Pictured above are two artifacts donated
by Bradley to the Navy Relief fund auction, Lot No. 72, accompanied by auction
ticket boldly signed by him at bottom margin. Included are a brown leather
36" general officer’s belt made by Hickok and designed by George Patton
which he patterned after the Confederate officers belt issued only to generals.
The circular gold plate buckle displays the US eagle seal with wreath on clasp.
Silver snap adjustments on inside of belt. Excellent condition. Plus the
general’s four-star red metal car plate with two attachment holes at top.
Accompanied by original leather cover. - Courtesy of
Estoric, Inc.
born in Clark, Missouri, on 12 February 1893
graduated from the United States Military Academy, 1915, was
commissioned a second lieutenant, and assigned to the 14th Infantry, June
1915
married Mary Quayle, 1916 (deceased 1965)
performed troop duty in the west, 1915-1919
was promoted to first lieutenant, July 1916, to captain, May 1917, and
to temporary major, June 1918
was on Reserve Officer Training Corps duty in Minnesota and South
Dakota, 1919-1920
was instructor in mathematics at West Point, 1920-1924
reverted to grade of captain, 1920 and 1922, and was returned to major,
1922 and 1924
graduated from the advanced course at the Infantry School at Fort
Benning, 1925
served in Hawaii with both the 19th and 27th Infantry, 1925-1927, and
was in charge of National Guard and Reserve affairs for the Hawaiian
Islands, 1927-1928
graduated from the Command and General Staff School at Fort
Leavenworth, 1929
was instructor in tactics and weapons at the Infantry School, 1929-1933
graduated from the Army war College, 1934
was instructor in tactics and plans and training officer at the United
States Military Academy, 1934-1938
was promoted to lieutenant colonel, June 1936
was chief of the Operations Branch, G-1, war Department headquarters,
1938-1940
was assistant secretary of the General Staff, 1940-1941
was promoted to temporary brigadier general, February 1941
was commandant of the Infantry School and set up the Infantry Officer
Candidate Program, 1941-1942
was promoted to the temporary ranks of major general, February 1942,
and lieutenant general, June 1943
successively commanded the 82d and 28th Infantry Divisions, 1942-1943
was personal representative in the field for the commander of the North
African Theater of Operations, 1943
commanded II Corps in operations against Axis forces in North Africa
and Sicily, 1943
was promoted to permanent ranks of brigadier general September 1943 and
major general, September 1944
commanded the First Army and the 12th Army Group in the invasion and
final campaigns of western Europe, 1944-1945
was promoted to temporary general, March 1945, a rank and date made
permanent in January 1949
was temporary administrator of veterans affairs, 19451947
was chief of staff of the United States Army, 7 February 1948-16 August
1949
responded to the National Security Act of 1947 by initiating a study of
Army organization that led to appointment of a vice chief of staff and two
deputies and to consolidation of technical services under the director of
logistics, administrative services under the director of personnel and
administration and financial and management functions under the comptroller
of the Army
was the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 16 August 1949-16
August 1953. was promoted to General of the Army, September 1950
was first chairman of the Military Staff Committee of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, 1949-1950
married Esther Dora Buhler, 1966 while attending an Army Association
meeting in New York City, died on 8 April 1981.
From: COMMANDING GENERALS AND CHIEFS OF STAFF, 1775-1982, William Gardner
Bell, Center of Military History, United States Army, Washington, D.C., 1983
Message from Omar N. Bradley, Chairman of
Joint Chiefs of Staff, informing General Douglass MacArthur that President Harry
S. Truman has replaced as Supreme Commander Far East Command. Unrestricted -
declassified. Classification changed from TOP SECRET to UNCLASSIFIED by order of
the Secretary of the Army, September 14, 1954..
(NRPM-319-OMPF-MACARTHURD-BRADLEYON) - Courtesy of the National Archives
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.
Self-effacing and quiet, Bradley showed a concern for the men he led that
gave him the reputation as the "soldier's general." That same concern
made him the ideal choice in 1945 to reinvigorate the Veterans Administration
and prepare it to meet the needs of millions of demobilized servicemen. After he
left active duty, both political and military leaders continued to seek
Bradley's advice. Perhaps more importantly, he remained in close touch with the
Army and served its succeeding generations as the ideal model of a professional
soldier.
Early Years
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. Hunting to
Bradley during his second year at West Point.
He found the structure of military life reassuring and
quickly
adapted to the rigors of cadet life.
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.
Some men had difficulty adapting to the demanding curriculum and strict
military life at West Point, but Bradley confessed that the discipline, the
rigors of a code of conduct centering on honor and duty, the structured society,
and the opportunities for athletics greatly appealed to him. An enthusiasm for
sports took time away from academics, but Bradley still managed to finish a
respectable 44th in his graduating class of 164. He lettered both in football
and in baseball, and later he commented on the importance of sports in teaching
the art of group cooperation.
Like his classmate Dwight Eisenhower, Bradley was not particularly
distinguished in the purely military side of his cadet years, achieving the rank
of cadet lieutenant only in his final year. But cadet rank turned out to have
little to do with future achievement for the class of 1915, which came to be
known as "the class the stars fell on" because so many of its members
became generals. Among its ranks were Joseph M. Swing, one of the airborne
pioneers, and aviators John T. McNarney and George E. Stratemeyer. Somewhat
lesser-known classmates, including Stafford LeRoy Irwin, Leland S. Hobbs, John
W. Leonard, Hubert R. Harmon, and James A. Van Fleet, would command Bradley's
divisions and corps during World War II.
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.
Bradley (second from left) and the
West Point baseball team.
He believed that sports taught
the art of group cooperation and
took pride in the fact
that every member of the 1914 team
who remained in the
Army became a general officer.
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
Brig. Gen. 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.
World
War I and the Interwar Years
The 14th Infantry was stationed at Yuma, Arizona, when the United States
formally entered World War I. Almost immediately, Bradley was promoted to
captain as the Army began to mobilize. However, rather than moving to Europe,
his regiment received orders to return to the Pacific Northwest, where it would
police the copper mines in Montana. Throughout the next year, Bradley
desperately tried to have himself assigned to a unit bound for the fighting in
France, but to no avail.
Bradley was promoted to major in August 1918, and shortly thereafter he
received the much-desired orders to prepare for duty overseas. The 14th
Infantry, with Bradley in command of its second battalion, became part of the
new 19th Infantry Division, which was organizing at Camp Dodge, near Des Moines,
Iowa. But the great influenza epidemic of 1918, coupled with the armistice in
November, ensured that the division would never go overseas. With the war over,
the Army rapidly demobilized and a frustrated Bradley never saw the battlefields
of the Western Front. He was then posted to South Dakota State College, where he
remained a year as an assistant professor of military science, reverting to his
permanent grade of captain.
In September 1920 Bradley began a four-year tour of duty as an instructor
of mathematics at West Point, while Douglas MacArthur was serving as
superintendent. Aside from the rigor of studying mathematics, which Bradley
believed stimulated one's powers of reasoning, he devoted his time at the
Military Academy to the study of military history. He was especially interested
in the campaigns of William T. Sherman, whom he considered a master of the war
of movement. By the time he was ordered to attend the advanced course at the
Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia, in the fall of 1924, following a
spring promotion to major, he had concluded that many of the men who had fought
in France had been misled by the experience of that static war; for Bradley,
Sherman's campaigns were more relevant to any future war than the battle reports
of the American Expeditionary Forces.
Since the curriculum at Fort Benning stressed open warfare, it gave
Bradley the opportunity to become a specialist in tactics and terrain and the
problems of fire and movement. He graduated second in his class, behind Leonard
T. Gerow, another officer with whom he was to serve years hence, and ahead of
officers who had combat experience in World War I. It was at Fort Benning that
Bradley concluded that his tactical judgment was as good as that of men tested
in battle. His Infantry School experience was crucial; as he later explained,
"the confidence I needed had been restored; I never suffered a faint heart
again."
When his tour at Fort Benning ended, Bradley was assigned to the 27th
Infantry of the Hawaiian Division. There he met George S. Patton, Jr., the
division G-2, whose future would be intertwined with his for many years.
Following a stint with the Hawaiian National Guard, Bradley returned to the
United States in 1928 as a student at the Command and General Staff School at
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. The premier school for professional soldiers,
Leavenworth was the eye of the needle through which any officer who hoped for
success in the Army had to pass. Bradley was somewhat critical of the
predictable and unimaginative instruction he received there, as he was of the
hoary "school solutions" the faculty presented. Still, he judged that
his year in Kansas stimulated his thinking about tactical problems and, voicing
a conclusion shared by many of his peers, believed the real importance of the
Command and General Staff School was that it gave his entire generation of
officers a common tactical language and technique for problem solving.
More important than Leavenworth, however, was Bradley's next assignment as
an instructor at the Infantry School in 1929. The assistant commandant was
George C. Marshall, who was determined to streamline and simplify tactical
command procedures. Under Marshall's guidance, instructors encouraged student
officers to think creatively about tactical problems and simplify doctrine so
that it was meaningful for citizen-soldiers rather than just for an Army
composed of professionals. Bradley judged that no one had ever had a more
profound influence on him, either personally or professionally, than Marshall.
Once having given a man a job, Marshall did not interfere, as long as the
officer performed as he expected. Impressed with the results of Marshall's
methods, Bradley adopted an identical hands-off style of command. Bradley's
four-year Infantry School assignment also brought another intangible benefit.
During this tour Bradley associated with a hand-picked company of "Marshall
men," some of whom, including Forrest Harding, he had known before. Others,
both faculty and students, and including such men as Joseph Stilwell, Charles
Lanham, W. Bedell Smith, Harold Bull, Matthew Ridgway, and J. Lawton Collins,
were to hold important assignments in a very few years. Marshall's personal
teaching, in part through the informal seminars he conducted for his staff, and
the stimulating company of a group of officers devoted to the study of their
profession rounded out Bradley's tactical education. Crucial to Bradley's future
in the Army was the fact that he had made a favorable impression on Marshall.
Bradley graduated from the Army War College in 1934 and returned to West
Point to serve in the Tactical Department. At Fort Benning he had taught and
associated with men who would lead divisions and corps during World War II. At
West Point he trained cadets—including William C. Westmoreland, Creighton W.
Abrams, Jr., Bruce Palmer, Jr., John L. Throckmorton, and Andrew J. Goodpaster,
Jr.—who would command battalions in that war and lead the Army in the decades
of the 1960s and 1970s. Bradley was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1936. When
he left West Point in the summer of 1938 for duty on the War Department General
Staff, he had spent some sixteen years in Army schools as student and teacher.
After a brief period in the G-1, the Army staff's manpower and personnel
office, Bradley became assistant secretary of the General Staff in the Office of
the Army Chief of Staff. At times inundated by the flood of paper, he and
Orlando Ward, later assisted by Bedell Smith, filtered the mass of information
directed at the Chief of Staff, framing problem areas and recommending
solutions. In February 1941, as the Army was expanding in anticipation of war
with the Axis Powers, Marshall promoted Bradley from lieutenant
Lt. Col. Omar Bradley (center) and
members of the Tactics
Department at West Point, 1937.
He taught cadets who
would lead the Army in the 1960s
and 1970s.
colonel to brigadier general, skipping the rank of colonel, and sent him
to Fort Benning to command the Infantry School.
At Fort Benning Bradley supported the formation and training of tank
forces, especially the new 2d Armored Division, then commanded by George S.
Patton, Jr. He also promoted the growth and development of the new airborne
forces, which would play a critical role in the coming war. His most important
contribution to the Army, however, was the development of an officer candidate
school (OCS) model that would serve as a prototype for similar schools across
the Army. When war came, the OCS system would turn out the thousands of
lieutenants needed to lead the platoons of an Army that eventually fielded
eighty-nine divisions. The Infantry Officer Candidate School at Fort Benning
alone would produce some 45,000 officers. When the United States formally
entered World War II on 8 December 1941, Bradley, at Marshall's suggestion, was
preparing a hand-picked successor to take command at Fort Benning. Marshall had
bigger challenges in mind for Bradley as the Army prepared for combat.
Brig. Gen. Omar Bradley, commander of the
Infantry School
at Fort Benning, congradulates newly
qualified parachute
officers of the 501st Parachute
Infantry Battalion in 1941.
Bradley vigorously pursued
the development of airborne forces
and was instrumental
in the development of the Officer Candidate School
system
that would produce thousands of officers during World War II.
World War II
Two months after Pearl Harbor, Bradley took command of the
82d Infantry Division. The unit had compiled a distinguished combat record in
World War I, but it had been reactivated with draftees leavened by only a small
Regular Army cadre. The new commander saw to it that incoming drafts of soldiers
were welcomed with military bands; when they were marched directly to their
cantonments, they found uniforms, equipment, and a hot meal waiting for them.
Such practices did much to boost the morale of often bewildered inductees.
Disturbed by the poor physical condition of the new soldiers, Bradley instituted
a rigorous physical training program to supplement a tough military training
schedule. He also invited Alvin York, Medal of Honor winner and the most famous
alumnus of the division, to visit his troops. Based on York's remark that most
of his own combat shooting had been done at very short range, Bradley adjusted
the division's marksmanship program to include a combat course in firing at
targets only twenty-five to fifty meters away. Bradley looked forward to taking
the 82d Division to Europe or the Pacific, but barely four months later he
received orders from General Marshall to take command of the 28th Infantry
Division, a National Guard unit that Marshall believed needed help badly.
Bradley turned over the 82d to Matthew Ridgway and went to Camp Livingston,
Louisiana, to address the problems of the Keystone Division.
Among the first steps he took was the reassignment of junior officers who
were over age and unable to cope with field conditions; roughly 20 percent of
all National Guard first lieutenants in 1941 were forty or older. The more
senior officers who lacked the knowledge or skills for battalion and regimental
command also found themselves transferred. He also reassigned officers and
sergeants within the division to eliminate the "home-townism" peculiar
to 1930s National Guard units, a system that hampered proper discipline. But the
worst problems of the 28th Division were not of its own making. The division had
been repeatedly levied for officers and noncommissioned officers; over 1,600 had
gone to OCS or aviation training since the division was mobilized. Bradley put a
stop to this drain in manpower and obtained new drafts from OCS to replace the
losses. He then began a systematic training program that included the intense
physical conditioning he had found necessary in the 82d. He also led the
division through increasingly more complex tactical exercises at the battalion
and regimental level, culminating in amphibious assault training on the Florida
coast.
Long experience gained from Army schools and from training recruits in
World War I had much to do with Bradley's ability to turn the 82d and 28th into
well-trained combat divisions. But he also clearly understood that
citizen-soldiers were not professionals and that the Army could not treat them
as such. He adopted George Marshall's view that doctrine had to be simplified
for execution by soldiers and leaders who had no previous military experience.
Indeed, his successes in 1942 owed much to an understanding of the discipline
and training needs of citizen-soldiers that derived from Marshall's guidance at
the Infantry School a decade earlier.
In February 1943 General Marshall, having previously remarked that Bradley
had been requested for corps command five or six times, ordered him to Austin,
Texas, to take over X Corps. Before Bradley assumed that command, however, the
orders were countermanded and he found himself en route to North Africa to work
for his classmate Dwight D. Eisenhower, whom he had occasionally seen but with
whom he had not served since graduation from West Point.
Bradley arrived in North Africa in the aftermath of the Kasserine Pass
debacle. He found a much-chastened Eisenhower worrying about the failure of
American units to perform well against their more experienced
Lt. Gen. Omar Bradley, II Corps commander,
consults with staff members. Bradley assumed
command
of II Corps, his first combat command,
in April 1943 and
led it through the rest of the
North African campaign
and the fighting in Sicily.
German opponents. The local British commander had been especially harsh in
assessing the initial combat performance of the Americans. Bradley's assignment
was to serve as Eisenhower's eyes and ears, reporting on the situation on the
Tunisian front and the means that might be used to correct the problems that
were by then evident to everyone.
One of his first important decisions was to advise Eisenhower to relieve
Maj. Gen. Lloyd Fredendall from command of II Corps, whose troops had
demonstrated a particularly poor performance at Kasserine. Eisenhower had been
reluctant to take such drastic action despite the recommendations of key
subordinates, but he finally acted after consulting with Bradley. When
Eisenhower assigned George Patton to replace Fredendall, he also asked Bradley
to become the corps deputy commanding general. Bradley then succeeded to command
of the corps on 15 April when Patton left to continue his interrupted planning
for landings on Sicily. Although Patton had restored discipline and confidence
to II Corps, it still lacked the prowess of British units. Bradley's task
throughout the remainder of the North African campaign was to convince both his
men and the British that the American soldier was as good as any and that
American leaders were as tactically adept as their Allied and Axis counterparts.
During the final battles of April and May 1943 he achieved his goal. The
II Corps attacked northward toward Bizerte, avoiding obvious routes of approach
and using infantry to attack German defenders on the high ground before bringing
up the armor. The 34th Infantry Division, maligned by the British as a unit with
poor fighting qualities, fought the crucial battle and dislodged the Germans
from strong defensive positions astride Hill 609, the highest terrain in the
corps sector. With tanks in the assault role, the 34th Division infantry cleared
the obstacle, allowing Bradley to send the 1st Armored Division through to
victory. American troops entered Bizerte on 7 May, and two days later more than
40,000 German troops surrendered to II Corps.
The fighting in North Africa was over, and the U.S. Army, as Bradley put
it, had "learned to crawl, to walk—then run." He then immediately
went to Algiers to help plan the invasion of Sicily, the next objective in the
Allied timetable approved at the Casablanca Conference. Capture of Sicily would,
the Allied leaders hoped, knock Italy out of the war and clear the central
Mediterranean of Axis forces. It might also divert German forces from the
Eastern Front, thereby partially satisfying Josef Stalin's continuing demands
that the western Allies open a second front against the Germans.
Army Chief of Staff General George C.
Marshall (center)
and Army Air Forces commander General
Henry "Hap" Arnold
confer with Bradley on the
beach at Normandy, France in 1944.
Under command of George Patton's Seventh Army, Bradley's corps was in the
vanguard of the Operation HUSKY assault, and it moved inland against negligible
resistance. The Germans and Italians were not surprised by the landings,
however, and hard fighting began the second day and characterized the remainder
of the 38-day campaign. By 16 August 1943, British and American forces held
Sicily.
The conquest of Sicily ultimately persuaded Italy to withdraw from the
war, but the Allied operation was less than a complete success. Advancing from
the south of Sicily along two axes of approach in a classic pincer converging on
the port of Messina, the Allies allowed the German units to escape across the
narrow straits to the Italian mainland. Bickering between American and British
commanders also continued. On the positive side, American troops had learned a
lot more about fighting. They had conducted their first opposed amphibious
landings and airborne assaults, brought four new divisions successfully into
battle, and taken a field army into war for the first time. It was during the
fighting in Sicily that war correspondent Ernie Pyle "discovered"
Bradley and established his reputation as the "soldier's general."
Whatever its defects, the battle for Sicily was an important step in preparing
Bradley for his next job. Shortly after the fighting ended, Eisenhower told him
that he would command an army and then activate an army group in the forthcoming
landings in France.
Bradley traveled to the United States to select the staff for his new
command, the First U.S. Army, then stationed at Governor's Island, New York. The
headquarters deployed to England in October 1943, and Bradley took on the dual
task of First Army commander and acting commander of the skeletal 1st U.S. Army
Group (subsequently re-designated the 12th Army Group). Eisenhower, appointed as
Supreme Allied Commander for the invasion of Europe, arrived in England in
January 1944. Shortly thereafter he confirmed that Bradley would command the
American army group when it was activated. But until the landings were secure,
all American ground forces in northern France would be under the temporary
command of General Sir Bernard L. Montgomery, who also commanded the British and
Canadian ground contingents.
For Operation OVERLORD, the assault on the Normandy beaches, the First
Army was assigned three corps. The V Corps was commanded by Leonard T. Gerow,
whom Bradley had known since his advanced course days at Fort Benning, and VII
Corps was led by J. Lawton Collins, a division commander who had proved himself
in the Pacific and a man whom Bradley had known during his teaching tour at
Benning. The XIX Corps, under command of Charles H. Corlett, would follow the
other corps ashore to establish the beachhead. Almost alone among the senior
Allied commanders, Bradley believed in the value of airborne landings both to
limit enemy access to the coast from inland and to spread confusion in the
German defenses. He therefore fought to have the 82d and 101st Airborne
Divisions dropped behind UTAH Beach on D-Day.
During the months before the invasion, Bradley supervised the refinement
of assault plans and troop training. He and his corps commanders finally decided
that the assaults would be led by the 29th Infantry Division and elements of the
experienced 1st Infantry Division on OMAHA Beach, and by the 4th Infantry
Division on UTAH. Both assault forces would be supported by the new duplex drive
M4 tank, a Sherman tank fitted with flotation skirts and propellers, which could
be launched from landing craft and swim ashore. Bradley decided American units
would not use other specialized tanks, including the "flail" tanks
that cleared minefields and tanks with flamethrowers, because they required
specialized training and an extensive separate supply and maintenance
organization. Some have contended that this decision to keep a lean supply
system cost the lives of many soldiers who died from mines and booby traps on
the Normandy beaches and during the subsequent breakout.
On the morning of 6 June 1944, Bradley was aboard the cruiser USS
Augusta, his headquarters for the invasion. He received word that the
Germans had moved the 352d Infantry Division into the area for training,
an unfortunate event that lengthened the odds against V Corps. However, he did
not change his battle plans. At 0630 American troops and their Allies assaulted
the Normandy beaches. Meeting only light resistance, the 4th Infantry Division
suffered very few casualties and quickly secured UTAH Beach. The VII Corps
pushed six miles inland by the end of D-Day.
On OMAHA Beach the situation was a nightmare. The German regiment there,
reinforced by troops from the division that had unexpectedly arrived, occupied
terrain favorable for defense and put up a stiff resistance. Landing craft
launched most of the amphibious tanks too far out from the shore, where most
foundered and sank. The aerial bombardment was almost completely ineffective in
suppressing German defenses, and many of the assault troops were put ashore at
the wrong places. For several hours the situation appeared to be a disaster in
the making. Casualties were heavy, particularly among the demolition engineers
assigned to clear the beach obstacles for following assault waves. The infantry,
pinned down on the tide line, was also hard hit. In the end good leadership and
naval gunfire resolved the situation. Determined and courageous American
commanders led their men in desperate local fights against the German position
and slowly established a foothold. U.S. Navy destroyers, ignoring the hazards,
navigated close inshore and fired directly into German strongpoints. When Gerow
finally established communications with Bradley, his first message was
"Thank God for the U.S. Navy!"
Hamstrung by scanty communications with the troops ashore, Bradley quietly
worried over what appeared to be a developing catastrophe. For a time he
considered evacuating the troops and sending follow-on assaults to UTAH or the
British beaches. At last, in the early afternoon, Gerow reported that his men
were beginning to reach the bluffs above the beach. By evening the crisis was
past, and V Corps had 35,000 soldiers ashore on a beach five and a half miles
long and a mile and a half across at its widest point. At a cost of around 2,500
casualties, the Allies had established themselves firmly on the Normandy coast.
On 9 June Bradley moved First Army headquarters ashore.
British and American forces repelled German counterattacks against the
beachhead throughout the first half of June, including an assault by the 17th
SS Panzer Grenadier Division designed to pierce the junction between the
U.S. V and VII Corps. Using information code-named ULTRA (from the Ultra Secret
classification assigned to the sophisticated code-breaking process), Bradley
shifted the newly arrived 2d Armored Division to crush the German attack.
Meanwhile, follow-on forces were steadily landing on the invasion beaches, and
the Allied lodgment became secure. Over the following month Bradley sent VII
Corps to capture the port of Cherbourg and expanded the beachhead into the
hedgerow country behind the coast, preparing for the breakout envisioned in the
OVERLORD plans.
The first attempts at breaking out of the lodgment failed in the face of
heavy German opposition. Bradley then conceived a plan for a one-corps attack
centering on St. Lo, using heavy air support. The operation, dubbed COBRA, began
on 25 July with a saturation bombing attack that fell on both American and
German positions. Collins' VII Corps nonetheless assaulted on schedule. After
pushing through the German lines, he committed two armored divisions to exploit
the breakthrough. On Collins' right flank, Troy Middleton, commanding VIII
Corps, likewise released an armored division after his infantry broke through
the initial German resistance. In a 35-mile advance, the American armor reached
Avranches and began a rout of the Germans that lasted just over a month, by
which time the Allies had closed on the German frontier.
With the breakout, Eisenhower activated Third U.S. Army with George Patton
in command. Bradley turned First Army over to Courtney Hodges and activated 12th
Army Group, which on 1 August assumed command of 21 divisions comprising some
903,000 men. No officer in the U.S. Army had any practical experience with the
operations of an army group—few had even served in a division before World War
II. Bradley finally decided to model his command technique on that of Sir Harold
R. L. G. Alexander, the British general with whom he had served in the
Mediterranean. Instead of providing only broad operational direction, as the
vague prewar American doctrine foresaw for army group commanders, Bradley
planned to exercise close control of his armies. He decided to assign broad
missions to his principal subordinates and then carefully monitor operations,
intervening on a selective basis when he thought necessary.
The first opportunity to test himself came the week after 12th Army Group
was activated. In what Bradley considered one of the worst mistakes anyone made
in World War II, Adolf Hitler ordered his commanders to seek a decision in
Normandy. Rather than withdraw, the Germans reinforced their units. Alerted by
short-notice ULTRA information, Bradley reinforced the VII Corps sector at
Mortain, where the German attack seemed aimed. The 30th Infantry Division,
supported by tactical air power, decimated the assaulting force. Seeing the
potential for a larger success, Bradley devised a plan to trap the bulk of the
retreating German forces west of the Rhine, a long encirclement that he
envisioned as a war-winning maneuver. In the event the American and Canadian
armies did not meet at Falaise in time to trap all the Germans, and many escaped
to fight again. The battle nonetheless marked the end of the fighting in
Normandy, where Allied forces had literally destroyed two German armies.
In practical terms, the battle determined the future course of the war.
Hard fighting in Normandy, followed by the pursuit across France through the end
of September 1944, wounded or killed more than 500,000 Germans and destroyed
many divisions. The famous 12th SS (Hitlerjugend) Division, for example,
literally dissolved as a fighting formation. Taken together, Normandy, the
Falaise pocket, and the retreat across the Seine reduced the German Army to
an infantry force with limited tactical mobility. German equipment losses were
staggering: some 15,000 vehicles were destroyed or abandoned. Less than 120 of
more than 1,000 tanks and assault guns committed to battle in Normandy remained
operational in September. Few panzer divisions could muster more than a
dozen tanks.
The Allied armies were quick to exploit German weaknesses, closing to the
borders of Germany by the fall. Assigning Hodges and Patton the mission of
pursuing the retreating enemy, Bradley gave both commanders wide latitude of
action and turned his attention to the growing problem of supplying forces that
daily moved farther away from the invasion beaches. But neither he nor
Eisenhower could significantly improve the logistical situation until the Allies
captured usable ports. By September the 12th Army Group was running out of
supplies and encountering stronger German resistance along the Siegfried Line.
With priority given to the MARKET-GARDEN operation, an attempt to capture Arnhem
and a bridge over the Rhine River, large-scale American movement essentially
halted and First and Third Armies continued only limited offensives.
On 16 December 1944, the Germans attacked in the Ardennes, an area that
Bradley had left thinly garrisoned as a calculated risk. Eisenhower quickly
determined to convert the attack into an opportunity to break the back of the German
Army. Bradley, agreeing with Eisenhower's assessment, reorganized his forces
to meet the threat and exploit the situation. He directed Patton to reorient his
attack to the north, with the aim of relieving American forces besieged in
Belgium. In what was probably his most impressive performance, Patton marched
his divisions almost one hundred miles in bad weather in two days to attack the
German left flank and link up with the 101st Airborne Division at Bastogne.
Meanwhile, First and Ninth Armies fought tenaciously to contain the German
attack, turning the Ardennes offensive into an unmitigated catastrophe for the German
Army. German losses were not substantially higher than American losses in
the fighting, but the battle cost the Germans the bulk of their skilled troops,
eradicated their operational reserve, and destroyed great quantities of modern
equipment. The Battle of the Bulge made the great victories of 1945 possible
because it eliminated the German Army's ability to resist the final
offensives into its homeland. In January 1945, having defeated the German winter
attacks, Bradley began a series of continuous offensives that smashed through
the Siegfried Line, crossed the Rhine, crushed the remains of the German forces
in the Ruhr, and finally met the Soviets on the Elbe River.
Since September 1944, and even earlier, the Allied commanders had debated
the best way to end the war militarily. Eisenhower, in consultation with Bradley
and Montgomery well before D-Day, had stipulated that the main Allied objective
in Germany was the Ruhr valley, Germany's industrial heartland. A threat to that
critical area would oblige the Germans to commit their remaining ground forces
for its defense. In general terms, Eisenhower and his senior commanders
envisioned an encirclement of the Ruhr that would capture the German industrial
base and the bulk of the German Army at the same time, thus bringing the
war to a close. The means of doing this remained controversial. Montgomery
favored a single "knife-like thrust" from the north, under his
command, to which all Allied resources would be committed. However, that
concept, as embodied in Operation MARKET-GARDEN, proved unsuccessful. In
contrast, Bradley supported Eisenhower's determination to pursue a broad-front
attack that was as important for domestic political reasons as for military
ones. Once at the Rhine, chance presented him with the opportunity for
improvisation.
The retreating Germans had methodically destroyed Rhine River bridges to
strengthen the defensive value of their natural barrier. The 9th Armored
Division, under the command of Bradley's classmate John Leonard, captured intact
the Ludendorff railway bridge at Remagen on 7 March. The structure had been
rigged for demolition with explosives, but inexplicably had not been destroyed
in a timely manner. Informed of that stroke of luck, Bradley ordered First Army
commander Courtney Hodges to push as many forces as possible across to the east
bank of the Rhine and secure the bridgehead. He then obtained Eisenhower's
approval to put as many as five divisions into an attack.
Bradley saw the possibility of now striking at the Ruhr from the south, up
the valley from Frankfurt, rather than from the British sector in the north. By
16 March he had pushed two corps over to the east bank of the Rhine and kept
them moving toward the main north-south autobahn. At the same time he ordered
Patton to seek a Rhine crossing in the vicinity of Oppenheim and then to drive
north toward Giessen, where he was to link up with First Army. Patton crossed
the Rhine with little difficulty on 23 March and immediately began his attack to
the north. By 28 March First Army had driven from the Remagen bridgehead through
the Lahn valley and beyond Giessen to Marburg, where its III Corps met XII Corps
of Patton's Third Army.
The stage was set for the final campaign of the war in Europe. Bradley
planned to swing his Ninth Army south and First Army north in a double
envelopment that would encircle the Ruhr and meet in the vicinity of Kassel.
Once that was accomplished, he intended to detail some units to mop up the Ruhr
and then attack with Ninth, First, and Third Armies from Kassel toward Leipzig
and Dresden, halting at the Elbe River where American forces were to meet the
Soviets. The operation developed very much as Bradley planned, with the pincers
closing around the Ruhr on 1 April. By 12-13 April American units had reached
the Elbe River. Bradley's troops had captured in excess of 315,000 prisoners,
more than had been taken at Stalingrad or in Tunisia. In a final offensive
Bradley sent Patton's Third Army to attack along the Danube into Bavaria,
Austria, and Czechoslovakia, cementing the Allied success.
At the end of operations in Europe, Bradley's 12th Army Group was the
largest ever commanded by an American general. It consisted of Lt. Gen. Courtney
Hodges' First, General George Patton's Third, Lt. Gen. William Simpson's Ninth,
and Lt. Gen. Leonard Gerow's Fifteenth Armies, a force comprising 12 corps, 48
divisions, and 1.3 million men. From the time of the TORCH landings in North
Africa through the end of the war, Bradley was indispensable to Eisenhower, who
greatly valued his perennial calm, understated professionalism, and sound
advice. Since 1943 he had been intimately involved in every crucial decision
that determined the outcome of the war in Europe. The Supreme Commander saw
Bradley as "the master tactician of our forces," and at the end of the
war he predicted that Bradley would eventually be recognized as "America's
foremost battle leader."
Postwar Service
Months before the end of the war in Europe, Bradley had asked General
Marshall to keep him in mind for an eventual command in the Pacific. Once
Germany capitulated, it became evident that General Douglas MacArthur did not
require another army group commander for his planned assault on the Japanese
home islands. Bradley was still in Germany when news of the Japanese surrender
reached him. President Harry S. Truman, it turned out, had other plans for
Bradley. On 15 August 1945, he appointed him to direct the Veterans
Administration (VA).
Somewhat unwillingly, Bradley accepted the job and began to modernize and
restructure that antiquated organization to meet the challenges that it would
soon face. Before the end of the war the VA was responsible for some 5 million
veterans, with a few pensions still going to cases arising from the War of 1812.
By 1946 almost 17 million veterans were on its rolls. Bradley completely rebuilt
the organization on a regional basis and insisted on basing his decisions on the
needs of the veteran, rather than on the political considerations that had so
often governed in the past in such matters as the location of VA hospitals. With
the help of Maj. Gen. Paul R. Hawley, Eisenhower's theater surgeon, he
completely overhauled a medical care system that Hawley had described as
medieval. He also revised and extended the educational benefits of the G.I.
Bill, arranged for jobs and job training
General of the Army Omar Bradley,
first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
August
1949. He served in this position until
his
retirement from military service in 1953.
programs for men whose only experience had been as members of the armed
forces, established a program of loans for veterans, and administered a
staggering growth in veterans insurance and disability pensions. Bradley was
unable to accomplish everything he had hoped to do in his two-year tenure, but
in the assessment of the press, he transformed "the medical service of the
Veterans Administration from a national scandal to a model establishment."
On 7 February 1948, Bradley succeeded Eisenhower as Army Chief of Staff
and became immersed in a series of problems arising from demobilization of the
Army, reform of its General Staff organization, and the unification of the armed
services. In the international crises which followed—notably the hardening of
relations with the Soviets—Bradley fought for both sufficient budgets and
modernization investments to meet the requirements imposed by the Truman
Doctrine and containment. The results were mixed. Congress rejected Army
proposals for universal military training, and the idea of bringing the National
Guard under direct Army control foundered on the shoals of political interest.
Bradley did, however, gain presidential support to extend the Selective Service
System, and in 1949 he managed to secure an increase in military pay that
brought it into line with equivalent civilian pay scales for the first since
well before World War II.
After eighteen months Bradley turned over the job of Army Chief of Staff
to J. Lawton Collins to accept another appointment. On 16 August 1949, he became
the first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), and on 22 September 1950
the 81st Congress officially promoted him to General of the Army with five
stars. He was the last officer in the American defense establishment to be
promoted to that rank, and the only one since World War II.
Bradley served two terms as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Those four years
were exceptionally difficult ones. Major disagreements between the Navy and the
Air Force over roles and missions had begun while Bradley was Army Chief of
Staff and continued into his tour as JCS Chairman. When debates over nuclear
deterrence and the value of conventional forces further exacerbated service
differences, Bradley played an important role as a mediator. Internationally, he
was involved in the creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
and the rearming of western Europe. He became the first Chairman of the Military
Committee of NATO on 5 October 1949, serving in that post through 1950 and
remaining as the U.S. representative to the NATO Military Committee until August
1953. A constant adviser to President Truman through the Korean War, Bradley
worked both to contain the conflict in Asia and to maintain a credible deterrent
against the anticipated Soviet attack in Europe.
On 15 August 1953, Bradley left active service. In the twenty-eight years
before his death in 1981, he occupied himself in industry and was periodically
consulted by civilian and military leaders. He retained an active interest in
the Army, spoke at its schools, and frequently visited units and met with
soldiers of all ranks.
A quiet but distinguished member of a distinguished class of West Point
graduates, Bradley typified a remarkable generation of Army officers.
Disheartened by a perceived lack of success in 1918, he pursued his duty
throughout some of the Army's most difficult years. The fact that war coincided
with Bradley's own professional maturity brought him promotion as the first
general officer in his class; George Marshall's confidence assured him a chance
to show his mettle.
There is no standard against which to compare Bradley as an army group
commander. During the fighting in Europe, his calm and effective presence was
important in times of crisis, as was his deft touch in handling subordinates. It
is difficult, for example, to imagine Patton without Bradley, who exploited the
talents of that volatile commander as well as any man could have done. Finally,
it was his superb wartime record, combined with his reputation for fairness and
honesty, that made him effective in what was probably his most difficult job,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
General of the Army Omar N. Bradley died on 8 April 1981, just a few
minutes after receiving an award from the National Institute of Social Sciences.
He was buried in Arlington Cemetery on 14 April 1981 with full military honors,
as the nation mourned the passing of this great and noble warrior.
Further Readings
There are many books about Bradley which describe his years of service to
the country. Of primary interest are his own recollections in A Soldier's
Story (1951) and with Clay Blair in A General's Life (1983). Also see
Charles Whiting's Bradley (1971). Because of the close relationship
between Eisenhower and Bradley during the war, standard works on Eisenhower are
also valuable sources of information on Bradley. See, for example, Eisenhower's Crusade
in Europe (1948) and Stephen E. Ambrose's The Supreme Commander (1970).
Russell F. Weigley provides a discussion of personalities and strategic and
operational considerations in his Eisenhower's Lieutenants: The Campaigns of
France and Germany, 1944-1945 (1981). The U.S. Army Center of Military
History's World War II series provides detailed accounts of strategic decisions
and the campaigns of the war in Europe. Those particularly useful for Bradley
are Command Decisions, edited by Kent Roberts Greenfield (1960); Gordon
A. Harrison's Cross-Channel Attack (1951); and Martin Blumenson's Breakout
and Pursuit (1961).
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