Background
He was born in Erie, Pennsylvania and died at age 96 in Millcreek Township, Pennsylvania.
He was born in Erie, Pennsylvania and died at age 96 in Millcreek Township, Pennsylvania.
Curtze participated in a Rotary Club student exchange to Scandinavia, which led to his appointment to the United States Naval Academy. Curtze was a star gymnast while attending the Naval Academy, winning second place in 1931 in the Eastern Intercollegiate Gymnastics League and leading the midshipmen to the league"s championship in 1933. When he qualified for the United States gymnastics team attending the 1936 Summer Olympics, his position with the United States Navy caused the State Department to prohibit his travel to Berlin, Germany during Adolf Hitler"s rule.
Curtze graduated from the Naval Academy in 1933.
He received his Master"s degree in Naval Construction from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He served as Deputy Chief of the Navy"s Bureau of Ships during the Vietnam War. He is buried at the Erie Cemetery. Curtze was serving as a fleet safety officer aboard the cruiser United States Ship Saint Louis at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
He helped guide the ship safely out of harbor, making it one of the few major ships to escape the Japanese bombings.
He also served as commander of the San Francisco Naval Shipyard. Curtze and his commanding officer, Rear Admiral William A. Brockett, Chief of the Bureau of Ships, resigned their posts in 1965 to protest Secretary of Defense Robert South. McNamara"s centralization of the United States. Department of Defense.
He served with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) as the engineering member of the first United States team in London.