WALTER KRUEGER

{{Infobox Military Person
|name=Walter Krueger
|lived=1881-1967
|placeofbirth=Flatow, West Prussia {Zlotow, Poland}
|placeofdeath=Valley Forge, Pennsylvania
|image=
Krueger only.jpg

|caption=General Walter Krueger
|nickname=
|allegiance= United States
|branch=
United States Army
|serviceyears=1898-1946
|rank=General
|commands=Sixth United States Army
Third United States Army
VIII Corps
2nd Infantry Division
|unit=
|battles=Spanish American War
Philippine-American War
Pancho Villa Expedition
World War I
World War II
|awards=Distinguished Service Cross (United States Army)
Distinguished Service Medal (Army)
Legion of Merit
|relations=
|laterwork=
}}
'Walter Krueger' (26 January 1881-20 August 1967) was a German-American soldier and general in the first half of the 20th century. He is best known for his command of the U.S. Sixth Army in the South West Pacific Area during World War II.

Contents
Education and Early Life
Early Service
Great War
Interwar Years
World War II
Later life
References
Further reading

Education and Early Life


Walter Krueger was born in Flatow, West Prussia (now Złotów, Poland), the son of a Julius Krüger, a Prussian landowner who had served as an officer in the Franco-Prussian War, and his wife Anna, formerly Hasse. Following the death of Julius, Anna and her three children immigrated to the United States to be near Anna's uncle in St. Louis, Missouri. Walter was then eight years old. After Anna remarried, the family settled in Madison, Indiana.[1]

Early Service


On 17 June 1898, Krueger, along with many of his fellow high-school students, enlisted as a volunteer for service in the Spanish-American War with the 2nd Volunteer Infantry. He reached Santiago de Cuba a few weeks after the Battle of San Juan Hill. Mustered out of the volunteers in February 1899, he returned home to Ohio planning to be a civil engineer.[2]
However, many of his comrades were re-enlisting for service in the Philippine-American War and in June 1899 Krueger re-enlisted as a private in M Company of the 12th Infantry. Soon he was on his way to fight Emilio Aguinaldo's ''Insurrectos'' as part of Major General Arthur MacArthur, Jr.'s 2nd Infantry Division. He took part in the advance from Angeles City to Tarlac City, Aguinaldo's capital. But Aguinaldo had fled, and the 12th Infantry pursued him vainly all the way through Luzon's central plain to Dagupan City.2
While serving in an infantry unit in the Philippines, he was promoted to sergeant. On July 1, 1901, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant, and was posted to the 30th Infantry on Marinduque.[3]
Krueger returned to the United States with the 30th Infantry in December 1903. In September 1904, he married Grace Aileen Norvell, who he had met in the Philippines. They had three children: James Novell, born on 29 July 1910; Walter Jr, born on 25 April 1910; and Dorothy Jane, born on 24 January 1913.[4] Both James and Walter Jr attended the United States Military Academy, James graduating with the class of 1926 and Walter Jr. with the class of 1931.2 Dorothy married an Army officer, Aubrey D. Smith.
In 1904, Krueger attended and graduated from the Infantry-Cavalry School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, followed by the General Staff College in 1907. After a second tour in the Philippines, he was assigned to Department of Languages at Fort Leavenworth as an instructor in Spanish and German, which he could speak fluently, along with French and English. Not only was Krueger an expert on discipline and training, he was also a noted military historian and scholar of military affairs.[5] He published translations of several German military texts, most notably William Balck's ''Tactics''. [6]

Great War


With the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, Krueger was offered a post as an observer with the German Army but was forced to turn it down due to familial commitments. Instead, he was posted to the 10th Infantry Regiment of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard.[7] The regiment was mobilized on 23 June 1916 and served along the Mexican border for five months as part of the Mexican Punitive Expedition under General John J. Pershing, although no Guard units fought Mexican troops. The unit was mustered out in October 1916.[8]
After the United States commenced hostilities in World War I, Krueger became Assistant Chief of Staff G-3 (Operations) of the
U.S. 84th Infantry Division at Camp Zachary Taylor. He became its chief of staff, with the rank of major as of 5 August 1917. In February 1918, he was sent to Langres to attend the American Expeditionary Force General Staff School. In May 1918, all officers whose division was not under orders for France were ordered to return home but Krueger stayed on as G-3 of the 26th Infantry Division. Apparently the French Army requested that Krueger be sent home due to his German origin and Krueger was re-posted to the 84th Division, but he soon returned, as it embarked for France in August 1918. In October 1918, he became Chief of Staff of the Tank Corps. Following the end of the war, Krueger was assistant chief of staff of VI and IV Corps on occupation duty, advancing to the rank of temporary colonel. For his service in France, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal in 1919.[9]

Interwar Years


With the end of the war, Krueger reverted to his permanent rank of captain on 30 Jun 1920 but was promoted to the permanent rank of major the next day. After periods at the Infantry School, Fort Benning, Georgia, and in command of the 55th Infantry Regiment at Camp Funston, Kansas, Krueger attended the Army War College, graduating in 1921, and remaining for a year as an instructor. From 1922 to 1925, he served in the War Plans Division of the U.S. Army General Staff. In 1927 he tried to transfer to the United States Army Air Corps but his flight instructor, Lieutenant Claire Lee Chennault flunked him. Krueger graduated from the Naval War College in 1926, and from 1928 to 1932 he was an instructor there.[10]
Krueger commanded the 6th Infantry at Jefferson Barracks from 1932 to 1934, then returned to the War Plans Division, becoming chief of the division in May 1936. He was promoted to temporary brigadier general in October 1936. In June 1938, Krueger went to Fort George G. Meade as commander of the 16th Infantry Brigade. He was promoted to temporary Major General in February 1939, commanded the 2nd Infantry Division (United States) at Fort Sam Houston rising in October 1939 to the command of VIII Corps.[11]

World War II


Generals Krueger, MacArthur and Marshall

In May 1941, Krueger was promoted to temporary lieutenant general, in command of the U.S. Third Army and the Southern Defense Command, a post he held for more than a year after the U.S entered World War II.
General Krueger

A month after the activation of the Sixth Army, in January 1943, Krueger took command of the army, based in Australia. He remained in command of the Sixth Army — which included in various combinations at different times I, X, XIV and XXIV Corps — throughout its combat duties. These included the assaults on Japanese positions on Kiriwina and Woodlark Islands (July 1943) as part of Operation Coronet; New Britain (December 1943-February 1944); Admiralty Islands (February-May 1944); mainland New Guinea (July-August 1944); Morotai (Netherlands East Indies, September-October 1944); Leyte and Mindoro (the Philippines, October-December 1944); and Luzon (January-February 1945).
Krueger was promoted to temporary General (four-star) in March 1945. In September 1945, the Sixth Army took up occupation duty in Japan. In January 1946 it was deactivated and Krueger reverted to lieutenant general. However, he retired as a full general in July 1946.

Later life


Krueger retired to San Antonio, Texas, where he bought a house for the first time. In retirement, he wrote ''From Down Under to Nippon: the Story of the 6th Army In World War II'', which was published in 1953.[12]
His retirement was marred by family tragedies. His son James was dismissed from the Army in 1947 for conduct unbecoming an officer. Grace's health deteriorated and she died on 13 May 1956.[12] In 1952, Dorothy fatally stabbed her husband with a hunting knife while he slept. By six votes to three, a U.S. Army court-martial found her guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced her "to be confined at hard labor for the rest of her natural life." A unanimous verdict of guilty would have made the death sentence mandatory.[14] However, in 1955, the US Supreme Court ruled that military trials of civilians were unconstitutional.[15] Dorothy was therefore released.[14]
In 1962 Krueger Middle School was established in San Antonio, Texas. The school is Home of the Fighting Falcons.
Krueger died at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania in 1967 and was buried in Section 30 of Arlington National Cemetery, among a number of family members.
Krueger made an appearance as a character in the 2005 war film, ''The Great Raid''. In an interesting twist, Krueger, a US Army general, was portrayed by Dale Dye, a retired captain of the US Marine Corps.

References


1. General Walter Krueger: Unsung Hero of the Pacific War, , Kevin C., Holzimmer, University Press of Kansas, ,
2.
3. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 15-16
4. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 16, 18, 20
5. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 18-22
6. Tactics, , William, Balck, , ,
7. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 24-25
8. Brief History of the 110th Infantry
9. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 26-29
10. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 31-47
11. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 49-76
12. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 242-245
13. Holzimmer, ''Krueger'', pp. 242-245
14.
15. ''Toth v. Quarles'' (1955)
16.

Further reading



General Walter Krueger: Unsung Hero of the Pacific War, , Kevin C., Holzimmer, University Press of Kansas, ,

From Down Under to Nippon: the Story of the 6th Army In World War II, , Walter, Krueger, Zenger Pub, ,

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