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Command of Honor

General Lucian Truscott's Path to Victory in World War II

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The inspiring true story of General Lucian Truscott, one of the greatest combat commanders of World War II.
General Lucian K. Truscott was an American military giant: tough, resourceful, and devoted to the men under his command. Unlike the more flamboyant high-ranking European field commanders of the time, he was neither arrogant nor in pursuit of personal glory-but rather a loyal, humble man who led his troops from the front and fought every enemy with a tenacity that made him one of the most respected and revered commanders in the U.S. Army.
In Command of Honor, author H. Paul Jeffers chronicles the life of this American hero. For the first time, the life of Truscott is revealed: his ramshackle childhood in Texas and Oklahoma, his extraordinary combat service, and his peacetime duties. But above all, this is a story of leadership and sacrifice by a man who lived for duty, honor, and courage-a man who would become a legend in the annals of U.S. Army history.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 14, 2008
      Jeffers (Onward We Charge
      ), a former broadcast journalist and prolific author, chronicles the career of one of the forgotten heroes of WWII in this informative and sprightly popular biography. Born in Texas and raised in Oklahoma, Lucian Truscott (1895–1965) joined the army when war was declared in 1917, and though he spent the war on the Mexican border as a second lieutenant with the 17th Cavalry, he remained in the postwar army, acquiring a reputation as “a hell-raising cavalryman.” He also was a prime mover in turning the postwar horse cavalry “into a mechanized force.” After Pearl Harbor, Truscott went to England, where he set up an American-style commando unit, the First Ranger Battalion. He served as General Patton’s deputy for the invasion of North Africa, and as a commander in the invasions of Sicily and Anzio. Since most of his wartime service was in Italy—the “forgotten front”—and the “unpretentious” General Truscott didn’t seek attention, his crucial role in the Allied victory has been overshadowed by others. Students of military history will welcome this first—and long overdue—biography.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2008
      The distinguished Lt. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott Jr. has long needed a biography for general readers, and that is what this readable, if rambling, volume is. Raised in the Southwest, Truscott joined the army as a 90-day wonder in 1917 and remained in the cavalry during the interwar period. A colonel at the outbreak of World War II, he successively organized the first Ranger battalion, led a combat team ashore in French North Africa, commanded the Third Infantry Division in Italy and a corps in southern France, and after the war succeeded Patton in command of the Third Army during occupation duty in Germany. Retired for medical reasons, he finished out his public service as chief of operations for the CIA and the rest of a long and happy family life. A fine supplement to Truscotts memoirs, Command Missions (1954), and a useful, agreeable addition to WWII shelves.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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