Clemens V. Rault | |
Birth Date: | 11 August 1896 |
Birth Place: | New Orleans, Louisiana |
Death Place: | New Orleans, Louisiana |
Placeofburial: | Greenwood Cemetery |
Serviceyears: | 1918–1950 |
Rank: | Rear Admiral |
Commands: | United States Navy Dental Corps United States Navy Dental School |
Battles: | World War I Haitian Campaign World War II |
Laterwork: | Dean of the Georgetown University School of Dentistry |
Clemens Vincent Rault (August 11, 1896 – January 29, 1989) was a rear admiral in the United States Navy and dean of the Georgetown University School of Dentistry. He served as the Chief of the United States Navy Dental Corps twice, from 1932 to 1933 and again from 1948 to 1950.[1]
Clemens Vincent Rault was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, on August 11, 1896, to Sophie (née Umbach) and Joseph Rault. He attended Spring Hill College in Mobile, Alabama, and received his DDS degree from Loyola University New Orleans in 1918.[2]
Assistant Chief, BUMED | February 1948- July 1950 |
Chief, United States Navy Dental Corps | February 1948- July 1950 |
Naval Dental School | October 1945 - February 1948 |
April 1944 - October 1945 | |
May 1939 - April 1944 | |
- March 1939 | |
April 1937 - | |
Northwestern University | September 1936 - April 1937 |
April 1932 - September 1936 | |
Chief, United States Navy Dental Corps | 1932 - 1933 |
4th Regiment, Marine Expeditionary Forces | January 1932 - April 1932 |
- September 1931 | |
December 1929 - | |
Instructor, Naval Medical School | October 1927 - October 1929 |
Naval Dispensary, Washington DC | February 1926 - October 1927 |
May 1924 - February 1926 | |
Navy Yard, Philadelphia | - May 1924 |
1st Brigade, Marine Expeditionary Forces, Haiti | July 1919 - February 1922 |
Sixth Naval District, Charleston | June 1919 |
Naval Reserve Forces | Dec 1918 - 23 April 1919 |
In 1937, he was ordered to the Northwestern University Dental School to complete graduate work. He received a Master of Science in dentistry (M.S.D) from the school the following year. Clemens Rault served in the United States during World War II, first in the New York Navy Yard, and then as the District Dental Officer in the Third Naval District. His final tours of duty were as the commander of the US Naval Dental School, Chief of the United States Navy Dental Corps, and as the Assistant Chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery for Dentistry.
Along with Alfred W. Chandler and Spry O. Claytor, Clemens V. Rault was promoted to rear admiral in 1947,[3] with the date being changed retroactively to be effective on the November 9, 1942. All three would serve as the Chief of the Dental Corps.
Clemens V. Rault retired from the United States Navy on July 1, 1950, after 31 years of naval service.
Clemens V. Rault became the dean of Georgetown University School of Dentistry in 1950, and retired from this position on January 1, 1966.[4] He remained a member of several professional dental organizations including the American Dental Association, the American College of Dentists (he was elected chairman of the organization's Washington section[5]), the International Association of Dental Research, and the International College of Dentists.[6] He also served as President of the American Association of Dental Schools, and was a member of Omicron Kappa Upsilon Society.[7]
In addition to his military awards, Clemens V. Rault received several professional awards in light of his long career in dentistry. He was elected "Dentist of the Year" in 1964 by the District of Columbia Dental Society, received an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Georgetown University in 1959, and another honorary Doctor of Science from New Orleans' Loyola University in 1966. The American Cancer Society awarded him the first annual Harold W. Krogh Award for his efforts at controlling oral cancer. He received the William John Gies award from the American College of Dentists in 1975 for his professional achievements and contributions to dental practices.
Clemens V. Rault died of heart failure on January 29, 1989, at Hôtel-Dieu Hospital in New Orleans. He was interred at Greenwood Cemetery.