel replaced.

Layton was in charge of all intelligence in the Pacific Ocean area.

Layton was a champion of using code-breaking information in war planning operations and had strong supporters in both Admiral Kimmel and Admiral Nimitz.

Layton's book And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway — Breaking the Secrets describes how Kimmel and his army counterpart at Pearl Harbor, General Walter C. Short, the commanders there, were scapegoats for failures by higher-ups in Washington, D.C. Layton blamed Admiral Richmond K. Turner in particular for monopolizing naval intelligence in Washington that would have alerted Kimmel and his staff to the imminence of attack and to the fact that Pearl Harbor could be a target of that attack.

Layton's argument is detailed and comprehensive, but in general, he maintains that although Washington was reading the highest level Japanese diplomatic code, Purple, little of this was ever made available to the field commanders, other than to General Douglas MacArthur in the Philippines, who failed to act, not only on the Purple data, but even after he knew that Pearl Harbor had been attacked.

The diplomatic information that they were denied not only contained data about the imminence of war, but also included messages sent from Honolulu to Tokyo by Takeo Yoshikawa, the spy sent to observe and report daily on the exact positions of ships in the harbor, using a grid system that was obviously designed for the purpose of targeting torpedoes and bombs.

Those above Turner, including his boss, the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark, and even General George Marshall, also come in for blame, though some details are still missing from the official record.

1941

Forrest Biard, another naval linguist, one who was in the last group to be sent to Japan for language studies, worked for the Rochefort HYPO team as soon as he left Japan in 1941.

HYPO was located in a basement, called "The Dungeon" by team members.

In a speech to the National Cryptologic Museum Foundation, Biard describes Layton as the sixth member of the five-member team (Joseph J. Rochefort, Joe Finnegan, Alva B. Lasswell, Wesley A. Wright, Thomas Dyer) who produced the information that was vital to winning the Battle of Midway, following the Battle of the Coral Sea.

He gives the following description of Layton:

1942

During May 1942, in particular, Layton and the Rochefort team were battling Washington as much as the Japanese – both as to where the next attack would occur and as to when it would occur.

Washington said Port Moresby or the Aleutians in mid-June; Rochefort/Layton said Midway, first week in June.