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<text>
<title>
(Before TIME) John J. Pershing:Old Soldier
</title>
<history>TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1910s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HEROES
Old Soldier
November 15, 1943
</hdr>
<body>
<p> On the walks and lawns of Washington's Walter Reed Hospital
the war-wounded push themselves around in wheel chairs or hobble
among the reddening leaves. In the afternoon they see a spare,
old straightbacked figure in dark civilian clothes who walks
slowly to the drive and hoists himself into a limousine. Even the
newest convalescent recognizes him. The face is chipped away by
age, the eyes dim. But it is the face on monuments, and the
bearing is still West Point. That's Black Jack Pershing, mister.
</p>
<p> It is the week of the Great Armistice that lost the world
a great war. Twenty-five years ago the ambulances were rolling
the hard-surfaced driveways of Walter Reed Hospital, bringing the
men out of the foreign valleys--from St. Mihiel, the Meuse, the
Somme. Today the ambulances roll again, bringing young men from
other valleys--from Nicosia, Salerno, Kiska, Guadalcanal.
</p>
<p> Twenty-Five Years. In his austere room at the hospital John
Joseph Pershing, 83, General of the Armies, shuffles around in
pajamas, reads newspapers, a few books, receives old soldier
friends. The nation has honored him, but the nation has not yet
discharged its debt in full.
</p>
<p> To a democratic U.S. he has willed an honorable military
tradition, though the nation has not always understood it.
</p>
<p> In 1917-18, when the A.E.F. was threatened with dissolution,
he kept it intact and built it up into an American Army.
</p>
<p> He had left that Army the sound precepts on which to build
a General Staff system, a nucleus of Pershing-trained officers
like its Chief of Staff George C. Marshall. The General of the
Armies could read with satisfaction now the unfolding history of
the greatest army the U.S. had ever had. And he could reflect on
the past. There was damn little else an old man could do. But in
his 83 years his eyes had more than once seen the glory of U.S.
arms.
</p>
<p> Glory, Glory.... The winds of a violent "peace" rattled the
cornfields of Linn County, Mo., in 1865. Little Jack Pershing was
five. People were singing Julia Ward Howe's new Battle Hymn of
the Republic and Pershing watched the ragged soldiers come back
from Appomattox. His father was sometimes farmer, sometimes
section foreman who raised his children on hard chores and
Pilgrim's Progress.
</p>
<p> Pershing was the eldest of nine and he split rails like his
hero Abe Lincoln. He also taught school and studied law until he
heard about West Point. Simply because he had the chance to get
a free education, he took up the career for which he was born.
John J. Pershing became a soldier.
</p>
<p> He was older than his classmates--22 as a plebe--a cold,
impersonal, plodding, thoroughgoing young man. He stood 30th in
a class of 77. In his last year he was president of his class and
cadet captain, too.
</p>
<p> Cavalryman. Pershing was graduated in '86. The hoofbeats of
the cavalry were in his ears. He galloped across South Dakota
over the graves of the Sioux. He taught military science at the
University of Nebraska and studied law, got a degree, thought of
quitting the service.
</p>
<p> In '98, he went to Cuba with the Negro 10th Cavalry. Lieut.
Pershing was 38. He was almost 40 when he was sent to the
Philippines and won his captaincy. He was a tough man and a hard
disciplinarian, though he had a sentimental affection for his
calling. He wrote to his classmates: "Drink deep thoughts of love
and affection for us all!" In 1905 he married the daughter of the
Hon. Francis E. Warren, Senator from Wyoming.
</p>
<p> General. T.R. had his eye on him. T.R. wanted to promote him
for the hard, impersonal way he had handled the Moro tribesmen
in Mindanao. Over the heads of 862 officers, including 257
captains, 364 majors, 110 colonels, T.R. made John J. Pershing
a brigadier.
</p>
<p> The brigadier general had a face like a sharp ax and a back
like a broomstick. He was all that the Academy taught its cadets
an officer should be. He had three daughters and one son. In
1915, a live coal fell from a basket-grate in a dining room in
the Presidio at San Francisco, set fire to the waxed floors.
Pershing's wife and three daughters, Helen, Anne, Mary, were
burned to death. All that was left to Brigadier General Pershing
was his six-year-old son.
</p>
<p> Washington ordered him to bring back Pancho Villa, who had
dared to cross the U.S. border on a raid. Pershing tracked the
rascal Villa down. But Washington changed its mind. Washington
told Pershing to let the rascal go and Pershing obeyed, tight-
lipped.
</p>
<p> It was 1917. A white-faced man stood before Congress and
cried: "Vessels...have been ruthlessly sent to the bottom without
warning and without thought of help or mercy for those on
board.... The world must be made safe for democracy." Woodrow
Wilson called on Congress to declare war.
</p>
<p> Commander in Chief. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker was a
dependable man. Mr. Wilson told him to closet himself for a few
days and recommend the officer who should take command of the
American Expeditionary Forces. Mr. Baker actually knew few
generals, except by name, but he had the records. The man he
chose was John J. Pershing, whom he had never seen.
</p>
<p> On June 13, 1917, Pershing landed in France. The Allies were
bled white by three years of vise-like war. They were low in
morale and committed to holding trenches, but their spirits rose
when Pershing and the A.E.F. arrived. The leaders of the British
and French were eager to absorb this fresh new blood into their
own thin blood streams.
</p>
<p> But Pershing had other ideas. The American forces must fight
as a unit, he said, and set his jaw. They could train better
under their own men; they would not become infected with the
Allies' pessimism. A victorious American Army would give the
nation prestige at the peace table, he thought. The U.S. must
keep its own military tradition; there would be other wars. Foch,
Clemenceau, Lloyd George bickered and bargained, Wilson and Baker
backed their man up. Pershing won his point. The American forces
trained and fought as a unit.
</p>
<p> Pershing also stood for his own tactics: an American Army
must be made ready to fight a war of movement, and the hell with
this hole-in-the-ground kind of thing. He was a sound tactician
and had studied his books; he stood up to British and French
veterans who had forgotten their early lessons. French commanders
incredulously watched U.S. soldiers spread chicken wire over
barbed-wire entanglements and storm the trenches of the Boche.
"You Americans have longer legs and bigger feet," said a French
general, shaking his head.
</p>
<p> There was one other great problem which beset the Commander
in Chief. He himself had had no training in General Staff work.
With a nucleus of trained officer graduates from Fort Leavenworth
staff school, he established a General Staff school in Langres,
France, and turned out men trained in supply and administration--537 of them.
</p>
<p> "Black Jack." The A.E.F. grew up. Pershing was methodical.
He made a fetish of writing things down in his clear, clipped
style--with no metaphors, pseudo or otherwise. He made the A.E.F.
drill. He insisted that infantrymen be taught to shoot, though
the French clucked. The French depended on hand grenades. He was
more than ever the spit-&-polish disciplinarian. To his officers
"Black Jack" (the nickname he picked up when he was with the
Negro 10th) was God. To the enlisted men he was both God and
devil. Some remembered him striding across a muddy field of
France with his face hard and his uniform immaculate. Others
remember him as "than sonuvabitch [who] roared past our column
in his big staff car, spattering every one of us with mud and
water from head to foot." He traced the successive phases of the
first Battle of the Marne by the graves of the dead and thought
of the "dreadful toll in human life." But he was a stern man and
believed in the attack.
</p>
<p> Armistice. In September 1918, Colonel George C. Marshall,
Chief of Operations for the First Army, finished the planning.
On the 12th the First Army attacked along the salient at St.
Mihiel. By the end of October the whole Meuse-Argonne front was
aflame. In the gumbo mud of France 117,000 men of the First Army
were dead or wounded. The German army was in retreat. On Oct. 30
Pershing wrote: "We should...continue the offensive until we
compel [Germany's] unconditional surrender."
</p>
<p> On Nov. 11, 1918, he rode through the bedlam of the Place
de la Concorde, staring with frigid disapproval at the
hysterical, joy-drunk mobs, who threatened to engulf him. His
heart and his tongue alike were prophetically bitter: the war,
though mercifully over, had not been won. Into sullen, unmolested
Germany marched a U.S. Army of Occupation. Pershing saw a future
that wishful, gentler men could not see.
</p>
<p> What Price Glory? The U.S was determined that it should not
happen again. The fast-dwindling group of those who believed in
preparedness wanted a National Defense Act to establish and keep
the framework of an army, so that the next time the U.S. would
be ready. Pershing was still busy in France; he sent Colonel John
McAuley Palmer to give advice, and Palmer framed an act settling
up stronger National Guard units, ROTCs. CMTCs and a Regular Army
of 280,000 men. Pershing came home to testify before Congress.
He wanted a democratic Army. This was a democratic Army. The bill
was passed. But it was an emasculated version.
</p>
<p> The pacifists--and the whole U.S. was rapidly turning
pacifist, or at least anti-war--emasculated it. They wanted no
Army. They thought that war could be stopped. Their propaganda
appealed to a war-sick nation. That propaganda was still going
strong in 1940. "World Peaceways Inc." spread its poster ads
through the U.S. press: pictures of a maimed veteran captioned
"Hello, Sucker," of a chemist bending over a fiendish brew ("If
He's Lucky a Million Men Will Die!"), of an infant on a meatblock
("Nice Fresh Babies--79 cents a Pound"). The pacifist group
killed compulsory military training out of the Defense Act of
1920; the regular Army was later cut to 125,000; Stallings' What
Price Glory? had a long run. Everyone vowed again and again that
it must not happen again.
</p>
<p> Pershing was mentioned for the Presidency, but turned his
stiff back. He was much admired by widows and young women. He
received honorary degrees from 18 universities and the
decorations of 13 nations and three States.
</p>
<p> In 1919 Pershing was made General of the Armies of the U.S.
by Act of Congress. In 1924, when he was 64, he was placed
reverently on a shelf.
</p>
<p> The Price of Peace. In 1938 the old warrior fell into a
sudden coma, ill with rheumatism, arthritis, uremic poisoning.
He was 78. The newspapers trotted out their ready-made obits. But
two months later he showed up at his son's wedding. In 1939 he
made his last pilgrimage to France.
</p>
<p> In 1940, on a warm afternoon in May, John J. Pershing
stepped out of a limousine at the White House and clumped across
the porch leaning on his cane. France had been invaded.
Photographers raised their cameras but the old man wrathfully
lifted his cane.
</p>
<p> No cameras clicked until Black Jack put his cane aside and
drew himself to attention--grey Homburg untilted, old eyes
straight, grey mustache clipped, chin drawn in, black suit
pressed to razor edges, black shoes gleaming. Then he wheeled and
marched inside to talk with the President. A newsman said softly:
"Here we go again."
</p>
<p> It was Dec. 7, 1941. That afternoon Pershing went driving
in Rock Creek Park. For 23 years his country had done its best
to forget that it had a military tradition. It had reduced its
Army to impotency, had neglected its training. Twenty-three years
before, his nation had refused to heed his warning: "The complete
victory can only be obtained by continuing the war until we force
unconditional surrender." Now it was Pearl Harbor and the day of
reckoning.
</p>
<p> Old Man. That evening the General of the Armies returned to
Walter Reed Hospital. He read the newspapers. Every two or three
weeks he was pleased to receive the great Marshall; occasionally
he received calls from old friends; from son Warren, a captain
of Engineers.
</p>
<p> Marshall could talk freely and respectfully with his old
chief, and the old man, who had seen greatness in the youngsters
in 1917, had no suggestions to make. But he was angry when he was
neglected. He was piqued when Ike Eisenhower went off to Europe
without taking leave of him. He glared and snapped: "I don't even
know the man." Every day he rose at 8, draped a bathrobe over his
pajamas and watched his breakfast roll in--grapefruit, cereal,
soft-boiled egg, toast, coffee. There were few things an old man
could enjoy; but he damn well did like and insist on grapefruit,
and for lunch a chop and spinach. He liked spinach. No cigars.
Gave up cigars 35 years ago on the advice of his doctor. A touch
of whiskey now and then.
</p>
<p> He read the 50 or 60 factual volumes in the plain bookcase
and drove in Rock Creek Park. He threatened to move to a hotel.
Major General Shelley Marietta, head of Walter Reed, talked him
out of it. He refused to pose for a picture, even at the request
of the War Department. To hell with the War Department. He was
living out an old warrior's life.
</p>
<p> The Room. In the State Department building is an office with
a door marked in gold letters, "General of the Armies." A
beribboned colonel sits inside the door. General Pershing's own
room is beyond. The room is blue-carpeted; on its walls hang four
portraits of America's dead and buried Generals: Washington,
Grant, Sherman, Sheridan. There is a fireplace, but there is no
fire in it. There is a large desk but no one sits there. The long
mirror hanging over the cold fireplace reflects no living
presence. The office of the General of the Armies is empty.
</p></body>
</article>
</text>