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Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr.

 
Wikipedia: Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr.
Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr.
July 18, 1886(1886-07-18) – June 18, 1945 (aged 58)
Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr. in Okinawa.
Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr. in Okinawa.
Place of death Okinawa
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1908–45
Rank US-O10 insignia.svg General (posthumous)
Commands held Alaskan Defense Command; U.S. Tenth Army
Battles/wars World War II
Awards Army Distinguished Service Medal; Purple Heart

General Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr. (July 18, 1886June 18, 1945) was a American lieutenant general during World War II. He served in the Pacific Theater of Operations and commanded the defenses of Alaska early in the war. After that assignment, he was promoted to command Tenth Army, which conducted the amphibious assault (Operation Iceberg) on the Japanese island of Okinawa. He was killed during the closing days of the Battle of Okinawa by enemy artillery fire, making him the highest-ranking American to have been killed by enemy fire during the war, and among the highest-ranking military officers to die, along with Lt. Gen. Lesley J. McNair, who was killed by friendly fire in France on July 25, 1944, and Lt. Gen. Frank Maxwell Andrews, killed in an air crash in Iceland on May 3, 1943. Buckner was posthumously promoted to the rank of a full four-star general on July 19, 1954 by a Special Act of Congress (Public Law 83-508)

Contents

Early career

His father was Confederate General Simon Bolivar Buckner, Sr., who surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Fort Donelson.

Buckner was raised in the rural hills of western Kentucky near Munfordville, and attended Virginia Military Institute. He later won an appointment to West Point (class of 1908) from President Theodore Roosevelt. He served two tours of duty in the Philippines. During World War I, he served as a brevet major, drilling discipline into budding aviators.[1]

Interwar period

Between the wars, Buckner returned to West Point as an instructor (1919–1923) and again as instructor and Commandant of Cadets (1932–1936). Though recognized as tough and fair, his insistence on developing cadets past conventional limits caused one parent to quip, "Buckner forgets that cadets are born, not quarried."[1] He was also an instructor at the General Service Schools at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and was executive officer at the Army War College in Washington, D.C.

Alaska

Prior to Pearl Harbor, Buckner was promoted to Brigadier General and assigned to fortify and protect Alaska as commander of the Army's Alaska Defense Command. Though comparatively quiet, there was some action with the attack on Dutch Harbor on the island of Unalaska, Japanese seizure of the islands Kiska and Attu (June 1942), Battle of Attu (Operation Landcrab, May 1943), and "invasion" of Kiska (August, 1943) (see Aleutian Islands campaign).

Battle of Okinawa

Lt. General Simon B. Buckner (foreground, holding camera), photographed with Major General Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr., USMC, on Okinawa.
The last picture of Lieutenant General Buckner, Jr., taken just before he was killed by a Japanese artillery shell.

In July, 1944, Buckner was sent to Hawaii to organize the Tenth Army, which was composed of both Army and Marine units. The original mission of the Tenth Army was to prepare for the invasion of Taiwan; however, this operation was canceled, and Buckner's command was instead ordered to prepare for the Battle of Okinawa. This turned out to be the largest, slowest, and bloodiest sea-land-air battle in American military history. On June 18, 1945, Buckner was standing between two boulders watching the first combat operations of the 8th Marine Regiment when he was hit by shrapnel from a Japanese 47mm artillery shell and killed instantly.[2] He was succeeded in command by Marine General Roy Geiger. Total American deaths during the battle of Okinawa were 12,500.

Buckner is interred in the family plot at Frankfort Cemetery in Frankfort, Kentucky.

Other

Named in honor of Buckner:

  • Fort Buckner, an Army sub-post of the Marine Corps' Camp Foster on Okinawa. The post is home to the 58th Signal Battalion and includes a small memorial to its namesake.
  • West Point's Camp Buckner, where yearlings (incoming sophomores) go through Cadet Field Training (CFT).

References

  1. ^ a b Buck's Battle, Time Magazine
  2. ^ Sledge (1990), p. 299.
Bibliography

External links

Military offices
Preceded by
Newly activated organization
Commanding General of the Tenth United States Army
1944-1945
Succeeded by
Roy Geiger

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