- James K. Woolnough
Infobox Military Person
name=James K. Woolnough
born= 1910
died= death year and age|1996|1920
caption=General James K. Woolnough (left) at retirement ceremony for WAC Director
nickname="Gentleman Jim"
placeofbirth=Mindanao, Philippine
placeofdeath=Walter Reed Army Medical Center
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Army
serviceyears=1932-1970
rank= General
unit=
commands=Continental Army Command 1st Cavalry Division
battles=World War II Korean War
awards=Combat Infantryman Badge
relations=
laterwork=James Karrick Woolnough was a
United States Army four star general who served as Commanding General of the United States Continental Army Command atFort Monroe , Virginia. In this capacity he was responsible for the command and control of all active and reserve forces in the Six Armies of the Continental United States from 1967 to 1970.Military career
Born on October 24, 1910 in
Mindanao ,Philippine Islands of Colonel and Mrs. James B. Woolnough, Woolnough attended theUnited States Military Academy at West Point, graduating in 1932. Further training included theU.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning and theNational War College atFort McNair , Washington, D.C. Additionally he was both a math instructor and a Regimental Commander at West Point.During his 38 years of active duty, Woolnough held a variety of staff and command positions worldwide. Shortly after the D-Day Normandy Beach landing, June 1944, he became executive officer of the 16th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division. In February 1945, during the
Battle of the Bulge , he assumed command of the 393rd Infantry Regiment, 99th Infantry Division, which later provided the vanguard forces to prevent the German destruction of theRemagen Bridge , thus making it possible for the U.S. forces to cross the Rhine.In September 1950 he was sent to Korea, given a map, and instructed to head north to find the 1st Cavalry Division, which he did and for a time commanded the 7th Cavalry Regiment, the Garry Owen. Eleven years later, as a Major General, he returned to Korea as the 1st Cavalry Division Commanding Officer.
In the Pacific theater on Joint Task Force Seven he was Deputy Plans and Operations Officer for the first atomic tests at
Eniwetok . Years later as a Lieutenant General in 1963, he was Deputy Commander-in-Chief,U.S. Army Pacific atFort Shafter , Hawaii.Among his many assignments during his eighteen years in the Pentagon he served as Chief of Staff of the NATO Standing Group, Director of Operations as well as Director of Plans for the U.S. Army General Staff, and Deputy Chief of Staff for Personnel, Department of the Army.
Upon retirement on October 31, 1970, Woolnough returned to his family home in
Arlington, Virginia .Woolnough died on May 30, 1996 at
Walter Reed Army Medical Center , and was buried inArlington National Cemetery next to his wife, Mary Agnes Woolnough, who died in 1980. He was survived by his second wife, Mary Dabinet Woolnough.ee also
References
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