Frederick, Robert, MG

Deceased
 
 Photo In Uniform   Service Details
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Last Rank
Major General
Last Service Branch
Infantry
Last Primary MOS
1542-Infantry Unit Commander
Last MOS Group
Infantry
Primary Unit
1949-1950, 2nd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division
Service Years
1928 - 1952
Infantry
Major General
Four Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
California
California
Year of Birth
1907
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by SPC Steven Ryan (LoneWolf) to remember Frederick, Robert (DSC w/OLC), MG USA(Ret).

If you knew or served with this Soldier and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Last Address
San Francisco
Date of Passing
Nov 29, 1970
 

 Official Badges 

4th Infantry Division Honorably Discharged WW II


 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Military Order of the Purple Heart
  1950, Military Order of the Purple Heart - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:




The Distinguished Service Cross (DSC) is the second highest military decoration that can be awarded to a member of the United States Army, awarded for extreme gallantry and risk of life in actual combat with an armed enemy force. Actions that merit the Distinguished Service Cross must be of such a high degree to be above those required for all other U.S. combat decorations but not meeting the criteria for the Medal of Honor. The Distinguished Service Cross is equivalent to the Navy Cross (Navy and Marine Corps) and the Air Force Cross (Air Force).

The Distinguished Service Cross was first awarded during World War I. In addition, a number of awards were made for actions before World War One. In many cases, these were to soldiers who had received a Certificate of Merit for gallantry which, at the time, was the only other honor besides the Medal of Honor the Army could award. Others were belated recognition of actions in the Philippines, on the Mexican Border and during the Boxer Rebellion.

This decoration is distinct from the Distinguished Service Medal, which is awarded to persons in recognition of exceptionally meritorious service to the government of the United States in a duty of great responsibility.

A little over fifty soldiers (and one sailor) received two Distinguished Service Crosses in World War Two. The sailor was John D. Bulkeley, who also received the Medal of Honor and the Navy Cross and was one of the most highly decorated Americans of World War II. Among Army recipients of two Distinguished Service Crosses were Creighton W. Abrams, Jr., later the Chief of Staff of the Army, William O. Darby, one of the fathers of the U.S. Army Rangers, and Robert T. Frederick, commander of the U.S-Canadian 1st Special Service Force. Five men of the 82nd Airborne Division received two Distinguished Service Crosses: James M. Gavin, Arthur F. Gorham, Matthew B. Ridgway, Reuben Henry Tucker III and Benjamin H. Vandervoort
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Other Comments:



I loved this movie as a kid, it is fitting to have General Frederick remembered here.



The Devil's Brigade is a 1968 motion picture action drama based on the 1966 book of the same name co-written by American novelist and historian Robert H. Adleman and Col. George Walton, a member of the 1st Special Service Force, a joint American-Canadian commando unit that saw action during World War II in the Aleutian Islands Campaign and later in the European Theater of Operations.


William Holden - Lt. Col./Col. Robert T. Frederick

  • Cliff Robertson - Maj. Alan Crown
  • Vince Edwards - Maj. Cliff Bricker
  • Andrew Prine - Pvt. Theodore Ransom
  • Jeremy Slate - Sgt. Dermot 'Pat' O'Neill
  • Claude Akins - Pvt. Rockwell 'Rocky' Rockman
  • Carroll O'Connor - Maj. Gen. Hunter
  • Jack Watson - Cpl. Wilfrid Peacock
  • Dana Andrews - Lt. Gen. Walter Naylor
  • Richard Jaeckel - Pvt. Omar Greco
  • Richard Dawson - Pvt. Hugh MacDonald
  • Tom Troupe - Pvt. Al Manella
  • Paul Hornung  : Lumberjack
  • Gene Fullmer : Bartender
  •    

       1943-1943, 1st Special Service Force (The Devil's Brigade)

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     1st Special Service Force (The Devil's Brigade) Details

    1st Special Service Force (The Devil's Brigade)

    While the origins of U.S. Army Special Forces date back to the French and Indian War and the formation of Rogers’ Rangers, the modern concepts of unconventional warfare were largely developed in World War II with the formation of several specially trained units. One of the these early Special Forces units was the First Special Service Force, also known as the “Devil’s Brigade.”

    The origins of the First Special Service Force (or the Force, as its members referred to it) began at the highest levels of the Allied Command in World War II. The basic concept, which came from the staff of Lord Louis Mountbatten’s Combined Operations Command, called for a force able to fight on land, on the sea, in the air, and in winter conditions. Planners intended to use the force to attack hydroelectric plants in occupied Norway, oil fields in Romania, and even targets in Russia. Because neither Britain nor Norway could supply the troops, this new unit would be comprised of American and Canadian soldiers. MG Dwight D. Eisenhower, head of the War Plans Division, gave one of his staff officers, LTC Robert T. Frederick, the assignment of studying the idea, codenamed Project Plough. On 16 June 1942 Eisenhower gave Frederick the task of organizing and commanding the unit that would become known as the First Special Service Force.

    After receiving his orders, Frederick began to organize a staff, obtain American and Canadian volunteers, and locate a place to train the new unit. To fill the Force’s ranks, Frederick and his staff recruited men with experience in working outdoors–lumberjacks, forest rangers, hunters, game wardens, prospectors, and others suitable for the Force’s mission. The Force was organized into three regiments, each made up of two battalions. It also had a small Air Force Detachment and a Service Battalion. In all, the Force would have approximately 2,300 officers and men.

    The First Special Service Force was activated on 9 July 1942 at Fort William Henry Harrison near Helena, Montana. The rugged, mountainous terrain and extreme winter conditions made Montana the ideal place for training. The Forcemen underwent rigorous training in a variety of weapons, hand-to-hand combat, demolition techniques, airborne assault, and attack maneuvers. In the fall, a group of Norwegian Army ski troops arrived to teach the Forcemen cross country skiing.

    In the fall of 1942, however, the Allies cancelled Project Plough. Although seemingly without a mission with the termination of Plough, Allied leaders decided to keep the well trained Force. In spring 1943, the Force underwent amphibious training at Norfolk, Virginia, for possible future amphibious operations.

    On 15 August 1943, the First Special Service Force participated in its first operation. The Forcemen landed on the rocky shores of Kiska in the Aleutian Islands, only to discover the Japanese had secretly abandoned the island.

    After returning to the U.S., the First Special Service Force was reassigned to the Mediterranean Theater and the fighting on the Italian peninsula. The Force arrived in Naples on 19 November 1943 and went into the line at Santa Maria with the 36th Infantry Division. In early December, the Force stormed and captured Monte La Difensa, a major hill mass blocking the Fifth Army’s advance which had been unsuccessfully assaulted by a number of other Allied units. In late December 1943 and early January 1944, the Force captured Monte Sammucro and Monet Mojo and held them against heavy odds.

    After a brief rest, the Force was sent into the Anzio Beachhead on 2 February and took up positions on the Allies right flank. Despite being forty percent understrength, the Force effectively held thirteen kilometers of front for ninety-nine continuous days and even penetrated the German main line of resistance on occasion. It was at Anzio that the Force earned its nickname, the “Devil’s Brigade,” for their fierce style of fighting in blackened faces. An entry from a diary found on the body of a German officer read, “The Black Devils are all around us every time we come into line, and we never hear them.”

    The Force seized key bridges south of Rome and entered the city with other Allied units on 4 June. In its last campaign, now under the command of COL Edwin A. Walker, the Force seized three islands off the south coast of France on 14 August to protect the Allied landings. However, the Force’s time was almost up. On 5 December 1944, the Force was disbanded. Many of the American Forcemen were sent to American airborne units as desperately needed replacements. Others served with the 474th Infantry (Separate), which saw action with the Third Army and later performed occupation duty in Norway.

    In its relatively brief wartime service, the First Special Service Force suffered over 2,700 casualties. It was awarded five U.S. Army campaign streamers and another ten by Canada. The Force’s legacy lives on as the seven Special Forces groups currently in the Regular Army or Army National Guard all trace their lineage to the First Special Service Force.

    © The Army Historical Foundation


    Type
    Special Operations
     
    Parent Unit
    Special Forces Units
    Strength
    Brigade
    Created/Owned By
    SF Cooper, Mark E, MAJ 47
       

    Last Updated: Sep 18, 2008
       
       
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    20 Members Also There at Same Time
    1st Special Service Force (The Devil's Brigade)

    Marshall, Alfred Cookman, COL, (1928-1944) IN 1543 Colonel
    Walker, Edwin Anderson, MG, (1931-1961) IN 1542 Colonel
    Adams, Paul DeWitt, GEN, (1928-1966) IN 1542 Major
    Radcliffe, T. Mark, COL, (1941-1978) IN 1542 Captain
    Boyce, Wayne, 1LT, (1940-1943) UN 00X First Lieutenant
    Higdon, John, 1LT, (1941-1944) FA 1193 First Lieutenant
    Rillera, Melchor T., S/SGT, (1942-1946) IN 745 Staff Sergeant
    Saum, Robert, SFC, (1941-1961) IN 812 Staff Sergeant
    Alvestad, Bernhard, SGT, (1942-1945) UN 00E Sergeant
    Glass, Joe M., SGT, (1940-1944) IN 745 Sergeant
    Saum, Robert, SFC, (1941-1961) IN 566 Sergeant
    Woodard, Joel Gardner, SFC, (1943-1951) IN 745 Sergeant
    McElveen, Clifford D., SFC, (1943-1968) IN 745 Private First Class
    Baron, Melvin, PVT, (1943-1944) IN 745 Private
    Brannon, William Wilson, PVT, (1943-1944) IN 745 Private
    Hoblitzell, James Ross, PVT, (1942-1943) IN 745 Private
    Vitatoe, Carl, PVT, (1942-1943) QM 821 Private
    Eschenburg, Emil, BG, (1939-1970) Lieutenant Colonel
    Redd, John DeMar, CPT, (1944-1946) Captain
    Aldridge, Lindell, S/SGT, (1940-1952) Staff Sergeant
    Boschet, Lloyd, T/5, (1943-1944) Technician Fifth Grade

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