- Hunter Liggett
Infobox Military Person
name=Hunter Liggett
born= birth date|1857|3|21
died= death date and age|1935|12|30|1857|3|21
placeofburial=San Francisco National Cemetery
caption=Hunter Liggett
placeofbirth=Reading, Pennsylvania
placeofdeath=San Francisco, California
allegiance=flagicon|United States United States of America
branch=United States Army
serviceyears=1879–1921
rank= Lieutenant General
commands= 41st Division I Corps First Army Third Army
battles=Indian Wars Spanish-American War Philippine-American War World War I
awards=Distinguished Service Medal Legion of Honor (France)Hunter Liggett (
March 21 ,1857 –December 30 ,1935 ) was a lieutenant general of theUnited States Army . His forty-two years of service spanned the period from the Indian campaigns totrench warfare .Liggett was born in
Reading, Pennsylvania . After his graduation from West Point as asecond lieutenant in 1879, he was assigned to the Fifth Infantry, where he served in both the Montana and Dakota Territories, as well as Texas and Florida, during which time he reached the rank offirst lieutenant in June 1884.His field service in the American West, the
Spanish American War , and thePhilippine-American War honed his skills as a troop leader.In 1907, he assumed command of a battalion of the 13th Infantry Regiment at
Fort Leavenworth . From 1909 to 1914, he served as student, faculty member, and president at theArmy War College . Success in brigade commands inTexas and in thePhilippines led to his selection as commander of the 41st Infantry Division inFrance in 1917. When his division was disestablished, he took command of I Corps as a temporary lieutenant (three star) general.Under Liggett's leadership, the corps participated in the
Second Battle of the Marne and in the reduction of the Saint-Mihiel Salient. In October 1918, as commander of theUS First Army , he directed the final phases of theMeuse-Argonne offensive and the pursuit of German forces until thearmistice . After commanding theU.S. Third Army also known as the "Army of Occupation" on the Rhein bridgeheads, Hunter Liggett retired in 1921. Congress promoted him to permanent lieutenant general in 1930.His medals included these: The Distinguished Service Medal; the decorations of the
Legion of Honor , fromFrance ; theOrder of Leopold , fromBelgium ; and theOrder of Saints Maurice and Lazarus , fromItaly .He died in
San Francisco, California in 1935. He is interred at theSan Francisco National Cemetery .Fort Hunter Liggett onCalifornia 's central coast, as well as theUnited States Coast Guard 's USS "Hunter Liggett" were named in honor of him.References
* [http://cgsc.leavenworth.army.mil/carl/resources/ftlvn/ww2.asp#liggett army.mil: Hunter Liggett]
* [http://www.militarymuseum.org/Liggett.html Gen. Liggett biography]
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