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Contact Info
Home Town Norfolk
Last Address Moraga, CA
Date of Passing Jul 06, 2006
Location of Interment Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Major General Prugh was born in Norfolk, Virginia, on 1 June 1920. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1941, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science. Upon graduation, he began the study of law at Boalt Hall, University of California at Berkeley.
In 1939, General Prugh enlisted in the 250th Coast Artillery Regiment, California National Guard, and in 1940 was discharged to enter the ROTC program at the University of California. He was commissioned a second lieutenant in March, 1942, and entered active duty four months later after having completed one semester of law school.
His initial assignment was with the 19th Coast Guard Artillery Regiment, stationed at Fort Rosencrans, San Diego. In 1944 he joined the 276th Coast Guard Artillery Battalion as battery commander in New Guinea and served there and in the Philippines.
He returned to the United States in February 1945, was separated from active duty in May of that year, and resumed the study of law at Hastings College of Law, University of California, in San Francisco. While still a student he accepted a Regular Army commission in November 1947 and received his Juris Doctor degree in May 1948.
Upon his return to active duty, he was assigned to the Military Affairs Division, 6th Army, Presidio of San Francisco. In 1949, he was transferred to the Office of The Judge Advocate General (OTJAG), Headquarters, Department of the Army, where he served in the Military Litigation-Claims Division. In 1950, he was assigned to the Wetzlar Military Post near Frankfurt, Germany, where he served as a trial counsel.
In 1951 he was reassigned to the Rhine Military Post, Western Area Command, in Kaiserslautern, Germany. He returned to OTJAG in 1953, serving as a member of the Board of Review (later renamed the Army Court of Military Review and then the Army Court of Criminal Appeals), and then in the Opinions Branch, Military Justice Division.
Following attendance at Command and General Staff College, MG Prugh served as the Deputy Staff Judge Advocate, 8th United States Army, Korea. In 1958 he began a three year tour as Deputy Staff Judge Advocate and Assistant Executive for Reserve Affairs, 6th Army, Presidio of San Francisco, and then attended the U.S. Army War College, graduating in 1962. MG Prugh then returned to OTJAG, serving as the Chief of OTJAG's Career Management Division, and then as Executive to The Judge Advocate General.
In 1964 General Prugh began a two-year tour as Staff Judge Advocate, United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. In 1966 he was assigned as Legal Advisor, U.S. European Command, in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France, and later Stuttgart, Germany. In 1969 he became the Judge Advocate, U.S. Army Europe and Seventh Army, in Heidelberg, Germany, and was promoted to Brigadier General in November of that year. General Prugh became The Judge Advocate General of the Army on 1 July 1971. Upon his retirement in 1975, General Prugh joined the faculty of his alma mater, Hastings College of Law, where he taught until 1982.
General Prugh is survived by his wife, Bunty; two daughters, Lieutenant Colonel Patt Prugh, U.S. Army Judge Advocate General's Corps, and Stephanie Beach; five grandchildren, Joseph Beach, David Beach, Kirstin Chiasson, Meghan Walsh, and Kathleen Walsh; and three great grandchildren, Katherine Beach, Elizabeth Chiasson, and Andrew Chiasson.
Other Comments:
Retired Army Major General George S. Prugh Jr., a Bay Area resident who was credited with helping to save the lives of American prisoners of war in Vietnam, died July 6, 2006, at the age of 86.
Major General Prugh, in his role as an Army lawyer, persuaded the South Vietnamese ambassador to grant POW status to Viet Cong and North Vietnamese soldiers during the Vietnam War. The U.S.-backed designation gave the enemy combatants international protections and set humane standards for their treatment under the Geneva Conventions.
"Prugh realized that if the South Vietnamese continued to treat the Viet Cong as criminals and dealt with them in their own way that there was no way the captured Americans would survive,'' said retired Col. Fred Borch, a historian with the U.S. Army's Judge Advocate General's Corps, the legal arm of the service.
Another time, Major General Prugh, who from 1971 to 1975 served as Judge Advocate General -- the top Army lawyer -- stood up to President Richard Nixon. The case involved the 1968 My Lai Massacre in which U.S. soldiers, under the command of Lieutenant William Calley, killed hundreds of apparently unarmed civilians in a South Vietnamese village. In a military trial, Calley was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
Nixon, under political pressure, wanted to decide Calley's appeal himself, but Major General Prugh held firm that the president didn't have the authority to make that decision, and the case remained within the judiciary.
Major General Prugh began his military career during World War II and served during the Korean and Vietnam wars. Trained at UC's Boalt Hall School of Law in Berkeley and Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, his studies were interrupted by the outbreak of World War II. He served as battery commander in the Coast Guard in New Guinea and the Philippines.
He returned to the Bay Area to resume his law studies in 1945. A year before he received his law degree, he accepted an Army commission. His first assignment was to the Army's Military Affairs Division in San Francisco's Presidio, not far from where he spent part of his boyhood years playing baseball on Marina district sandlots with Joe and Dom DiMaggio.
During his military career, he had stints in Asia, in Europe and at the Pentagon. At one point, he was legal adviser to General William Westmoreland, who commanded U.S. troops during the Vietnam War. One of his chief interests was to professionalize the Army's legal corps and to assure that soldiers accused of crimes and dereliction of duty had adequate representation, Borch said. Upon retirement from the Army in 1975, he taught law at Hastings until 1982.
Throughout his life, he was a student of history and carried on written correspondences with others over points of law, a passion one of his daughters described as Jeffersonian. He even penned a musical about the life of Swiss humanitarian Jean-Henri Dunant, the first recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize who founded an organization later to be known as the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Major General Prugh was born in Norwalk, Virginia, on June 1, 1920. He died in Moraga from complications related to Parkinson's
Description The plan of the Pacific subseries was determined by the geography, strategy, and the military organization of a theater largely oceanic. Two independent, coordinate commands, one in the Southwest Pacific under General of the Army Douglas MacArthur and the other in the Central, South, and North Pacific (Pacific Ocean Areas) under Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, were created early in the war. Except in the South and Southwest Pacific, each conducted its own operations with its own ground, air, and naval forces in widely separated areas. These operations required at first only a relatively small number of troops whose efforts often yielded strategic gains which cannot be measured by the size of the forces involved. Indeed, the nature of the objectivesùsmall islands, coral atolls, and jungle-bound harbors and airstrips, made the employment of large ground forces impossible and highlighted the importance of air and naval operations. Thus, until 1945, the war in the Pacific progressed by a double series of amphibious operations each of which fitted into a strategic pattern developed in Washington.
21 Named Campaigns were recognized in the Asiatic Pacific Theater with Battle Streamers and Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medals.