Corlett, Charles, MG

Deceased
 
 Photo In Uniform   Service Details
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Last Rank
Major General
Last Service Branch
US
Last Primary MOS
0002-General Officer
Last MOS Group
General Officer
Primary Unit
1945-1946, XXXVI Corps
Service Years
1913 - 1946
US
Major General
Ten Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

75 kb


Home State
Nebraska
Nebraska
Year of Birth
1889
 
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Contact Info
Last Address
Burchard
Date of Passing
Oct 13, 1971
 
Location of Interment
Santa Fe National Cemetery (VA) - Santa Fe, New Mexico
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Section V, Row 0, Site 2233

 Official Badges 

1st Infantry Division Army Staff Identification Belgian Fourragere Wound Chevron (1917-1932)

Netherlands Orange Lanyard US Army Retired (Pre-2007)


 Unofficial Badges 

Signal Shoulder Cord


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
National Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  1971, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Charles H. Corlett (July 31, 1889 – October 13, 1971), nicknamed “Cowboy Pete,” was a major general in the U.S. Army who commanded troops in both the Pacific and European Theaters during World War II. He led the attack on Kiska in 1943 and commanded the 7th Infantry Division in the taking of Kwajalein in 1944. After D-Day he led the XIX Corps of the 1st Army in pursuit of the retreating German Army through France, Belgium, The Netherlands, and Germany.


Early life and career


Charles H. Corlett was born in Burchard, Nebraska, July 31, 1889, but lived most of his early life in Monte Vista, Colorado, where his father farmed and practiced law. He graduated from public high school in Monte Vista and worked on cattle ranches until he was 19, when he was appointed to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1909. As a cadet, his knowledge of horses earned him the nickname “Cowboy Pete.” He graduated from the Academy June 12, 1913, was appointed second lieutenant in the Regular Army, and was stationed in Alaska, Texas, and New Jersey with the Signal Corps.


In April 1916, he moved with the 30th Infantry to Eagle Pass, Texas, where action in the Mexican Border Campaign was anticipated but didn’t materialize. He then was assigned to Radio Company A, a horse and mule outfit, and used one of the earliest radios in the U.S. Army. His brigade was renamed Signal Corps, and he witnessed the early development of military aviation, which was then a branch of the Signal Corps.


When the United States entered World War I in 1917, Corlett worked in the early organization and expansion of the Signal Corps and was its first commanding officer and executive. As Director of Signal Corps Supplies, American Expeditionary Forces, he was injured by mustard gas while laying communication lines at the front. He crossed the Rhine with the first American troops at Coblenz. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1918 at age 29.


During the 1920s and 1930s, Corlett commanded various army detachments. He graduated from Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in 1924 and Army War College in Washington, D.C., in 1925. He was an instructor at Coast Artillery School and at Command and General Staff School. He was a member of the War Department General Staff from 1934 to 1939. He commanded regiments in Hawaii, California, Washington, and Alaska from 1939 to 1941.


World War II


North Pacific


Corlett was promoted to the rank of Major General on September 6, 1942, and placed in command of the Kiska Task Force, consisting of the 7th Division, together with amphibious forces, combat teams, special forces, mountain forces, parachute forces, winter forces, and the Canadian 13th Infantry Brigade—a total of 35,000 men. The task was to plan an attack and take Kiska back from the Japanese, who occupied the only US soil of WW II, both Kiska and Attu, two of the western-most islands in the Aleutian Chain, posing a threat to the U.S. mainland and Canada. Kiska was a Japanese seaplane and submarine base with a well-established infrastructure and an estimated force of 10,000.


Before the Kiska attack, which was to occur in August 1943, Attu was secured after several weeks of combat in extremely difficult weather. The U.S. troops on Attu were ill prepared for the cold, stormy environment of the Aleutians, but they were better prepared for the Kiska campaign with heavier clothing and training supplemented by 15–45 days of acclimatization and maneuvers in the Aleutians. Beginning in January, the United States Navy blockaded the island and bombed it almost every day. Aerial photographs of the area showed enemy vehicles as late as August 13.


The U.S. amphibious attack on Kiska began the night of August 15. The soldiers expected enemy fire, but they were greeted by only silence as they scrambled ashore in heavy, unrelenting fog. On August 16, the second half of the powerful invasion force came ashore on the northern part of Kiska, again to a deserted island. The Japanese had left under cover of night, fog, and storm. At noon on August 17, General Corlett conceded that the enemy was really gone, leaving great stores of supplies. U.S. forces suffered 25 deaths and more than 100 wounded from friendly fire. This phantom battle marked the end of Japanese occupation of American soil and its only campaign in the Western Hemisphere.


South Pacific


General Corlett was then transferred to Fort Ord, California, to organize, train, and equip the 9th Amphibian Corps, including the 7th Infantry Division and other special troops who later distinguished themselves in many battles in the South Pacific. He received orders to take command of the 7th Infantry Division and report to Admiral Chester Nimitz at Pearl Harbor, where Nimitz informed him that he was to be in command of the Army forces that would capture Kwajalein Island on the southern part of Kwajalein Atoll, a major Japanese naval-air base and part of the Marshall Islands, 2,350 miles southwest of Honolulu. Kwajalein, the world’s largest atoll, was defended by 5,000 troops, who were ordered not to surrender.


After extensive amphibious training on Maui for 5 months and many days of aerial bombardment of the island, the 7th Division attacked and fought in Operation Flintlock on January 31–February 7, 1944, a campaign resulting in the capture of 27 islets, 12 of which were rigorously defended to the death by the enemy.


Kwajalein has been called by some military observers the most nearly perfect of all U.S. amphibious operations because of the flawless execution of a well-thought-out plan. Casualty results attest to this evaluation and were attributed to careful planning and preparation by the 7th Division: 177 U.S. soldiers killed, 4,398 Japanese killed, and 174 enemy soldiers taken prisoner.


Europe


In April 1944, Corlett was ordered to the European Theater of Operations. In London he reported to General Dwight Eisenhower and was informed that he was to become commander of the XIX Corps of the 1st Army under General Omar Bradley. The Corps, initially consisting of the 2nd and 3rd Armored Divisions and the 29th and 30th Infantry Divisions, would battle across France, Belgium, The Netherlands, and Germany. He immediately began training the Corps in Warminster, England, for the anticipated amphibious assault in Normandy.


On the fourth day after D-Day (June 10), the XIX Corps landed at Omaha Beach, near Colleville-su-Mer. In the next 4 months they took St. Lo after difficult hedge-row fighting and spearheaded the Operation COBRA breakthrough to Mortain and the Falaise Pocket, where they destroyed 100 German tanks and captured 3 German divisions. While dealing with thousands of prisoners, the Corps occupied the towns of Evreux and Elbeuf and took Tessy-sur-Vire on August 1. They captured Percy on August 5. After stopping the last German offensive in Normandy and battling nearly 100,000 troops in the Argentan-Falaise Pocket, they crossed the Seine on August 28.


Ordered to drive northwest as quickly as possible, the XIX Corps faced the bulk of the German Army, which was retreating as fast as it could to prevent any further encirclement, but capable of counter-attacking and defending in force.


Building bridges and shooting down 42 German planes, the XIX Corps reached Belgium in 2 days, crossing the Somme on September 2, the first allied soldiers to enter Belgium and the Netherlands. They took Tournai on September 2, followed by Fort Eben-Emael, Maastricht, and Sittard. On September 14, the Corps crossed the Meuse River and entered Germany, establishing a bridgehead across the Albert Canal. The Corps was struggling to close an escape route known as the Aachen Gap when, because of illness, Corlett was relieved of command of the Corps on October 15, 1944, and assigned the 12th Army Group in France. From D-Day to October 15, the XIX Corps captured 29,867 prisoners, shot down 55 enemy airplanes, built 160 bridges, and crossed the Vire, Seine, Somme, Meuse, and Maas Rivers. During this same period, soldiers of the Corps were awarded 26 Distinguished Service Crosses, 737 Silver Stars, and 3,390 Bronze Stars.


In November 1944, Corlett reported to Admiral Nimitz in Honolulu and took command of the XXXVI Corps in the planning of the northern attack on the Japanese mainland from the Kurile Islands. In connection with that order and at the time of V-J Day, he was writing a training course in amphibious operations for divisions returning from Europe.


Post–World War II


After World War II, Corlett was appointed by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture to organize and initiate the Commission for Eradication of Hoof and mouth disease in Mexico, requiring relocation to Mexico City until mid-1947. He returned to his sheep and cattle ranch in New Mexico, where the governor appointed him chairman of the New Mexico State Bureau of Revenue and later to the State Investment Council. He was also on the board of the School of American Research. He died in Espanola, New Mexico, on October 13, 1971, at the age of 82 years.


Commands:



  • Company B, 30th Infantry, Fort St. Michael, Alaska

  • Company A and Company I, Plattsburg Business Men’s Training Camp

  • Radio Company A, 30th Infantry, Eagle Pass, Texas

  • Signal Corps, Fort Monmouth, New Jersey

  • Signal Corps Supplies, American Expeditionary Forces, France

  • 48th Infantry, Fort Harvey J. Jones, Arizona

  • 3rd Battalion, 9th Infantry, San Antonio, Texas

  • Civilian Conservation Corps, Eugene, Oregon

  • 30th Infantry, Presidio, San Francisco, California

  • Special Forces, Fort Shafter and Schofield Barracks, Hawaii

  • 9th Army Corps, Fort Lewis, Washington

  • 4th Army Corps, Fort Ord, California

  • 7th Division, Fort Greely, Alaska

  • 9th Amphibian Corps, Marshall Islands, South Pacific

  • XIX Corps, European Theater, France, Belgium, The Netherlands, Germany

  • XXXVI Corps, U.S. Pacific Command


Battles, wars:



  • Mexican Border Campaign

  • World War I

  • World War II


Decorations:



  • Distinguished Service Medal (Army, 3 times)

  • Distinguished Service Medal (Navy)

  • Silver Star (Kwajalein)

  • Legion of Merit (Kiska)

  • Mexican Border Campaign Medal

  • World War I Victory Medal

  • American Defense Service Medal

  • American Theater Service Medal

  • Pacific Theater Service Medal with two battle stars

  • European Theater Service Medal with three battle stars

  • World War II Victory Medal

  • Officer of the Legion of Honor (France)

  • Croix de Guerre with Palm (France)

  • Commander of Order of Leopold with palm (Belgium)

  • Croix de Guerre with palm (Belgium)

  • Grand Order of Orange, Nassau (The Netherlands)

  • Estralia De Abdon Caldron Ecudar (Ecuador)



   
Other Comments:



Commander of the Order of Leopold II with palm (Belgium) 
Commander

Commander

   


WWII - European Theater of Operations/Normandy Campaign (1944)/Battle of St. Lo
From Month/Year
July / 1944
To Month/Year
July / 1944

Description
Battle of St Lô (7 - 19 July 1944) in the west of the landing zones was as important to the Americans as the town of Caen was to the Anglo/Canadian Forces in the east. Both towns were the main crossroad towns into Normandy through which all major road led. Without these towns and the road networks they give access to, the Allied Armies were going nowhere. The Germans recognized this and set up most of their Armoured forces around Caen where the open countryside better suited their armour protection and longer range of their guns. The forces used by the Germans for the defense of St Lô were the 3rd Parachute Division and the 352nd Infantry Division. The German Parachute divisions were the elite infantry units of the German Army, showing the importance the attached to the defense of St Lô. SS units were not used as all the SS formations were armoured and the terrain around the town did not lend itself to armoured warfare. Experts in camoflague and trained to operate in small groups or alone, the German Paratroopers used the hedgerow terrain expertly to their advantage and did everything in their power to exact a heavy price from the Americans for every meter of ground captured.

The new attack of First Army was delivered on a ten-mile front, with the main effort by the 29th Division aiming at the ridges along the St-Lô-Bayeux highway and then at St-Lô itself. On its right, the 35th Division was to exert pressure between the Vire and the Isigny-St-Lô highway; its objective was the right bank of the Vire, in the elbow made by that winding stream just northwest of St-Lô. Advance here would help the 30th Division on the other side of the Vire, by covering its flank along the river. On the 29th Division's left, an assault against Hill 192 would be made by the 2d Division of V Corps. Capture of this dominating observation point would be of prime importance in the attack on St-Lô.
   
My Participation in This Battle or Operation
From Month/Year
July / 1944
To Month/Year
July / 1944
 
Last Updated:
Mar 16, 2020
   
Personal Memories
   
My Photos From This Battle or Operation
No Available Photos

  188 Also There at This Battle:
  • Austin, John, S/SGT, (1943-1945)
  • Cadamatre, Brian
  • ELLIS, HARRY
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