Everything about J Lawton Collins totally explained
Joseph "Lightning Joe" Lawton Collins (
1 May 1896 –
12 September 1987) was a
general of the
United States Army. During
World War II, he served in both the
Pacific and
European Theaters of Operations. His brother
James Lawton Collins was also in the army as a
Major General. His nephew,
Michael Collins, would become famous for being the Command Module Pilot on the
Apollo 11 mission in
1969 that saw the first two men on the Moon. He too would retire as a
Major General, but in the
Air Force.
He was
Army Chief of Staff during the
Korean War.
Early career
Collins was born in
New Orleans, Louisiana, on
1 May 1896. He graduated from the
United States Military Academy in
1917; was commissioned a
second lieutenant and assigned to the
22nd Infantry, April 1917; was promoted to
first lieutenant, May 1917, and temporary
captain, August 1917. He attended the
Infantry School of Arms at
Fort Sill and served with his regiment at various locations,
1917–
1919.
Collins was promoted to captain, June
1918, and to temporary
major, September 1918; commanded the 3rd Battalion, 22nd Infantry, in
France,
1919, and was assistant chief of staff,
G-3, of
American Forces in Germany,
1920–
1921.
Advancement
Collins married
Gladys Easterbrook,
1921; reverted to captain,
1920; was instructor in the department of
chemistry at
West Point,
1921–
1925; graduated from the company officer course at the
Infantry School,
Fort Benning,
1926, and from the advanced course at the
Field Artillery School, Fort Sill,
1927.
He was an instructor in weapons and tactics at the Infantry School,
1927–
1931; was promoted to major, August
1932; was executive officer of the
23rd Brigade,
Manila, and assistant chief of staff,
G-2,
Philippine Division,
1933–
1934.
He graduated from the
Army Industrial College,
1937, and the
Army War College,
1938; was an instructor at the Army War College,
1938–
1940.
He was promoted to
lieutenant colonel, June 1940; was chief of staff of the
VII Corps,
1941.
Major Commands
Collins was promoted to the temporary ranks of
colonel, January 1941,
brigadier general, February 1942, and
major general, May
1942.
He was chief of staff of the
Hawaiian Department, 1941–1942, and commanding general of the
25th Infantry Division—the "Tropic Lightning" Division—on
Oahu and in operations against the
Japanese on
Guadalcanal,
1942–
1943.
Transferred to Europe, he commanded VII Corps in the
Normandy invasion and in Western European campaigns to the German surrender,
1944–
1945. The VII Corps is best-known for the leading role it played in
Operation Cobra; less well known is Collins' contribution to that plan. Throughout the 1944-45 campaign, the VII Corps tended to lead the most important 1st Army efforts. Collins was widely considered the best US Corps commander in the theatre.
Collins was promoted to temporary
lieutenant general (April) and permanent brigadier general (June), 1945. He was deputy commanding general and chief of staff of Army Ground Forces, August – December 1945; was director of information (later chief of public information) of the Army,
1945–
1947; was deputy (later vice) chief of staff of the United States Army,
1947–
1949; was promoted to temporary general and permanent major general, January
1948.
Collins was chief of staff of the United States Army,
16 August 1949 –
15 August 1953; as such he was the Army’s senior officer throughout the
Korean War.
He directed the Army’s operation of the railroads, brought the first
Special Forces group into the order of battle, and was closely associated with the development of the Army’s contribution to the newly established
North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
He was representative of the United States to the Military Committee and the Standing Group of NATO,
1953–
1954; was special representative of the United States in
Vietnam with ambassadorial rank,
1954–
1955; returned to his NATO assignment; retired from active service, March
1956.
Collins died in
Washington, D.C., on
12 September 1987. He is buried at
Arlington National Cemetery.
Further Information
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