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Douglas MacArthur

 

Douglas MacArthur


Douglas MacArthur (January 26, 1880April 5, 1964) was an American military leader. He is the most decorated soldier in the history of the United States military. He served in the U.S. Army most of his life, taking part in three major wars (World War I, World War II, Korean War) and rising to the rank of General of the Army, one of only nine people to hold that rank in U.S. history.

During World War II, MacArthur became famous for both losing and retaking the Philippines. He was appointed Supreme Allied Commander in the South West Pacific Area and led a series of military victories by Allied forces in the theatre. After Japan surrendered to the Allies in 1945, MacArthur became the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers, rebuilding Japan during the Allied occupation. During the Korean War, MacArthur was removed from command for insubordination to U.S. President Harry S. Truman, causing a national controversy.
MacArthur remains one of the most controversial figures in American history. While greatly admired by many for his strategic and tactical brilliance, MacArthur is also criticized by many for his actions in command, such as his role in putting down the Bonus Army, his command in the Philippines and New Guinea, and his challenge to Truman during the Cold War. MacArthur was also criticized for his egotistical attitude.

Early life and education


MacArthur was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. His parents were Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur, a recipient of the Medal of Honor during the American Civil War, and Mary Pinkney Hardy MacArthur of Norfolk, Virginia. In 1883, when he was three years old, his other brother, Malcolm, died (his older brother Arthur would later attend the U.S. Naval Academy and die in 1923 as a Captain.) MacArthur spent much of his childhood in remote parts of New Mexico such as Fort Selden, where his father commanded an infantry company. In his memoir Reminiscences, MacArthur wrote that his first memory was the sound of a bugle.

When MacArthur was six years old, his father was reassigned to Fort Leavenworth in Kansas. Three years later, the MacArthur family moved to Washington, D.C when Douglas's father took a post at the War Department. There he spent time with his paternal grandfather, Judge Arthur MacArthur, a member of the high-profile Washington political culture that had enormous influence on Douglas.

MacArthur's father was posted to San Antonio, Texas in 1893. There, Douglas attended the West Texas Military Academy, where he became an excellent student. MacArthur entered the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1898. An outstanding cadet, he graduated as valedictorian of his 93-man class in 1903, with only two other students in the history of West Point surpassing his achievements. MacArthur became a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, where he was a leader in combat engineering.

World War I


During World War I MacArthur served in France, with the 42nd Division. Upon his promotion to Brigadier General (the youngest ever in the Army) he became the commander of the 84th Infantry Brigade.

McArthur's Mistress.

In 1929 McArthur met Isabel Rosario Cooper, a sixteen-year old Filipina Actress, who he later took with him to Washington

The Bonus Army


He spent most of the inter-war period on different assignments in the Philippines. In 1932, while in Washington, D.C he commanded the troops used to disperse the Bonus Army of First World War veterans who were in the capital protesting against the government's failure to give them benefits. He was accused of using excessive force against a peaceful protest.

MacArthur left the U.S. Army in 1937 to command the Philippine Army, but returned in July 1941 as commander of United States Army Forces Far East (USAFFE), based in Manila.

World War II


After the United States entered World War II, MacArthur became Allied commander in the Philippines. He courted controversy on several occasions, especially when he overruled his air commander, General Lewis H. Brereton, who had requested permission to launch air attacks against Japanese bases on nearby Formosa. Consequently much of the US Far East Air Force was destroyed on the ground in the Philippines, the prelude to a Japanese invasion. In March 1942, as Japanese forces tightened their grip on the Philippines, MacArthur was ordered by US President Franklin D. Roosevelt to relocate to Melbourne, Australia. MacArthur's famous speech, in which he said "I came out of Bataan and I shall return", was made at Terowie, South Australia on March 20.

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MacArthur became Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in the Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA) and took command of Australian, US, Dutch and other Allied forces defending Australia, fighting mainly in and around New Guinea and the Dutch East Indies. He later moved SWPA headquarters to Brisbane, Australia. MacArthur's forces eventually achieved success, overrunning Japanese resistance in 1943 and 1944.

MacArthur's handling of the Australian forces under his command during this time has been the subject of much criticism, both by his contemporaries and subsequent historians. During 1942, MacArthur controlled more Australian than US forces. However, it has been claimed that he decreed that all Australian victories would be reported as "Allied victories", while American victories would be reported as American. It is also a widely-held view that, from mid-1943 onwards, MacArthur confined the Australian Army divisions under his command to tough and largely irrelevant actions, while reserving the more prestigious actions for his own nation's troops. As a result, there is an enduring antipathy towards MacArthur in Australia.

American forces under MacArthur's command took back the Philippines in October 1944, fulfilling MacArthur's vow to return to the Philippines and consolidating their hold on the archipelago after heavy fighting. In September 1945 MacArthur received the formal Japanese surrender which ended World War II. He was awarded and received the Medal of Honor for his leadership in the Southwest Pacific Theater.

Post-World War II


After World War II, MacArthur served as Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP). His first responsibility was overseeing the reconstruction in Japan. Though it was officially an effort of the Allies, the US was firmly in control, and MacArthur was effectively the dictator of Japan during this period. In 1946, MacArthur's staff created the constitution that is in use in Japan to this day. MacArthur handed over power to the newly-formed Japanese government in 1949, and remained in Japan until June 1950.

After the surprise attack of the North Korean army in June 1950 started the Korean War, the United Nations General Assembly authorized a United Nations (UN) force to help South Korea. MacArthur led the UN coalition counter-offensive, noted for an amphibious landing behind North Korean lines in the Battle of Inchon. As his forces approached the Korea-China border, the Chinese warned they would become involved. During his trip to Wake Island to meet with President Truman, MacArthur was specifically asked by President Truman about Chinese involvement in the war. MacArthur was dismissive.

On October 25, 1950, the People's Liberation Army attacked across the Yalu River, forcing the U.N forces to embark on a lengthy retreat. MacArthur sought an extension of the conflict into China, but President Truman refused his request. Later declassified documents indicate that MacArthur wanted to drop many nuclear bombs on China — some sources put this number at 50. Any nuclear strike may have brought the Soviet Union into the war and perhaps launched a Third World War. Truman feared a nuclear exchange and needless Chinese deaths. After heated arguments between the two men, Truman relieved MacArthur of his duty on April 11, 1951. General Matthew B. Ridgway replaced MacArthur and stabilized the situation near the 38th parallel.

Post-dismissal


MacArthur returned to Washington (his first time in the continental US in 11 years), where he made his last public appearance in a farewell address to the U.S. Congress, interrupted by thirty ovations. In his closing speech, he mused: "Old soldiers never die, they just fade away."

On his return from Korea, after his relief by Truman, MacArthur encountered massive public adulation, which aroused expectations that he would run for the US presidency as a Republican in 1952. However, a Senate Committee investigation of his removal, chaired by Richard Russell, contributed to a marked cooling of the public mood and, once his presidential hopes had died away, MacArthur spent the remainder of his life quietly in New York.

MacArthur and his second wife, Jean Faircloth, are buried together in downtown Norfolk, Virginia; their burial site is in a small museum dedicated to his memory, and there is a major shopping mall named for him across the street from the burial site. The couple's son changed his surname and now lives anonymously as a saxophonist in the New York area.

MacArthur's nephew, Douglas MacArthur II, served as a diplomat for several years.

Military career

  • 1899 – attends the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York
  • June 11, 1903 – graduates first in his class, commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers
  • 1905 - 1906 – serves as an aide to his father in the Far East
  • 1907aide-de-camp to President Roosevelt
  • 1914military expedition to Veracruz, Mexico
  • 1917 - 1919 – joins the 42nd Infantry Division; is credited with naming it the "Rainbow Division"
  • serves as divisional Chief of Staff, 84th Infantry Brigade Commander, and as the divisional commander
  • 1919 – becomes Superintendent of the US Military Academy
  • 1919 - 1920 - love affair with Herta Heuser, a German Red Cross worker who nursed him during his service in France and Germany
  • 1922 - 1930 - serves in the Philippines, commanding the District of Manila and the 23rd Brigade
  • February 14, 1922 - marries Louise Brooks, née Cromwell, a New York socialite
  • January 1925 - returns to US as a corps area commander
  • 1928 - leads the US Olympic Team to Amsterdam and returns to Manila as commander of the Philippine Department
  • 1928 divorced by Louise MacArthur
  • 1929 takes as his mistress Isabel Rosario Cooper (committed suicide, 1960), a 27-year-old Scottish-Filipino actress who starred in the Tagalog film "Ang Tatlong Hambog"; she moves with him to Washington, DC in 1930 and their affair continues until 1934
  • October 1930 - commander of the Ninth Corps Area
  • November 1, 1930 - 1935 - Chief of Staff of the United States Army
  • 1935 - serves as the Military Advisor to the Commonwealth Government of the Philippines
  • December 31, 1937 - retires from the US Army and becomes Field Marshal of the Philippine Army
  • April 1937 - marries Jean Faircloth
  • February 21, 1938 - Arthur MacArthur IV born
  • July 26, 1941 - returns to active duty in command of USAFFE
  • February 22, 1942 - President Franklin Delano Roosevelt ordered MacArthur out of the Philippines as the American defense of the nation collapsed. Upon leaving he says, "I shall return."
  • February 5, 1945 - He fulfills his promise and returns to liberate Manila
  • September, 1945 - Becomes military governor of Japan
  • December 15, 1945 - Orders the end of Shinto as the state religion of Japan
  • July 8, 1950 - Named commander of UN forces in Korea
  • July 31, 1950 - Travels to Taiwan and conducts diplomacy with Chiang Kai-Shek
  • September 15 1950 - Battle of Inchon fought; though not present, he had planned it
  • October 15 1950 - Meets with Truman on Wake Island, after informing the White House that he is too busy to return to Washington
  • April 11, 1951 - After he publicly criticizes White House policy in Korea, Harry Truman removes him from command
  • April 19, 1951 - At farewell address before Congress, gives famous Old Soldiers Never Die speech
  • 1951 - Retires from the U.S. army
  • May 12 1962 - Gives famous valedictory speech at West Point
  • April 5 1964 - General Douglas MacArthur dies

    Dates of rank

  • Second Lieutenant, United States Army: June 11, 1903
  • First Lieutenant, United States Army: April 23, 1904
  • Captain, United States Army: February 27, 1911
  • Major, United States Army: December 11, 1915
  • Colonel, National Army: August 5, 1917
  • Brigadier General, National Army: June 26, 1918
  • Brigadier General rank made permanent in the Regular Army: January 20, 1920
  • Major General, Regular Army: January 17, 1925
  • General for temporary service as Army Chief of Staff: November 21, 1930
  • Major General rank listed on Regular Army retired rolls: October 1, 1935
  • Lieutenant General for temporary service in the Army of the United States: July 27, 1941
  • General, Army of the United States: December 18, 1941
  • General of the Army, Army of the United States: December 18, 1944
  • General of the Army rank made permanent in the Regular Army: March 23, 1946

    Notes about components:



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