Otis, Glenn Kay, GEN

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
General
Last Service Branch
US
Last Primary MOS
0002-General Officer
Last MOS Group
General Officer
Primary Unit
1983-1988, 00GC, US Army Europe (USAREUR)
Service Years
1946 - 1988
Official/Unofficial US Army Certificates
Cold War Certificate
Order of the Spur
Golden Dragon Certificate
US Ranger
General
Two Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
New York
New York
Year of Birth
1929
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by SP 4 Richard Bradley to remember Otis, Glenn Kay, GEN 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
Home Town
Plattsburgh
Last Address
Carlisle, Pennsylvania
Date of Passing
Feb 21, 2013
 
Location of Interment
Saint Patrick's Cemetery - Carlisle, Pennsylvania

 Official Badges 

US European Command Allied Command Atlantic Defense Intelligence Agency 25th Infantry Division

Training and Doctrine Command US Army Forces Command Army Staff Identification War Department Military Intelligence

Department of the Army Military Intelligence Infantry Shoulder Cord US Army Retired (Pre-2007) Army Honorable Discharge (1984-Present)




 Unofficial Badges 

Armor Shoulder Cord Order Of The Golden Dragon Cold War Medal Order of The Spur (Gold)

Order of Saint George (Gold)


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
West Point Association of Graduates
  1953, West Point Association of Graduates


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Non- TWS members can have a tribute, photo, or other item added to this page by sending an email to:
tunnellrat25thinf34cav@verizon.net

General Glenn K. Otis, United States Army (Retired)

General Otis served as a consultant for many defense firms and served on the Defense Science Board and Ballistic Missile Defense Advisory Committee. Previously he was Senior Vice President of Coleman Research Corporation (1988-96) and Chairman of the Board on Army Science and Technology at the National Academy of Sciences. He entered the United States Army in 1946 and served for 42 years. Prior to leaving military service in 1988, he served as Commander in Chief, U.S. Army Europe and 7th Army, and Commander, NATO's Central Army Group (1983-88).  Previously he commanded the U.S. Army's Training and Doctrine Command (1981-83).

Obituary:
Gen (Ret) Glenn K. Otis, 83, of Carlisle, died Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013 at Carlisle Regional Medical Center.  Born Mar. 15, 1929 in Plattsburgh, NY, he was the son of the late Glen K. and Viola Hart Otis.

General Otis began his career as an enlisted soldier on occupation duty in Korea following World War II, was selected from the ranks to attend West Point, later taught at the military Academy, fought valiantly as a cavalry sqaudron commander in Vietnam during the Tet Offensive of 1968, directed the XM-1 Tank Task Force that produced the technologically superior Abrams main battle tank, and positively affected the lives and training of thousands of soldiers as Commander in Chief of the U.S. Army Europe during key periods of the Cold War. General Otis served as the commander of the 1st Brigade, 3rd Armored Division (Spearhead) from 1972 until 1973. He then was assigned as the Chief of Staff, 3rd Armored Division in September. He served as the Chief of Staff until his next stateside assignment. He then continued his service to his country as a core member of the Defense Science Board, the highest-level board advising the Secretary of Defense, and a member of similar, national-level advisory boards.  He served his country in the U.S. Army for 42 years. He was a soldiers soldier.

Surviving are his wife of nearly 60 years, Barbara Otis of Carlisle; one son, Peter Otis (and wife, Lisa) of Glen Allen, VA; two daughters, Caren Otis of Carlisle and Nancee Groh (and husband, Jeffrey) of Carlisle; and four grandchildren, Logan, Donovan, Tyler, and Emily.  He was preceded in death by his sister, Janice Peoples.

Memorial Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10 a.m., Wednesday, Feb. 27 at St. Patrick Catholic Church, 85 Marsh Dr., Carlisle with the Rev. William C. Forrey as celebrant.

Hoffman-Roth Funeral Home & Crematory, Inc., 219 N. Hanover St., Carlisle is in charge of the funeral arrangments.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Wounded Warrior Project, P.O. Box 758517, Topeka, KS 66675 or Humane Society of Harrisburg Area, 7790 Grayson Rd., Harrisburg, PA 17111.

To sign the guest book, visit www.hoffmanroth.com.
 

General Glenn K. Otis - 83

 

Funeral Homily

February 27, 2013

 

Barbara, please accept the sympathy and love of all of us gathered together as we commend Glenn to the Lord. Your devotion to him, the example of married love that which you and Glenn offered, remain a great inspiration to us all and we pray that the Lord will bless and console you and Caren, Nancy and Peter and all of your loved ones.

I also want to thank the Honorary Pall Bearers who are with us today. Many of you comprise the Saturday Morning Breakfast Club. General Otis would be so honored by your presence here this morning. Allow me to personally thank and acknowledge the following distinguished officers. Your friendship and support meant more than you will ever know to General Otis: Lieutenant General David Grange, Major General William Burns, Brigadier General Dick Potter, Colonel Robert Gerard, Colonel George Shevlin, the recently deceased Colonel Don Lunday is represented this morning by his son Lieutenant Colonel Brian Lunday. My sympathies to you all as well and thank you for your service today as the Honorary Pall Bearers.

Today we celebrate the life of General Glenn K. Otis. For God has called his creation back home again. And as we contemplate the loss of General Otis many thoughts, emotions and questions come to mind. The meaning of life, the meaning of death and the afterlife.

But most of all our thoughts turn to faith for we celebrate this day - Glenn’s victory in Christ in His Passion, Death and Resurrection. Our faith tells us that through Christ the power of sin and death was destroyed. Through our belief in Jesus Christ we know that our ultimate destiny is to live with God in heaven.

Our thoughts this day reflect upon the belief that Glenn is with the Lord Jesus and that should be most comforting and consoling …. for this is our goal as a Christian community. To one day be united with God in heaven. Death is the great and final emptying of self so that Jesus can come and take possession – come to me, all you who labor!

No words will take away the sense of pain, sorrow or human loss that each of us now experience. But our faith in the Lord Jesus enables us to say that for Glenn, life is changed and not ended. Glenn is home. He is at peace – that place where there is no more pain, suffering or torment.

As you know we are in the season of Lent and the themes of death and dying, life and living, are constantly before us. However, from the start of the journey, from whatever town or village, whatever suburb or inner city we happen to be in at the moment, we know where it will end at the end of Lent we find ourselves at the tomb. The death of Jesus.

Yet, we know that this isn’t the end of the story. There is another chapter and that chapter is the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. We can again get bogged down in the questions of why? Why did he have to die? Why did Jesus have to die in the manner that he did? Why didn’t God intervene? Couldn’t anyone have saved Our Lord – many questions?

As Catholics we walk the Stations of the Cross during the Lenten season we identify with the suffering of Jesus and in this we mourn. His journey is a sad one, broken, battered carrying a cross to his death – but his entire life story isn’t the cross. His life story is one of life, love and acts of kindness that marked his life. His life story is one that didn’t end in death on the Cross, but rather in new life that was promised to us in Baptism. Today it is the life story of General Glenn Otis that we remember; it is his new life in Christ that he is now experiencing that we must remember and rejoice in.

General Otis knew the Beatitudes and he lived the Beatitudes. He instinctively understood the Beatitudes as a formula for living and a formula for life and happiness. The Beatitudes that we heard from Matthew’s Gospel this morning are often referred to as the "Attitudes of Life". They go beyond the Ten Commandments in a way that doesn’t just keep us from sinning against God and neighbor; but rather compel us to love one another in a Godly way. Who doesn’t recognize General Otis in these instructions?

 
 

Glenn K. Otis was born in Plattsburgh, New York. Would graduate from Saint John’s Academy.

Enlisted in the Army for 2 years – here he served in the Army of Occupation in South Korea

He returned home would be selected to attend West Point

He would go on to receive a Master’s from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Mathematics and then another Master’s degree in Military Art and Science from the Command and General Staff College.

You know they always say that behind every successful man there is a successful woman and such was the case with General Otis. He would come to know the love of his life Barbara Julia Davies also from Plattsburgh, New York. Barbara, at least at first, was first drawn to Glenn’s mother whom she loved and adored – she would also come to love her son Glenn and marry him on June 6, 1953. They were married almost 60 years.

60 years of beautiful, sacrificial, unconditional love years of marriage – the military life is not easy – I wouldn’t know, but perhaps all the more challenging when you are married to an officer who has immense obligations and responsibilities that required wife and family to move and move often.

Barbara and Glenn would have three beautiful children: Caren, Nancy and Peter. Later they would enjoy 4 grandchildren: Logan, Donovan, Tyler and Emily.

His active duty would take him to Fort Benning, Georgia, Fort Carson, Colorado, Nuremburg, Germany, Fort Hood, Texas, Cornwall, New York, Leavenworth, Kansas, Fort Knox, Kentucky where he become the Commander of the Armor School, Fort Myer, Virginia and Fort Monroe, Virginia as the TRADOC Commander

There was no possible way that I could trace the exact order of General Otis’s career – it was too extensive and vast.

He had 3 tours of Germany, He was a graduate of the Carlisle War College in 1970

During the Vietnam War, he played a decisive role in the Tet Offensive as Commander of the 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry, 25th Infantry Division.

While defending Tan Son Nhut Air Base, his unit was faced with an enemy battalion of 600 men, his squadron killed 300 and took 24 prisoners. He received from his tour in Vietnam the Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star, and Purple Heart with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Legion of Merit, and 8 Air Medals. The Squadron he commanded received the Presidential Unit Citation.

He spent 5 years in Heidelberg, Germany as the Commander of the United States Army Europe where he had oversight over 250,000 troops and 250,000 civilians.

He was on the design team that engineered the XM1 Abrams Tank

He would retire in 1988 after pouring himself out in total dedication and service to our country as a soldier for 42 years. He retired a 4 star General.

 
 

When I think of General Otis this morning I cannot help but to think of how he contributed to the long line of men and women that serve in uniform today. He did his part to care for our soldiers when we were a nation at war. His heart beat as one with his troops – when they were on the field – he was on the field. When there was a fatality – it might have well been someone who died in his own family. Duty, Honor, Country were themes that were simply a part of his DNA.

General Otis came from that generation that never asked what their country could do for them, but always and with their lives asked what they could do for America.

He knew that the real strength of troops, platoons, battalions, or a country comes from a sense of shared history, values, customs, hopes and dreams all of which unifies a people making them stronger.

When I asked Barbara, Caren and Nancy how to describe the General’s personality they said he was independent, self-made, self-sacrificing, easy to live with, great sense of humor – especially when the joking was at his expense, humble, thought of others before self, fun, loved a good laugh.

Unfortunately, he was a frustrated golfer.

As you can imagine he was a great athlete – in younger days he was a great swimmer and a lifeguard in high school.

Loved watching sports. When the kids were younger he would take them fishing on Lake Champlain. He loved his wife and he loved his children.

To know General Otis was to know a man of incredible, outstanding character, integrity, leadership. I mean the kind of leadership that brings out the very best in you. He brought out the best in you because he led by example.

He was honorable, a man of service – an individual that only comes around once in many years. A man who knew his God and was a faithful Roman Catholic – a man of faith. A man who practiced his faith.

Every two years he attended his Vietnam unit’s reunion – it was important for his men to see him. General Otis had the ability to instill courage, when courage was in short supply, to instill faith, when faith seemed fleeting and he could create hope when there was an overwhelming sense of despair.

Those who served under the command of this great man, soldier and leader loved him, respected him and will miss him.

In the end complications from an aneurysm would claim his life – a life poured out in love and service. You gave to us a wonderful example and will forever be an inspiration.

He was and always will be a soldier’s soldier.

Our hearts are heavy with the feeling of a profound sense of loss right now, for someone we knew and loved is no longer here in the flesh. Glenn in his own way had been preparing for this moment in his life. Though we were not ready to say good bye to him, we have to believe that he was ready for this next chapter in his life. He had accomplished his mission in life. Our faith must now console us in knowing that he has been welcomed by the Lord himself and taken to a place that has been prepared for him. Our faith tells us that life does not end with death, but rather we are changed, reunited with the source of all life through the redemptive grace of Christ’s own death and resurrection. And one day we shall be reunited with Glenn again – his life must be an inspiration to us all. To love, share and give without counting the cost and to be ever faithful to the one who died so that we might be set free.

What the Beatitudes give to us in this life are very beautiful and precious – all those things which make life worthwhile, things such as peace, goodness, joy, love, compassion, mercy, gentleness, integrity, freedom of spirit. But they are only a foretaste of the good things to come.

A person who lives according to the Beatitudes offers us a glimpse of what is to come in the kingdom of heaven. Eternal life will merely be the full blossoming of a plant that is green with life and health. Glenn lived the Beatitudes. The joy that he possessed in loving so many in this life was a foreshadowing of the joy that he now enjoys in being in the presence of our Creator.

General Glenn K. Otis, know that we will never forget you. Thank you for your service in loving God, family country and neighbor. Rest in peace. Rest in peace.

   
Other Comments:

Distinguished Service Cross Citation

  • Otis, Glenn K. Lieutenant Colonel (Armor), U.S. Army
  • Headquarters Troop, 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division
  • Date of Action: January 31, 1968
  • General Orders No. 2546 (May 28, 1968) Home Town: Vicksburg, Michigan
Citation:

The Distinguished Service Cross is presented to Glenn K. Otis, Lieutenant Colonel (Armor), U. S. Army, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations involving confict with an armed hostile force in the Republic of Vietnam, while serving with Headquarters Troop, 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry, 25th Infantry Division.

Lieutenant Colonel Otis distinguished himself by exceptionally valorous actions on 31 January 1968 as commanding officer of a cavalry squadron defending against the communist Lunar New Year offensive at Ton Son Nhut Air Base.  Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army forces launced a massive attack on the base and penatrated the defensive wire.  Lt. Colonel Otis responded to a call for assistance and immediately led his squadron to reinforce the beleaguered friendly elements.  Braving devestating rocket, machinegun and mortar fire, he repeatedly ordered low passes over the enemy positions to asses the rapidly changing situation and skillfully coordinate his unit's defenses.  His aircraft was forced down on three occasions by the intense enemy fusillage, but he refused to leave the battle area and quickly secured another helicopter each time.  The battle grew in intensity, as he fearlessly landed amid a curtain of fire to coordinate with his ground commanders and encourage his men to continue their staunch defenses.  His skillful and agressive leadership inspired his men to repel the attack and force the determined insurgents to withdraw.  Informed that an estimated Viet Cong battalion, poised outside the perimeter, was threatening the air base, he quickly directed his unit in a search and clear operation. Repeadedly exposing himself to savage enemy fire, he led his men in a fierce attack that totally destroyed the enemy forces.  His fearless leadership in the heat of battle was instrumental in preventing the vital military installation from falling into enemy hands.

Lieutenant Colonel Otis' extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty were in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the United Staes Army.

Other Awards General Otis recieved:  Castle Memorial Award West Point 1995 Ft. Leavenworth, KS Hall of Fame, Order of St. George Gold Medal 1990, 2004 Distinguished Graduate West Point Award, 2011 Distinguished Leadership Award Command & General Staff College.

   
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   1967-1968, 1204, 25th Infantry Division (Tropic Lightning)

Lieutenant Colonel
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25th Infantry Division (Tropic Lightning) Unit Page
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Vietnam, South (Vietnam)
 
 
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 25th Infantry Division (Tropic Lightning) Details

25th Infantry Division (Tropic Lightning)
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Infantry Divisions
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Last Updated: Nov 10, 2010
   
   
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25th Infantry Division (Tropic Lightning)

Drake, Earle Avon, CPT, (1956-1967) AR 1204 Captain
Penn, Ronald W., CPT, (1965-1967) AR 1204 Captain
Westbrook, James Barrington, CPT, (1964-1968) AR 1204 Captain
Ayres, Charles Haskell, 1LT, (1968-1969) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Gaiser, Lewis Bernard, 1LT, (1965-1967) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Johnson, Charles Leo, 1LT, (1966-1967) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Moore, John, MAJ, (1966-1986) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Parnelle, Samuel W., 1LT, (1967-1968) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Rogers, George Patrick, 1LT, (1963-1967) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Sharp, Thomas Boyd, 1LT, (1964-1967) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Smith, Joseph John, 1LT, (1957-1969) AR 1204 First Lieutenant
Young, David Reese, 2LT, (1967-1968) AR 1204 Second Lieutenant
Webb, Jr., George, COL, (1943-1976) AR 1210 Lieutenant Colonel
Stenehjem, George, COL, (1949-1980) AR 1210 Major
Hocker, William Eddie, CPT, (1963-1967) AR 1203 Captain
Ashburn, Jerry Allen, 1LT, (1968-1969) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
Donovan, Robert Martin, 1LT, (1964-1968) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
Dubbs, Raymond Arthur, 1LT, (1967-1968) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
Kitts, Charles, COL, (1966-1996) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
McKibbin, Hugh Robert, 1LT, (1966-1968) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
Michels, Michael Ronald, 1LT, (1967-1969) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
Russin, Donald John, 1LT, (1966-1968) AR 1203 First Lieutenant
Appler, Donald, COL, (1961-1984) AR 1620 Second Lieutenant
Anderson, Alister, COL, (1956-1977) CH 5310 [Other Service Rank]
Mearns, Filmore K, LTG, (1935-1973) USA 0002 Major General
Preer, Carleton Jr., BG, (1939-1970) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Blade, Gene, COL, (1954-1994) IN 11A Colonel
Conboy, John, LTC, (1943-1968) FA 1193 Lieutenant Colonel
Garner, Harold, LTC, (1954-1974) IN 1542 Lieutenant Colonel
Martin, Louis, LTC, (1966-1988) SC 0210 Lieutenant Colonel
Meyer, Jules Raymond, LTC, (1943-1970) IN 1542 Lieutenant Colonel
Stevens, Robert, LTC, (1961-1990) SF 18A Lieutenant Colonel
Troy, Guy, COL, (1942-1976) MI 9301 Lieutenant Colonel
Crawford, Larry, MAJ, (1968-1982) IN 11A Major
Donnal, John Andrew, LTC, (1953-1967) EN 1331 Major
Lange, Karl Ferdinand, LTC, (1952-1969) IN 1542 Major
Neiman, Randy, MAJ, (1968-1982) IN 1560 Major
Alvarado, Teofilo, CPT, (1962-1968) IN 1542 Captain
Artz, Jon, CPT, (1960-1980) IN 1542 Captain
Behne, Edward Lee, MAJ, (1959-1979) AV 1981 Captain
Bujalski, David Allan, CPT, (1964-1967) MI 9301 Captain
Burkholder, Boyd, MAJ, (1962-1982) IN 1542 Captain
Casp, Michael Allen, CPT, (1962-1967) FA 1193 Captain
Childers, Stephen Andrew, CPT, (1963-1967) IN 1542 Captain
Coleman, George, CPT, (1963-1968) SC 1010 Captain
Flowers, James, LTC, (1964-1984) AG 2110 Captain
Houston, William, CPT, (1964-1969) MI 9307 Captain
Just, Donald, CPT CH 5310 Captain
Landis, Phil, CPT, (1965-1969) IN 1542 Captain
Marcum, Leonard Gerald, CPT, (1961-1967) IN 1542 Captain
Mayer, John, CPT, (1966-1970) MS 3506 Captain
McClellen, Robert, LTC, (1963-1986) IN 1542 Captain
Miller, Frederick, CPT, (1965-1967) IN 11A Captain
Mitchell, David George, CPT, (1962-1968) QM 4010 Captain
Mullineaux, Barry Thomas, CPT, (1966-1970) IN 71542 Captain
Stevens, Robert, LTC, (1965-1990) FA 1199 Captain
Winter, Carl J., CPT, (1964-1968) IN 1542 Captain
Adams, James Clarence, 1LT, (1966-1968) IN 1542 First Lieutenant
Artman, James Boyd, 1LT, (1967-1968) IN 1542 First Lieutenant

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