George Patton was born in 1885 in California. Like Omar Bradley, he was educated at the American Military Academy. He graduated from here in 1909. In 1916, he served as an aide-de-camp to General Pershing in his expedition against the Mexican Pancho Villa who had crossed the American/Mexican border and sacked the town of Columbus in New Mexico. Many Americans were not aware that President Woodrow Wilson had even sanctioned this campaign and Patton was to be linked with such 'daring-do' throughout his military career.
By the end of the First World War , Patton had established a tank training school and it was in armoured warfare that Patton was to make his name. One of the training officers at this camp was a young Dwight Eisenhower.
Patton commanded American forces in Morocco, Tunisia and Sicily between 1942 and 1943 and in early 1944, he was given command of the American Third Army. Patton played a key role in the use of armour after the successful landings at D-Day. Armoured warfare speeded up the Allies advance across western Europe and Patton always seemed to be ahead of any other Allied armoured group. His tactics were uncompromising but undoubtedly successful. Montgomery was known to have commented that Eisenhower seemed to favour requests for equipment by Patton as opposed to British generals in the thrust across Europe. But, if true, Eisenhower probably had the evidence to favour Patton, especially after the heroic failure at Arnhem.
The 3rd Army Group broke through the Germans defences at Normandy and it cleared a path across northern France and in March 1945, it crossed the River Rhine and moved into mainland Germany and from there into Austria.
After the war in Europe ended in May 1945, Patton was made military governor of Bavaria but was removed from this post when he was accused of being too soft on the Germans. Certainly, by the time the war in Europe had ended, Patton saw the might of the Russians as more of a threat than the defeated Nazis. Patton was killed, the result of a road crash, in late 1945 aged 60.

A Sherman of Patton's 3rd Army passes through the Siegfried Line
A forceful and outspoken man, Patton made as many enemies as friends. Popular among his troops for his uncompromising leadership, he could also be harsh and only expected results from the men under his command.
Creighton Abrams graduated from West Point in 1936 and served with the 1st Cavalry Division from 1936 to 1940, being promoted to first lieutenant in 1939 and temporary captain in 1940.
He became an armored officer early in the development of that branch and served as a tank company commander in the 1st Armored Division in 1940.
During World War II, he served with the 4th Armored Division, initially as regimental adjutant (June 1941-June 1942) then as a battalion commander (July 1942-March 1943), and regiment executive officer (March 1943-September 1943) with the 37th Armored Regiment. A reorganization of the division created a new battalion, the 37th Tank Battalion, which he commanded through March 1945 when he was promoted to command Combat Command B of the division. During this time he was promoted to the temporary ranks of major (March 1943) and lieutenant colonel (September 1943).
During much of this time his unit was at the spearhead of the 4th Armored Division and the Third Army, and he was consequently well known as an aggressive armor commander. By using his qualities as a leader and by consistently exploiting the relatively small advantages of speed and reliability of his vehicles he managed to defeat German forces who had the advantage of superior armor, superior guns and better trained troops.
Following the war he served on the Army General Staff (1945-1946), as head of the department of tactics at the Armored School, Fort Knox (1946-1948), and graduated from the Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth (1949). He was briefly promoted temporary colonel in 1945 but reverted to lieutenant colonel during WW II demobilization.
He commanded the 63rd Tank Battalion, part of the 1st Infantry Division, in Europe (1949-1951). He was again promoted to colonel and commanded the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment (1951-1952). These units were important assignments due to the Cold War concern for potential invasion of western Europe by the Soviet Union. He then attended and graduated from the US Army War College in 1953.
Due to his service in Europe and his War College tour, he joined the Korean War late in the conflict. He successively served as chief of staff of the I, X, and IX Corps in Korea (1953-1954).
Upon return from Korea he served as chief of staff of the Armor Center, Fort Knox (1954-1956). He was promoted brigadier general and appointed deputy chief of staff for reserve components at the Pentagon (1956-1959). He was assistant division commander of 3rd Armored Division (1959-60) and then commanded the division (1960-62) upon his promotion to major general.
He was then transferred to the Pentagon as deputy chief of staff for operations (1962-63), then was promoted lieutenant general and commanded V Corps in Europe (1963-1964).
He was promoted general in 1964 and appointed vice chief of staff of the Army (he was seriously considered as a candidate for chief of staff at that time). Due to concerns about the conduct of the Vietnam War, he was appointed as deputy to General William Westmoreland, head of the Military Assistance Command in Vietnam, in May 1967. He succeeded Westmoreland as commander in June 1968. His tenure of command was not marked by the public optimism of his predecessors, who were prone to press conferences and public statements.
Following the election of President Richard Nixon he implemented the Nixon Doctrine referred to as Vietnamization. Vietnamization was designed to wind down the U.S. involvement in Vietnam, and have South Vietnam responsible for executing the war.
He was appointed Chief of Staff of the United States Army in June 1972 but was not confirmed by the Senate until October 1972 due to political repercussions involving disobedience by one of his subordinate commanders. He served in this position until his death in September 1974. During this time he began the transition to the all-volunteer Army.
Abrams was known as an aggressive and successful armor commander. General George Patton said of him, "I'm supposed to be the best tank commander in the Army, but I have one peer: Abe Abrams. He's the world champion." His unit was requently the spearhead of the Third Army during WW II. Abrams was one of the leaders in the relief effort which broke up the German entrenchments surrounding Bastogne and the 101st Airborne Division during the Battle of the Bulge.
He was noted for his concern for soldiers, his emphasis on combat readiness, and his insistence on personal integrity.
The M1 Abrams main battle tank is named in his honor.
Additional Sources: en.wikipedia.org
www.euronet.nl
www.historylearningsite.co.uk
www.arlingtoncemetery.net
encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com
www.jewishsf.com
www.armorart.com
www.jodyharmon.com
www.luftwaffe39-45.historia.nom.br
www.pattonhq.com
On This Day In History
Birthdates which occurred on May 24:
0015 Julius Caesar Germanicus Roman commandant
1544 William Gilbert Essex England, physicist (researcher into magnetism)
1605 Nikon [Nikita Minin] patriarch of Russian-orthodox church
1650 John Churchill 1st duke of Marlborough, English general strategist
1738 George III king of Great-Britain (1760-1820)
1743 Jean-Paul Marat France, revolutionist
1753 Oliver Cromwell Burlington NJ, black who served with Washington
1794 William Whewell British philosopher (History of Inductive Science)
1803 Charles Bonaparte Corsican/French prince of Canino/Musignano
1810 Abraham Geiger theologian/author/leader of Reform Judaism
1811 Charles Clark Brigadier General (Confederate Army), died in 1877
1816 Emanuel Leutze US, painter (Washington Crossing the Delaware)
1816 Robert Seaman Granger (Union Army Brevet Major General, died in 1894)
1819 Victoria Alexandrine London England, Queen of Great Britain (1837-1901)
1854 Louis Mountbatten Admiral (WWI)
1866 Armando Frid Argentina, lived until July 28 1990 (124 years)
1870 Jan Christian Smuts proponent of Commonwealth & League of Nations
1891 William F Albright US old testament scholar/archaeologist
1893 W H Walter Baade German/US astronomer (Andromeda)
1895 Samuel I Newhouse US millionaire publisher (Parade, Vogue, Glamour)
1898 Kathleen Hale British children book writer/illustrator (Orlando)
1905 Mikhail Sholokhov USSR, writer (And Quiet Flows the Don, Nobel 1965)
1910 Margers Zarins composer
1918 Coleman A Young civil rights leader (Mayor-D-Detroit)
1934 Jane Byrne (Mayor-D-Chicago)
1938 Tommy Chong Edmonton, Alberta, comedian/actor (Cheech & Chong, Leo-That 70s show)
1941 Bob Dylan [Zimmerman] Duluth MN, singer/songwriter (Rainy Day Women #12 & 35)
1943 Frank Oz Muppeteer (Grover, Yoda)
1943 Gary Burghoff Bristol CT, actor (Radar-MASH)
1944 Patti LaBelle [Holt] Philadelphia PA, singer (LaBelle-Lady Marmalade)
1945 Priscilla Presley Brooklyn NY, actress (Jenna-Dallas, Naked Gun)
1951 Ronald A Parise Warren OH, PhD/astronaut (STS 35, STS 67)
1955 Rosanne Cash Memphis TN, country singer (I Wonder)
1971 Troy Barnett NFL defensive end (New England Patriots)
1982 Baby Boy Samane South Africa, son of Christina, heaviest known viable baby (22 lbs 8 oz/10.2 kg)
Deaths which occurred on May 24:
1153 David I King of Scotland, dies
1543 Nicolas Copernicus astronomer, dies in Poland
1851 Stanko Vraz [Jakob Frass] Slavic poet (Grammatica), dies at 40
1861 Elmer Ellsworth US warrior (Chicago Zouaves), shot to death at 23
1861 James T Jackson US landlord (doodde EE Ellsworth), shot dead)
1879 William Lloyd Garrison abolitionist (Liberator), dies at 73
1941 Lancelot Holland British Vice-Admiral ((WWII/Hood), dies in battle
1959 John Foster Dulles US Secretary of State (1953-59), dies at 71
1963 Elmore James blues guitarist, dies at 45 of a heart attack
1974 Duke Ellington composer/bandleader/pianist, dies of cancer at 75
1981 George Jessel US comedian/America's toastmaster general (Diary of Young Comic), dies from a heart attack at 83
1986 Stephen D Thorne Lieutenant Commander USN/astronaut, dies in a plane crash at 33
1991 Gene Clark folk-rocker (Byrds-Tambourine Man), dies at 49
1993 Milton O Thompson astronaut (Dynasoar, X-15), dies at 66
1994 Yehuda Mor-Mirkovsky Israeli kibbutz-founder, dies at 96
1995 Harold Wilson British PM (1964-70, 74-76), dies of cancer at 79
1995 Mike Pyne jazz Pianist, dies at 54
1996 Alexander Langsdorf physicist, dies at 83
1996 Jack McCarthy kiddie show host (Popeye), dies of cancer at 81
1997 Edward Mulhare actor (Ghost & Mrs Muir), dies of lung cancer at 74
GWOT Casualties
Iraq
24-May-2004 2 | US: 2 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Specialist Beau R. Beaulieu Taji (Camp Cooke nr. Baghdad) Hostile - hostile fire - mortar attack
US Private 1st Class Owen D. Witt Ad Dwar (near) Non-hostile - vehicle accident
Afghanistan
A Good Day
http://icasualties.org/oif/ Data research by Pat Kneisler
Designed and maintained by Michael White
On this day...
1086 Abbott Dauferio/Desiderius becomes Pope Victor III
1153 Malcolm IV becomes king of Scotland
1487 Imposter Lambert Simnel ceremony crowned as King Edward VI of Dublin
1626 Peter Minuit buys Manhattan from Indians for trinkets, valued at $24 (or not)
1658 Battle of Dunes (Spanish-French War) fought
1689 English Parliament guarantees freedom of religion for Protestants
1726 People's revolt due to increase in gin/brandy tax
1738 Methodist Church is established
1809 Dartmoor Prison opens to house French prisoners of war
1815 George Evans discovers Lachlan River, Australia
1818 General Andrew Jackson captures Pensacola FL
1822 At Battle of Pichincha, Bolívar secures independence of Quito from Spain
1824 Pope Leo XII proclaims a universal jubilee
1829 Pope Pius VIII issues his program for the pontificate
1830 "Mary Had A Little Lamb" is written
1830 1st passenger rail service in US (Baltimore & Elliots Mill, Maryland)
1844 Samual FB Morse taps out "What hath God wrought" (1st telegraph message)
1846 General Zachary Taylor captures Monterrey in Mexican War
1854 Anthony Burns, slave, arrested by US Deputy marshals in Boston
1854 Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, 1st Black college in US forms by Prebyts
1856 Pottawatomie Massacre took place in Kansas
1861 Alexandria VA occupied by Federal troops
1861 Major General Benjamin Butler declares slaves "contraband of war"
1862 Westminster Bridge across Thames opens
1866 Berkeley CA named (for George Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne)
1883 Brooklyn Bridge opened by President Arthur & Governor Cleveland
1884 Anti-Monopoly party & Greenback Party form People's Party in the US
1890 G. Train & S. Wall circle world in record 67 days, Tacoma-Tacoma
1899 1st auto repair shop opens (Boston)
1902 Cleveland's Bill Bradley is 1st American League-er to hit a homerun in 4 consecutive games
1902 Empire Day 1st celebrated in Britain
1915 Thomas Edison invents telescribe to record telephone conversations
1916 Conscription begins in Britain
1916 French driven out of Fort Douaumont after 500 killed or injured
1916 Last British-Indian contract workers arrive in Suriname
1916 US pilot William Thaw shoots down a German Fokker
1921 1st parliament for Northern Ireland elected
1921 British Legion is formed
1928 Record 12 future Hall of Famers take the field, as Yankees beat A's 9-7
1930 1st woman to fly from England to Australia solo, lands (Amy Johnson)
1930 Babe Ruth homers in both games of a doubleheader, giving him 9 in one week
1931 1st air-conditioned train installed-B&O Railroad
1936 Dutch bishops forbid membership of Nazi party
1940 Dutch army demobilizes
1940 Dutch Queen Wilhelmina speaks on BBC radio
1940 German tanks reach Atrecht France
1941 Bismarck sinks British battle cruiser HMS Hood, 1,416 die 3 survive
1943 Admiral Dönitz stops U-boat in Atlantic Ocean
1943 U-441 shoots Sunderland seaplane down over Gulf of Biskaje
1944 Enver Hoxha becomes head of Albania anti fascists
1944 Icelandic voters severe all ties with Denmark
1951 Racial segregation in Washington DC restaurants ruled illegal
1951 Willie Mays begins playing for the New York Giants
1953 Pope Pius XII publishes encyclical Doctor Mellifluus
1954 1st rocket attains 150 mile (241 km) altitude, White Sands NM
1954 Dr Peter Murray Marshall becomes 1st black to head an AMA unit
1954 German airline Lufthansa forms
1954 IBM announces vacuum tube "electronic" brain that could perform 10 million operations an hour!
1957 Anti American riots breakout in Taipei, Taiwan
1958 President Batista opens offensive against Fidel Castro's rebellion
1958 UP & International News Service merge into United Press International
1959 1st house with built-in bomb shelter exhibited (Pleasant Hills PA)
1959 Empire Day renamed Commonwealth Day in England
1961 27 Freedom Riders arrested in Jackson MS
1961 Explorer (12) fails to reach Earth orbit
1962 M Scott Carpenter aboard Aurora 7 launched into earth orbit
1963 1st Lockheed A-12 to crash, CIA pilot Ken Collins ejects safely
1964 Longest homerun (471') in Baltimore's Memorial Stadium (Harmon Killebrew, Minnesota Twins)
1965 Supreme Court declares federal law allowing post office to intercept communist propaganda is unconstitutional
1967 AFL grants a franchise to the Cincinnati Bengals
1968 Mick Jagger & Marianne Faithfull arrested for drug possession
1968 President De Gaulle proposes referendum & students set fire to Paris bourse
1969 Beatles' "Get Back" single goes #1 & stays #1 for 5 weeks
1974 Dean Martin Show, last airs on NBC-TV
1975 Soyuz 18B carries 2 cosmonauts to space station Salyut 4
1976 1st commercial SST flight to North America (Concorde to Washington DC)
1976 Muhammad Ali TKOs Richard Dunn in 5 for heavyweight boxing title
1977 USSR President Podgorny resigns
1979 Billy Martin issues a public apology to Reno sportswriter Ray Hagar
1980 Iran rejects a call to the World Court to release US hostages
1981 Bobby Unser wins, loses, & wins a controversial Indianapolis 500
1983 Supreme Court rules government can deny tax breaks to schools that racially discriminated against students
1984 Detroit Tigers win American League record 17th straight road game
1986 Margaret Thatcher becomes 1st British PM to visit Israel
1986 Reginald Huffstetler treds water for 985 hours
1988 John Moschitta set record for fast talking: 586 words per minute (Someone needs a life)
1988 Porntip Nakhirunkanok, 19, of Thailand, crowned 37th Miss Universe
1989 "Indiana Jones & the Last Crusade" premieres
1989 French war criminal Paul Touvier arrested in monastery in Nice
1989 New York Yankee pitcher Lee Gutterman sets record of pitching 30-2/3 innings before giving up his 1st run of the season
1993 Eritrea achieved independence from Ethiopia after 30-year civil war
1993 Kurd rebellion kills 33 soldiers & 5 citizens in Turkey
1993 The archbishop of Guadalajara, Mexico, was shot to death at Guadalajara's airport when his car was caught in a shootout between rival drug cartels.
1997 Telstar-5 Proton Launch, Successful
1997 In Afghanistan forces of the Taliban swept into Mazar-E-Sharif, the last opposition stronghold.
2000 Israeli troops pulled out unilaterally from south Lebanon, ending 18 years of occupation.
2000 The state of Maryland dismissed its wiretapping case against Linda Tripp after a judge disallowed most of Monica Lewinsky's testimony.
2000 Isiah Thomas, Bob McAdoo and Tennessee womens coach Pat Summitt were elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame.
2001 Democrats gained control of the U.S. Senate for the first time since 1994 when Vermont Sen.(Jumpin) James Jeffords abandoned the Republican Party and declared himself an independent.
2001 Erik Weihenmayer (32) of Golden, Colorado, became the 1st blind person to reach the top of Mt. Everest. Sherman Bull of New Canaan, Conn., became the oldest person to reach the peak. 94 climbers reached the summit over 4 days
2003 Chen Yongfeng (20), was arrested in Wenzhou China on charges of killing and dismembering 10 people
2003 Coalition forces captured two more wanted Iraqis: Sayf al-Din al-Mashadani, No. 46 on the list and Sad Abd al-Majid al-Faysal, No. 55.
Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"
ancient Rome : Quando Rex Comitiavit; a. d. ix Kal. Junias
Bahamas, Belize, Gibraltar, Lesotho, Turk & Caicos : Commonwealth Day
Bulgaria : Education Day/Enlightenment & Culture Day
Ecuador : Battle of Pichincha (1822)
England : Victoria Day/Empire Day (1819)
France : La Fete des Saintes Maries
National Escargot Day
Alchemy Day
Kirtland Warbler Day.
National Strawberry Month
Religious Observances
Roman Catholic : Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, help of Christians
Orthodox : Feast of SS Cyril & Methodius, evangelizers
Lutheran : Commemoration of Copernicus, teacher
Lutheran : Commemoration of Euler, teacher
Anglican : Commemoration of Jackson Kemper, 1st missionary bishop in US
Anglican : Commemoration of 1st Book of Common Prayer
Feast of SS. Donatian and Rogatian, martyrs.
Religious History
1738 English founder of Methodism John Wesley underwent his famous religious conversion at Aldersgate Chapel in London. Later, in his journal, Wesley reflected under this date: 'I felt my heart strangely warmed....'
1752 According to a note inscribed in his Bible, Robert Robinson, 16, was "born again" ("renatus") under the preaching of English revivalist George Whitefield. Robinson later authored the hymn, "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing."
1892 Birth of Earl B. Marlatt, American religious educator and hymnologist. In 1926 Marlatt penned the hymn, "`Are Ye Able?' Said the Master," to be sung in a consecration service at Boston University's School of Religion.
1930 Pioneer linguist Frank C. Laubach, while serving as a Congregational missionary, wrote in a letter: 'As one makes new discoveries about his friends by being with them, so one discovers the "individuality" of God if one entertains him continuously.'
1950 In Boston, during its annual gathering, the Northern Baptist Convention formally changed its name to the American Baptist Convention. Twenty-two years later, in 1972, the denomination changed its name once more, and became the American Baptist Churches in the U.S.A.
Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.
Thought for the day :
"Suppose you were an idiot, and suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself."