- Wilds P. Richardson
Wilds Preston Richardson (1861–1929) was an officer of the
United States Army notable for being an explorer and geographer ofAlaska in the early decades of the 20th century. DuringWorld War I he was promoted to the rank brigadier general and, because of his cold weather experience, sent to lead thePolar Bear Expedition , part of theAllied intervention in the Russian Civil War . Richardson retired after the war and died inWashington, D.C. in 1929.Biography
Richardson was born on
20 March 1861 to Oliver P. and Hester F. (Wingo) Richardson in Hunt County,Texas . After attending schools in that county, the younger Richardson received an appointment to attend theUnited States Military Academy at West Point in 1880. After graduation in 1884, Richardson was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the 8th Cavalry Regiment, serving inCalifornia and other western posts. Richardson was promoted to first lieutenant in 1889, and joined the faculty at West Point three years later.In 1897, Richardson was sent to Alaska to begin what would be a twenty-year stay. Initially in charge of scouting locations and supervising construction of military installations, in 1905 Richardson was appointed head of the War Department's
Alaska Roads Commission , which oversaw federal road construction projects in the territory. His major project was the completion of a convert|380|mi|km|adj=on road from Valdez to Fairbanks.After the entry of the United States into
World War I , Richardson—promoted to brigadier general in August 1917—was assigned to command the 78th Infantry Brigade of the 39th Infantry Division atCamp Beauregard ,Louisiana , in March 1918. Arriving at Brest,France , on3 September 1918 , Richardson's unit participated in the closing stages of the war. After the Armistice, GeneralJohn J. Pershing assigned Richardson—because of his Alaskan cold-weather experience—to thePolar Bear Expedition inMurmansk . Returning to the U.S. in October 1919, [cite news | title = General say Reds killed 82 Yankees in Russia | work = Chicago Daily Tribune | date =1919-10-16 | page = 7 ] Richardson reverted to the rank of colonel and retired the following October.Richardson lived the remainder of his years at the Army and Navy Club in Washington, D.C.; he died at
Walter Reed Hospital on20 May 1929 and was buried at West Point.Legacy
The U.S. Army post established near Anchorage, Alaska, in 1940 was named
Fort Richardson in his honor. The Valdez-Fairbanks Trail, surveyed under his supervision in 1904, was named the Richardson Trail to honor him. InWorld War II , the U.S. Navytransport ship USS|General W. P. Richardson|AP-118|2 was named in his honor.References
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