General Omar N. Bradley - El Paso, Texas

General Omar N. Bradley - El Paso, Texas

From 1977 until his death in 1981 Omar N. Bradley, five-star general of the United States Army, lived and worked at Fort Bliss. Omar Nelson Bradley was born literally in a log cabin near Clark, Missouri, on 12 February 1893, the only surviving child of schoolteacher John Smith Bradley and Sarah Elizabeth Bradley, nee Hubbard. The environment of Bradley's youth in rural Missouri was impoverished, but he received a good secondary education, becoming a star player on the Moberly High School baseball team. To supplement the family income, he also became a crack shot. He went to work for the Wabash Railroad after high school graduation in order to earn enough money to enter the University of Missouri. Bradley's plans changed, though, when his Sunday School superintendent recommended that he apply for an appointment to West Point. After placing first in the competitive exams for his district that were held at Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis, he received an appointment from Congressman William M. Rucker to enter the Military Academy in the fall of 1911. Bradley graduated from West Point on 12 June 1915 as a second lieutenant of Infantry. Three months later he joined the 14th Infantry Regiment's third battalion at Fort George Wright, near Spokane, Washington, where he was exposed to the old Regular Army life that was shortly to disappear forever. Under the tutorship of Edwin Forrest Harding, another second lieutenant who was six years his senior, Bradley began a lifelong habit of studying his profession. Harding was a natural schoolmaster who led a small group of lieutenants through weekly tactical exercises that broadened into discussions of military history and current operations in Europe. Few people had a greater influence on Bradley than Harding, who convinced him that an officer had to begin studying at the very start of his career and continue to study regularly if he hoped to master his profession. International crises soon put Lieutenant Bradley's developing military skills to their first, rather modest test. When the civil war in Mexico spilled over the border into the United States, American regulars under the command of Brigadier General John J. Pershing marched into Mexico in pursuit of the rebel commander, Pancho Villa. Because of the possibility of actual war with Mexico, the War Department called up the Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico National Guard and ordered more Regular Army units to the border. Among them was the 14th Infantry, which went into camp at Douglas, Arizona. Although Bradley saw no action on the Mexican border, he learned a good deal about handling troops in field conditions, conducting long motor marches, and maintaining discipline, morale, and training in unfavorable circumstances. In the midst of the crisis, Congress passed the National Defense Act of 1916, doubling the authorized size of the Regular Army and increasing the number of infantry regiments to sixty-five. As a consequence of the expansion, Bradley found himself promoted to first lieutenant seventeen months after graduating from West Point. The crisis with Mexico passed, but Bradley and his regiment remained in the Southwest until after the United States declared war on the German Empire. At the end of World War I, Omar Bradley considered himself a professional failure because he had spent the war in the United States while his contemporaries had distinguished themselves on the battlefields of France. His gloomy self-assessment was premature. Thirty-five years later he held the highest rank in the United States Army, had been its Chief of Staff, and had served two terms as the first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He had also more than made up for his lack of combat duty, for during World War II he successively commanded a division, a corps, an army, and finally a group of armies. His last command, the 12th U.S. Army Group, was the largest body of American soldiers ever to serve under one field commander; at its peak it consisted of four field armies. Except for his original division assignments, Bradley won his wartime advancement on the battlefield, commanding American soldiers in North Africa, Sicily, across the Normandy beaches, and into Germany itself. His understated personal style of command left newsmen with little to write about, especially when they compared him to the more flamboyant among the Allied commanders, but his reputation as a fighter was secure among his peers and particularly with General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander, who considered him indispensable. http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/omarnels.htm

Area: Northeast / Ft. Bliss

Source: Library of Congress

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Retirement Ceremony at Old Ironsides

My father retired after serving 21 years in the army.

Texas (El Paso County) Fort Bliss Quadrangle

This map represents the Fort Bliss Quadrangle in El Paso County, ...

West Texas Young Marines lay wreaths at Ft. Bliss Cemetery

West Texas Young Marines honored Veterans by laying wreaths at ...

Master Plan Fort Bliss Texas: General Site Plan and Building Map

General site plan of Fort Bliss Texas indicating permanent, ...

El Paso, Texas Ft. Bliss and Vicinity

Texas photo map of El Paso, Texas, Ft. Bliss and vicinity. Area ...

El Paso YOUNG ghostbusters

El Paso YOUNG ghostbusters

Grandpa Henderson with Frances

Grandpa Bill Henderson with Frances Grundy in field. Circa 1925.

Grandma with Frances

Grandma Lucinda Godfrey Henderson with Frances Grundy in field. ...

Grandma with Frances

Lucinda Godfrey Henderson holding Frances Grundy. Circa 1925.

EPCC First Day Classes Begin

While community leaders continued to seek additional funding, ...

EPCC Admissions Line in 1972

First EPCC students in line to register for classes at the first ...

EPCC Enrolls 901 Students for First Year

Startup funding for the college was acquired when Senator Joe ...

One of My Homes

This is a sign posted outside of the front gate of Fort Bliss ...

My Grandparents, John Joseph Longo and Wilma Myra Scully Longo

This photo shows Wilma and John Joseph Longo Sr. are somewhere ...

John J. Longo Sr.

My parental Grandfather, John J. Longo , Dec 25,1953. My ...

Railway Warehouse 1896

Visible from the 54 Patriot Freeway. Built in 1896 on Ft. Bliss, ...

Elvira V. Escajeda, burial El Paso, TX 2022

Family of Elvira V. Escajeda at Fort Bliss National Cemetery ...

Bilalian News Article, September 24, 1976

Bilalian News Article titled "First Mosque on military base ...

home.search_collection