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Contact Info
Home Town Tuskegee, Alabama
Last Address Unnknown
Date of Passing Jun 04, 1980
Location of Interment Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Wall/Plot Coordinates Plot: Section 3, Site 3886-B-1
Born at Tuskagee, Alabama, November 14, 1890, he was a student at Alabama Ply Institute in 1911 and graduated from West Point in 1915. He was commissioned a Second Liutenant, Infantry, June 1915, and advanced through the grades to Major General in 1943.
He served in the Mexican Border Campaign, 1916-17, with the American Expeditionary Forces in France in World War I, 1918-19, and in Asia in World War II as Chief of Staff of China, Burma and India Theater of Operations. He received the Distinguished Service Medal for his long service to the nation.
He died in 1980 and was buried in Section 3 of Arlington National Cemetery. His wife, Charlotte Frances Jadwin Hearn (1894-1979), who he married on December 17, 1917, is buried with him.
Mexican Service Campaign (1911-1919)/Pancho Villa Expedition (1916-1917)
From Month/Year
March / 1916
To Month/Year
February / 1917
Description The Pancho Villa Expedition—now known officially in the United States as the Mexican Expedition but originally referred to as the "Punitive Expedition, U.S. Army"—was a military operation conducted by the United States Army against the paramilitary forces of Mexican revolutionary Francisco "Pancho" Villa from March 14, 1916, to February 7, 1917, during the Mexican Revolution 1910–1920.
The expedition was launched in retaliation for Villa's attack on the town of Columbus, New Mexico, and was the most remembered event of the Border War. The declared objective of the expedition by the Wilson administration was the capture of Villa. Despite successfully locating and defeating the main body of Villa's command, responsible for the raid on Columbus, U.S. forces were unable to prevent Villa's escape and so the main objective of the U.S. incursion was not achieved.
The active search for Villa ended after a month in the field when troops sent by Venustiano Carranza, the head of the Constitutionalist faction of the revolution and now the head of the Mexican government, resisted the U.S. incursion. The Constitutionalist forces used arms at the town of Parral to resist passage of a U.S. Army column. The U.S. mission was changed to prevent further attacks on it by Mexican troops and to plan for war in the eventuality it broke out. When war was averted diplomatically, the expedition remained in Mexico until February 1917 to encourage Carranza's government to pursue Villa and prevent further raids across the border.