Operation Safe Haven (1957)

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Operation Safe Haven, also known as Operation Mercy, was a refugee relief and resettlement operation executed by the United States following the Soviet suppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.[1]

The airlift was ordered by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on December 10, 1956. Headed by task force commander General George B. Dany, it successfully evacuated over 27,000 Hungarian refugees to the United States over a period of 90 days, with an additional 11,000 being settled, also in the US, in the following year.[1] Operation Safe Haven was the most significant European humanitarian airlift since the Berlin Airlift.[2]

Lifting the refugees began almost simultaneously to an appeal by Elvis Presley at the close of his last appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show. Presley's broadcast live to an audience of 54.6 million on January 6, 1957 eventually covered a quarter of a million refugees and their settlement in Austria and the United Kingdom.

The airlift was a joint endeavor by the United States Bolling and Military Air Transport Services, the United States Navy, and various commercial aircraft. General George B. Dany, commander of the 1611th Air Transport Wing at McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., was named Airlift Task Force commander.[3] From January 1, 1957, air transports from the 1608th Air Transport Wing from Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., and 175 aircraft from the 1611th Air Transport Wing from McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., relocated 9,700 refugees to the United States. In addition to air transport, from December 18, 1956, through February 14, 1957, USNS General LeRoy Eltinge (T-AP-154), USNS General W. G. Haan, USNS Marine Carp, and USNS General Nelson M. Walker (T-AP-125), all Navy Military Sea Transportation Service personnel transports, carried 8,944 refugees from Bremerhaven, Germany, to Camp Kilmer, NJ, US.[4] These refugees were job-classified by the U.S. Labor Department as they made their way to American shores. In total, some 38,000 refugees were permanently resettled in the United States.[1]

Concurrent charitable appeal by Elvis Presley and its legacy

References

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