06/14/1998
Jim Conley
El Paso Times
Some of this century's most famous or
important U.S. Army generals left their mark on Fort Bliss and the
surrounding area - and two actually fought in this region.
Many
people know that Gen. John J. "Black Jack" Pershing was one of those who
waged battles in the region, because his pursuit of Mexican
revolutionary figure Pancho Villa is an oft-told part of the Paso del
Norte history. But who's the other general?
Actually, the man
wasn't a general at the time but was a young 1st Lt. George Patton, who
fought under Pershing in 1916. Almost 30 years later, Patton went on to
become one of the most famous U.S. Army generals of World War II when
his troops drove the Germans east into their homeland and pursued them
until their surrender in May 1945.
Two other important generals
who retired to El Paso were General of the Army Omar N. Bradley - the
nation's last five-star general - and Gen. James H. Polk, a
hell-for-leather armored cavalry officer who was a personal favorite of
Patton's.
A fifth well-known general who served at Fort Bliss was
Jonathan Wainwright, who served at Fort Bliss in 1939 when he was a
commanding general of cavalry and his units were training at the post.
Regarded
as a hero of the de-fense of the Philippines, Wainwright was welcomed
by 40,000 cheering El Pasoans in December 1945, when he visited the city
two months after receiving the Medal of Honor from President Truman.
Polk
made the most recent impact on the post, having spent years here in
retirement and dying only six years ago, in February 1992. He left
behind his wife, Josephine, and daughter, Jody Schwartz, and was buried
in Arlington National Cemetery. Polk's legacy is particularly important
to Fort Bliss because of his status as a patriarch of the 3rd Armored
Cavalry Regiment, which was transferred to Fort Carson, Colo., from Fort
Bliss just three years ago.
Polk commanded the unit in World War
II when it was the 3rd Cavalry Group. Patton personally pinned the
Silver Star Medal on Polk for gallantry in action after Polk spearheaded
the U.S. push into Germany. Patton's widow later sent Polk a pair of
Patton's own star insignia when Polk got promoted.
Bradley graced
El Paso with his presence in retirement from 1977 until his death in
April 1981, when he had a heart attack in New York City at age 88.
His
real introduction to Fort Bliss had been his review of the troops at
Noel Field in June 1948 - 50 years ago - part of the festivities
associated with the post's centennial year celebrations.
El Pasoan
Courtney M. Rittgers, a retired Army lieutenant colonel who was
decorated for combat infantry action, served as one of Bradley's trusted
aides.
"It was a great honor and a memorable experience,"
Rittgers said recently, although he said that Bradley actually had been
to El Paso before 1948.
"He stayed here on his honeymoon with his
first wife, Mary, at what's now the Paso del Norte hotel," said
Rittgers, who in an interview a year after Bradley's death called the
general possibly "the greatest commander the armed forces ever
produced."
Pershing, who amassed thousands of soldiers in El Paso
and along the border for the 1916 punitive expedition into Mexico,
almost retired to El Paso but apparently felt he was was too popular to
have the privacy in re-tirement that he would have liked. So he went to
Arizona.
Pershing had gone on to command the U.S. expeditionary
forces in France in World War I, but returned to El Paso in 1920 to bid
the city farewell before going to San Antonio. "I'll be back," he told
the throng, and according to news accounts, he kept his promise.
Scarcely a year passed that Pershing didn't return to El Paso for a
visit. He retired from active duty in 1924, died in 1948 and is also
buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Patton's service under
Pershing includes some of Patton's least-known exploits, since his World
War II service completely overshadowed his Mexican expedition
experience and World War I service. But in 1915, Patton got into a
battle with troops guarding the headquarters of Mexican Gen. Julio
Cardenas, a member of Villa's staff. It was in the Lake Itascate area
near the little village, Las Cienegas.
When the shooting was over,
Patton had killed Cardenas and another Mexican. He took the general's
heavy, silver spurs, which soon graced the walls of the Patton house at Fort Bliss.
A
few years before Pershing's death, Patton went to Washington to visit
the ailing old general who Patton had served nearly 30 years earlier at
Fort Bliss. Patton was getting ready to head for land action in North
Africa.
As the story goes, Patton knelt before Pershing to get the
general's blessing, then stood and saluted his old mentor. Ironically,
Patton preceded Pershing in death by three years. Patton died in an
accident in Germany just before Christmas 1945, seven months after the
German surrender.
Unlike the other three famous generals, Patton
remained with the men he had led, many just teen-agers who never got a
chance to grow old, but died around Christmas of 1944 in the Battle of
the Bulge.
His grave is in a famous cemetery in Luxembourg, where the crosses of U.S. soldiers extend almost as far as the eye can see.
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