Restoration: The Bat
ASM-N-2 Guided Missle
- By Jim Sweeney
- Air & Space magazine, January 2002
In the Pacific theater of World War II, naval bombers like the Privateer carried the little airplane-like Bat aloft, then released it to find its way, via radar, to its target.
NIST/U.S. Dept. of Commerce





Comments (3)
My father Robert B. Rump was one of the original group who developed the first BAT missile. He went to the Pacific in April 1945 with the BAT and saw it sink several Japanese ships late in the War. After the War he was commissioned to the newly-commissioned naval Air Missile Test Center at Pt. Mugu, Oxnard, CA.
I don't understand how everything is being developed; one of four main men involved has never even been contacted.
Barbara Homan (daughter)
6250 Telegraph Rd. #1005
Ventura, CA 93003
(805) 650-0022
blhoman@sbcglobal.net
Posted by Barbara Homan on October 31,2009 | 10:32 PM
My father, George W. Patterson, III also worked on the BAT. He was employed by the Bureau of Standards from about 1940 to 1946, when he went to the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania,1946-1950. He then went to Burroughs Corp and worked on the Atlas Missile guidance system among others, from about 1950-1955 before returning to teach at the Moore School until his death in 1972.
Posted by Graham M Patterson on July 19,2010 | 05:33 PM
Do either of the first two commenters have any photos like this one
museum.nist.gov/panels/batmissile/bigpix/gang.htm
It shows my grandfather, Russell C. Newhouse. It would be great to see additional photos or links to your relative's work on BAT.
Posted by Bill Newhouse on June 27,2012 | 10:55 AM