March, Peyton Conway, GEN

Deceased
 
 Photo In Uniform   Service Details
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Last Rank
General
Last Service Branch
US
Last Primary MOS
0002-General Officer
Last MOS Group
General Officer
Primary Unit
1919-1921, Office of the Chief of Staff of the Army
Service Years
1888 - 1921
US
General
Three Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Year of Birth
1864
 
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Contact Info
Home Town
Easton, PA
Last Address
Easton, PA
Date of Passing
Apr 13, 1955
 
Location of Interment
Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Section CL, Site 1476

 Official Badges 

Army Staff Identification US Army Retired US Army Retired (Pre-2007) French Fourragere




 Unofficial Badges 

Artillery Shoulder Cord


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Historical SoldiersNational Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  1921, Historical Soldiers
  1955, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Peyton Conway March was Army Chief of Staff.

March was the son of Francis Andrew March, considered the principal founder of modern comparative linguistics in Anglo-Saxon and one of the first professors to advocate and teach English in colleges and universities. Peyton March attended Lafayette College, where his father occupied the first chair of English language and comparative philology in the United States. In 1884, he was appointed to West Point and graduated in 1888. He was assigned to the 3rd Artillery.
 

He married Josephine Smith Cunningham (d. 1904) in 1891. They had a son, Peyton, Jr. (b. 1896), who was killed in a plane crash during WWI.
 

In 1894, March was assigned to the 5th Artillery and promoted to 1st lieutenant. He was sent to the Artillery School in 1896. He organized the Astor Battery and was sent to the Philippines in the Spanish-American War. In 1899, March was the aide to Gen. Arthur MacArthur, Jr.. Later that year he was promoted to major. He continued to serve in the Philippines, and was a provincial governor and commissary of prisoners.
 

In 1903 he was sent to Fort Riley and commanded the 19th Battery of the field artillery. Later that year he was sent to Washington, D.C. and served on the newly created General Staff.
 

In 1904-1905, March was one of several American military attachés serving with the Japanese army in the Russo-Japanese War. He would become one of eight observers who were later promoted to the rank of General in the U.S. Army.

In 1907, March commanded the 1st Artillery Battalion, 6th Field Artillery. March then served as adjutant of Fort Riley, then served as adjutant at several other commands, including at the War Department.
 

In 1916, he was promoted to colonel and commanded the 8th Field Artillery on the Mexican border.
 

During World War I, March was promoted to brigadier general and commanded the 1st Field Artillery Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, American Expeditionary Forces. Later that year, he was promoted to major general and commanded the artillery units of the U.S. First Army and all non-divisional artillery units.
 

In March 1918, he was recalled to Washington, took over as acting Army Chief of Staff on March 4 and was Army Chief of Staff on May 20, 1918. He was promoted to temporary general.
 

March was highly critical of President Wilson's decision to send an American Expedition to North Russia and Siberia in 1918 The so-called Siberian Intervention ) ostensibly to prop-up the Russian war effort, secure the railroads, support the Czech Legion trapped there, and stop the Japanese from exploiting the chaos in order to colonize Siberia. March wrote after the pull-out of American forces in 1920:
 

The sending of this expedition was the last occasion in which the president reversed the recommendation of the War Department during my service as Chief of Staff of the Army... almost immediately after the Siberian and North Russian forces had reached their theaters of operations, events moved rapidly and uniformly in the direction of complete failure of these expeditions to accomplish anything that their sponsors had claimed for them.
 

He served as Chief of Staff until June 30, 1921. As Chief of Staff he reorganized the Army structure, and abolished the distinctions between the Regular Army, the Army Reserves, and the National Guard during war time. He created new technical branches in the service including the Air Corps, Chemical Warfare Corps, Transportation Corps, and Tank Corps. He also centralized control over supply. After the war ended, he supervised the demobilization of the Army. As Chief of Staff he often came into disagreement with Gen. John J. Pershing, who wanted to conduct the AEF as an independent command.
 

March retired as a major general in 1921. In 1923, he married Cora V. McEntee.

 
In June 1930, March was advanced to general on the retired list.

 

March died on April 13, 1955 and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
 

March was a highly efficient and capable administrator who did much to modernize the American Army and prepare it for combat in the First World War.

 

   
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   1917-1918, 1st Field Artillery Brigade, 1st Division (Big Red One)

Brigadier General
From Month/Year
- / 1917
To Month/Year
- / 1918
Unit
1st Field Artillery Brigade Unit Page
Rank
Brigadier General
MOS
Not Specified
Base, Fort or City
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State/Country
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 Patch
 1st Field Artillery Brigade, 1st Division (Big Red One) Details

1st Field Artillery Brigade, 1st Division (Big Red One)
Type
Artillery
 
Parent Unit
1st Division (Big Red One)
Strength
Army Brigade
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Sep 6, 2009
   
   
Yearbook
 
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27 Members Also There at Same Time
1st Field Artillery Brigade

Summerall, Charles Pelot, GEN, (1892-1931) Brigadier General
Reinhart, Stanley, MG, (1916-1946) FA Captain
1st Division (Big Red One)

Mattison, George Pratt, PVT, (1918-1918) [Other Service Rank]
McNair, Lesley James, GEN, (1904-1944) Brigadier General
Murray, Maxwell, MG, (1907-1946) Major
Swansburg, Edward T (Eddie), SGT Sergeant
Reiniche, Joe R., PFC, (1917-1918) Private First Class
Hallyburton, Edgar Morrison, SGT, (1909-1919) IN Sergeant (Field Service)
Hamilton, Victor, CPL, (1917-1918) IN 000 Corporal (Field Service)
Legge, Barnwell, BG, (1916-1949) AMP Lieutenant Colonel
Marshall, George Catlett, GA, (1902-1959) OD Lieutenant Colonel
Legge, Barnwell, BG, (1916-1949) AMP Major
Legge, Barnwell, BG, (1916-1949) AMP Captain
Morgan, David R, CPT, (1917-1919) MD 000 Captain
Roosevelt, Archibald Bulloch, LTC, (1917-1943) IN 1542 Captain
Legge, Barnwell, BG, (1916-1949) 01 First Lieutenant
Legge, Barnwell, BG, (1916-1949) 01 Second Lieutenant
Leytham, Lowell S., PVT, (1917-1918) IN Private
Tyner, Ellis, PFC, (1917-1918) IN 000 Private
Rhodes, William C, CPL, (1917-1918) Corporal (Field Service)
Foster, Forest Lloyd, SGT, (1917-1919) Sergeant (Cavalry)
Thompson, Ernest, COL, (1914-1952) Lieutenant Colonel
Prichard, Vernon Edwin, MG, (1915-1949) Captain
Dial, Walter Verlin, 2LT, (1917-1918) Second Lieutenant
5th Field Artillery (155's)

Murray, Maxwell, MG, (1907-1946) Major
Aultman, Dwight, BG, (1894-1929) AR 000 Brigadier General
Menoher, Charles Thomas, MG, (1886-1926) Colonel
6th Field Artillery (155's)

Yeaman, Ross, CPL, (1917-1919) Corporal
Yeaman, Ross, CPL, (1917-1919) Corporal
Parker, Cortlandt, MG, (1906-1946) FA 1193 Colonel
Arch, Alexander Louis, SGT, (1913-1920) FA 845 Sergeant
Downer, John Walker, COL, (1901-1943) Colonel
Monkman, Albert, PVT, (1917-1919) Private

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