| General Dwight Eisenhower | |||
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Dwight David Eisenhower, born in Denison, Texas, on October 14th, 1890; died in Washington, D.C., on March 28th, 1969. US Army officer, 34th President of the United States of America. Born in Texas, Dwight Eisenhower grew up in Abilene, Kansas. Between
1911 and 1915, he attended the West Point Military Academy; he was not
able to take part in actual military action during WWI, having been assigned
training duties. He followed courses at the Command and General Staff
School in Leavenworth, Kansas, in 1925, and later at the Army Staff College
in Washington, D.C., from which he graduated in 1928. He served on several
General Staff positions during the years before the US involvement in
WWII. In 1940 and 1941, he was Executive Officer with the 15th Infantry Regiment,
then Chief of Staff, 3rd Division, and finally Chief of Staff, 3rd Army.
In 1942, the Army's Chief of Staff, George Marshal, was looking for new
faces for operational command postings. In March, he appointed Eisenhower
as Chief of Operations Division, and two months later sent him to London
as Commander of US forces in Europe. In 1942, Eisenhower took part in the discussions of the Combined Chiefs
of Staff to determine how best to attack Germany, and he was given the
command of Operation Torch, the invasion of North Africa, which started
on November 8th, 1942. Then, in July 1943, Eisenhower led the invasion of Sicily. The ground
forces involved in that operation included the US 7th Army and the British
8th Army, under General Bernard
Montgomery. The 1st Canadian Infantry Division was part of
the 8th Army. Eisenhower then took command of the joint ground forces
that landed in continental Italy on September 8th, 1943; he was not to
lead that campaign to its conclusion, however, being recalled to London
in December to take over the supreme command of the forces that prepared
the invasion of France. As Commander of SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force),
Eisenhower had to combine Allied armies, navies and air forces to build
the largest invading force ever assembled; to assist him, a general staff
strong of some 16,000 men and officers. Despite the success of D-Day, Eisenhower's command was not immune from
controversy. As the campaign of Normandy dragged on, Eisenhower and British
General Bernard
Montgomery found themselves in disagreement over the best strategy
to follow next. Eisenhower finally imposed his vision: a broad front of
all Allied troops that would march eastwards. A further crisis broke out
when, despite the insistence of Churchill,
he ordered the US troops that were closing in on Berlin to turn south,
thereby leaving the German capital under control of the Soviet armies. After the Armistice was signed on May 8th, 1945, Eisenhower commanded
the occupation forces for six months. He then succeeded George Marshal
as Chief of Staff of the US Army, a position he kept until 1948. From
April 2nd, 1951 to May 30th, 1952, Eisenhower was SACEUR (Supreme Allied
Commander, Europe). Eisenhower then left the military to run in the US presidential elections.
An immensely popular war hero, he won an easy victory and was inaugurated
on January 20th, 1953. He won a second term in 1956.·
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