
"Ole
Blood and Guts"
American General and tank
commander, whose bold armored advance across France and Germany
in 1944 and 1945 made a significant contribution to
Allied victory in World War II .
He was born in San Gabriel,
Calif., on Nov. 11, 1885, into a family with a long tradition of
military service. He attended the Virginia Military Institute and
graduated
from the United States Military Academy in 1909, when
he was commissioned a 2d Lieutenant in the 15th Cavalry. He
graduated from the Mounted Service School, Fort Riley, Kans., in
1913, and a year later from the Advanced Course at the Cavalry
School, Fort Riley. In 1916 he went as acting aide to Gen. John J.
Pershing in the Mexican expedition, and in 1917 Pershing took him
to France as commander of his headquarters troops.
In November 1917, Patton was one of the first men detailed to the
newly established Tank Corps of the United States Army and was
assigned the task of
organizing and training the 1st Tank Brigade near Langres, France.
He led this unit in the St. Mihiel drive in mid-September 1918
and was wounded later in the month at the opening of the Meuse-Argonne
offensive. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and the
Distinguished Service Medal and promoted temporarily to the rank
of Colonel.
Between the two world wars Patton graduated from the Command and
General Staff School in 1924 and from the Army War College in
1932. His assignments during this period included two tours in
Hawaii, a tour in the office of the Chief of Cavalry, War
Department, and three tours with the 3d Cavalry at Fort Myer, Va.
In July 1940, Patton was
appointed to the command of a brigade of the 2d Armored Division
at Fort Benning, Ga. Less than a year later he was given command
of the division and promoted temporarily to the rank of Major
General. Early in 1942 he became commander of the 1st Armored
Corps, which he trained at the Desert Training Center, near Indio,
Calif.
Patton p
layed a leading role in the Allied
invasion of North Africa in November 1942, commanding the ground
elements of the western task forces that entered Casablanca and
soon occupied French Morocco. When in March 1943 the United
States 2d Corps in Tunisia was reorganized following an earlier
rebuff at Kasserine Pass by Gen. Erwin Rommel's forces, Patton
became its commander. Within a month he was promoted temporarily
to the rank of Lieutenant General and put in charge of American
preparations for the invasion of Sicily. On July 10 he commanded
the U.S. Seventh Army in its assault on that island. In
conjunction with the British Eighth Army, he cleared Sicily of
the enemy in 38 days. His victory was marred by an incident in
which he struck an Army hospital patient being treated for shell
shock, an action for which he later made a public apology.
In March 1944, Patton assumed
command of the Third Army in Britain and began to plan future
operations in northwest Europe. Shortly before the invasion he
was reprimanded by Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower for indiscreet
political statements. On August 1st his army became operational
in France, and he began the exploitation of the breakthrough near
Avranches made by the First Army a few days before. He thrust one
corps westward into Brittany toward Brest, while his other three
corps pushed southward toward the Loire and then swung eastward
in a series of broad sweeps toward the Seine. In one of the most
spectacular actions of the campaign in northern France, he drove
toward Paris, bypassed it, and reached the area near Metz and
Nancy before being stopped by dwindling supplies and stiffening
enemy resistance. While Patton was preparing an attack eastward
into the Saar area, in conjunction with the Seventh Army, the
Germans launched their Ardennes counteroffensive of December 16.
In an action characterized by Gen. Omar N. Bradley as "one
of the most astonishing feats of generalship of our campaign in
the west", Patton turned his forces quickly northward
against the southern flank of the bulge and helped contain the
enemy.
By the end of January 1945, the Third Army was ready to drive
against the Siegfried Line between Saarlautern (now Saarlouis)
north to St. Vith. Patton's four corps had pierced these defenses
by the end of February, and by mid-March had pushed forward
through the Eifel to gain control of the Moselle from the Saar
River to Coblenz and of the Rhine from Andernach to Coblenz. In
the following week his forces raced through the Palatinate region
to the Rhine south of Coblenz. On the evening of March 22/23,
units crossed the river near Oppenheim. Frankfurt am Main fell
three days later. By the third week in April his forces had
driven across southern Germany to the Czechoslovakian border, and
some of his units were in Austria before the month's end. During
the first week in May, Third Army columns pushed into
Czechoslovakia, and (Pilsen) was freed just before the armistice.
Patton was promoted to temporary four-star rank in mid-April.
Shortly after the end of the war he entered on his duties as
military governor of Bavaria. His outspoken criticisms of some of
the denazification policies led to an outcry in the United States,
followed in October 1945 by his relief as Third Army commander
and assignment to the Fifteenth Army, then a small headquarters
engaged in studying miliary operations in northwestern Europe.
Near the end of the year Patton was seriously injured in a so-called
automobile accident near Mannheim. He died in a nearby hospital
in Heidelberg on Dec. 21, 1945.
Profane, impetuous, and flamboyant, Patton was easily the most
colorful of the United States Army's commanders in the west, and
its leading genius in tank warfare. Behind his showmanship and
audacity lay the imaginative planning and shrewd judgment that
made him one of the greatest combat commanders of World War II.


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