- William Hood Simpson
Infobox Military Person
name= William Hood Simpson
born= birth date|1888|05|18
died= death date and age|1980|08|15|1888|05|18
placeofbirth=Weatherford, Texas
placeofdeath=San Antonio, Texas
placeofburial=Arlington National Cemetery
caption=
allegiance=flag|United States of America
branch=United States Army
serviceyears= 1909–1946
rank= General
commands=Fourth United States Army XII CorpsNinth United States Army Second United States Army 30th Infantry Division 35th Infantry Division
unit=
battles=Moro Rebellion Mexican ExpeditionBattle of Saint-Mihiel (WW1)Meuse-Argonne Offensive (WWI)Battle of Aachen (WW2)Operation Plunder (WW2)Operation Varsity (WW2)Operation Veritable (WW2
awards=Army Distinguished Service Medal (2)Silver Star Medal Légion d'honneur (France) Croix de guerre (France)
laterwork=
portrayedby=Lieutenant General William Hood Simpson (May 18, 1888 – August 15, 1980) was a distinguished U.S. Army officer who commanded the
U.S. Ninth Army in northern Europe, during World War II, among other roles.William Simpson was born May 18, 1888, at
Weatherford, Texas . After graduating from theUnited States Military Academy in 1909, he was commissioned into the infantry. Before US involvement inWorld War I , Simpson served in the US and in thePhilippines , including the Mexican Punitive Expedition, in 1916.He was promoted to Captain in May 1917 and served with the 33rd Division throughout World War I, receiving temporary promotions to Major and Lieutenant Colonel and becoming divisional Chief-of-Staff.
In the inter-war years, 1919 - 1941, Simpson filled staff appointments and attended military schools, both as student and as instructor. In mid-1940, he was appointed to command the 9th Infantry at
Fort Sam Houston , Texas. Before US entry into World War II, he had commanded divisions and received promotion to temporary Major-General, taking 35th Division from Camp Robinson, Arkansas, to a training site in California. Further promotions followed and in May, 1944, as a Lieutenant General, Simpson took his staff to Britain to organise the US 9th Army. This formation was activated as part of
SHAEF staff in 1945Omar Bradley 's 12th Army Group, on September 5th at Brest, France. Brest was liberated on September 20.The 9th Army joined the general advance and, after a month in the
Ardennes the 9th was moved further north. In November, 1944 it broke through theSiegfried Line and advanced, in some of heaviest fighting of the war, to the Roer River. At this point the advance stalled, due to the threat posed by dams upstream.After the
Battle of the Bulge , the 9th Army remained with Field MarshalBernard Montgomery 's21st Army Group for the final attack into Germany.As part of
Operation Plunder , theRhine was crossed on March 24, 1945, north of theRuhr industrial area and on April 19th the 9th Army made contact withCourtney Hodges ' US 1st Army, making complete encirclement of theRuhr . On 4 April, it had reverted to Bradley's 12th Army Group.The Ninth was the first American Army across the
Elbe , on April 12.Simpson returned to the US in June, 1945. He undertook a mission to China in July and subsequently commanded the
U.S. Second Army at Memphis, Tennessee. He retired in November 1946 and, on July 19, 1954 he was promoted to General on the retired list by special Act of Congress (Public Law 83-508).General William H Simpson died on August 15, 1980, and is buried alongside his wife in
Arlington National Cemetery .Military decorations
External links
* [http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/whsimpson.htm Simpson's biography from the Arlington National Cemetery's website]
* [http://texashistory.unt.edu/search/?q=Simpson%2C+William+Hood&t=dc.subject Photos of William Hood Simpson] , hosted by the [http://texashistory.unt.edu/ Portal to Texas History]
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