Brentwood area of Maryland.
At 19, he studied for a year on a scholarship at the Corcoran Gallery School of Art. He was employed as a newspaper artist at the old Washington Times-Herald, and when his father became ill, he took over his work drafting patents for a patent attorney at $3 a job. He supplemented this work playing the piano in a band for $3 a gig ($6 if they played on New Year's Eve).
The day after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, he quit his job to join the Navy, volunteering as a naval aviator. As a F4U Corsair fighter-bomber pilot in the Pacific, he flew almost 100 missions off the aircraft carrier Yorktown CV-10. He received the Air Medal for downing an enemy aircraft during a rescue mission for one of his fellow pilots.
During the Korean War, Hennesy flew on active duty for two years in the Mediterranean. He remained with the Naval Reserves and retired as a Commander. After the war he worked for the US Department of Energy (then known as the Atomic Energy Commission), as Director of Manpower and Management, but spent most evenings pursuing his true passion, painting.
In '72 he and his late wife, Elizabeth, built a home and studio in Clifton, where he worked and became a well-known and respected artist. His paintings have been exhibited at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Georgia Museum of Art, the Corcoran and the Smithsonian, and are displayed in numerous public and private collections, including The House of Representatives and the State Department.
Gerald is predeceased by his wife, and four of his children, Michael, Kathleen, Paul, and Brian, and is survived by three sons; four grandchildren; and two great grandchildren.
Gerald will be interred in Arlington National Cemetery, at a date and time to be determined.
In lieu of flowers, well-wishers can contribute to the USS Yorktown CV-10 Association.
Brentwood area of Maryland.
At 19, he studied for a year on a scholarship at the Corcoran Gallery School of Art. He was employed as a newspaper artist at the old Washington Times-Herald, and when his father became ill, he took over his work drafting patents for a patent attorney at $3 a job. He supplemented this work playing the piano in a band for $3 a gig ($6 if they played on New Year's Eve).
The day after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, he quit his job to join the Navy, volunteering as a naval aviator. As a F4U Corsair fighter-bomber pilot in the Pacific, he flew almost 100 missions off the aircraft carrier Yorktown CV-10. He received the Air Medal for downing an enemy aircraft during a rescue mission for one of his fellow pilots.
During the Korean War, Hennesy flew on active duty for two years in the Mediterranean. He remained with the Naval Reserves and retired as a Commander. After the war he worked for the US Department of Energy (then known as the Atomic Energy Commission), as Director of Manpower and Management, but spent most evenings pursuing his true passion, painting.
In '72 he and his late wife, Elizabeth, built a home and studio in Clifton, where he worked and became a well-known and respected artist. His paintings have been exhibited at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Georgia Museum of Art, the Corcoran and the Smithsonian, and are displayed in numerous public and private collections, including The House of Representatives and the State Department.
Gerald is predeceased by his wife, and four of his children, Michael, Kathleen, Paul, and Brian, and is survived by three sons; four grandchildren; and two great grandchildren.
Gerald will be interred in Arlington National Cemetery, at a date and time to be determined.
In lieu of flowers, well-wishers can contribute to the USS Yorktown CV-10 Association.
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