- Blackshear M. Bryan
Infobox Military Person
name=Blackshear M. Bryan
born= birth date|1900|2|08
died= Death date and age|1977|3|2|1900|03|02
caption=General Blackshear M. Bryan
nickname=
placeofbirth=Alexandria, Louisiana
placeofdeath=
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Army
serviceyears=1922-1960
rank=Lieutenant General (United States)
unit=
commands=24th Infantry Division (United States) XVI Corps I Corps (United States) United States Military Academy U.S. Army, Pacific First United States Army
battles=Korean War
awards=Army Distinguished Service Medal Order of the British Empire Air Medal in Korea
relations=
laterwork=President, Nassau Community CollegeLieutenant General Blackshear Morrison Bryan was aUnited States Army general who served during the Second World War and Korean War.Early Life and Education
Bryan was born in Alexandria, Louisiana on February 8, 1900. He was attending
Virginia Military Institute when he received an appointment to theUnited States Military Academy atWest Point , New York in 1918. He graduated with the second or June 14th class of 1922, receiving a commission as a second Lieutenant in the artillery.After graduation from West Point, Bryan took artillery officer training at
Fort Sill , Oklahoma. He returned to West Point to serve as an assistant Army football coach during the 1925 and 1926 seasons. Bryan was also an instructor there in 1928-1929 and 1933-1934. He was promoted became a lieutenant in 1927 and captain in 1935. In 1940 he was promoted to major and graduated from theArmy War College , then atWashington Barracks (Fort Lesley J. McNair ) in Washington, D.C., before the school was closed for the duration of World War II.World War II
At the outbreak of World War II, Bryan was chief of the Policy Section for the War Department General Staff in Washington, D.C. where he was promoted to Lieutenant colonel. In 1942 he was promoted to colonel and assigned as Chief of the Aliens Division for the Provost Marshal General's Office. With a his promotion to general and a 1943 reorganization, he headed the Prisoner of War Division with charge over Japanese internment and prisoner of war camps throughout the United States. In July 1945, Bryan became Provost Marshal General and transitioned an agency whose lifespan rarely exceeded beyond the end of combat hostilities into a post-war organization with charge over Army military investigations, the military police and the Army's military police school.
Cold War and Korea
In 1948, he transferred to Panama Canal Zone, serving as chief of staff under General
Matthew Ridgway who headed a newly established unified multi-service command structure, the Caribbean Command, replacing the Army's World War II Caribbean Defense Command.In March 1951, Bryan was part of the first rotation of combat commanders since the start of the
Korean War , taking charge of the 24th Infantry Division, a first combat command that he took on with Ridgeway's full faith, despite not having combat experience.After a year in Korea, Bryan served as Deputy Chief of Staff for the
Far East Command in Tokyo before commanding theXVI Corps in Japan. He then took on a leading role on the military armistice commission of theUnited Nations that concluded hostilities in Korea in 1953 and directed the repatriation of prisoners of war. After promotion to major general and a short stint as commanding general of I Corps in Korea, he was appointed the 43rd superintendent of the United States Military Academy atWest Point for which he served from 1954 to 1956.In July 1956 he took command of U.S. Army Pacific in Hawaii. In July 1957 Bryan assumed his final command as commanding general,
First United States Army atFort Jay ,Governors Island in New York City. After 37 years of active duty, Bryan entered the retired list February 29, 1960.Retirement and Family
From 1960 to 1965 Bryan served as the first president of the Nassau Community College in Long Island, New York.
Two of Bryan's sons, Blackshear Jr. and James, served in the U.S. Army. Blackshear M. Bryan, Jr. or "Morrie" was born in 1929 at West Point during his father's tenure as assistant football coach. He attended the Academy, graduating with the class of 1954. He accepted a commission with the Air Force, then transferred to the U.S. Army in 1963. Serving in Vietnam he was cited twice for heroism during his tour. On September 22, 1967, as he was rounding out his tour in Vietnam, Major Morrie Bryan was killed in a crash of his U-21A during a training mission as he attempted to avoid trespassers on the runway.
Bryan's son Jamie also died in 1967 in a military aircraft accident after serving two combat tours in Vietnam. Blackshear M. Bryan died March 2, 1977 in a Silver Spring, Maryland nursing home after a long illness and was buried at the
West Point Cemetery .References
United States Army Pacific, History, Commanding Generals, Blackshear M. Bryan [http://www.usarpac.army.mil/history/cgbios/cg_bryan.asp]
United States Military Academy Class of 1954 Webpage - Combat Deaths [http://usma1954.org/Deceased/CombatDeaths.htm#Byan]
German Prisoners of War in the United States by Arnold P. Krammer in Military Affairs, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Apr., 1976), pp. 68-73
*Citation
title= New Command Team in Korea
journal= Time
volume=
issue=
date=March 5, 1951
year= 1951
pages=
url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,805734,00.html. Retrieved on February 4, 2008.*Citation
last =
first =
author-link =
title =Veteran of Korea Heads West Point
newspaper =New York Times
pages =33
year =1954
date=February 28, 1954
url =http://select.nytimes.com/mem/archive/pdf?res=F50E13F83958117A93CAAB1789D85F408585F9ee also
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