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{{Infobox military person
{{Infobox military person
|name=William Ruthven Smith
|name=William Ruthven Smith
|image=William R. Smith.jpg
|image=19-smith-wr l.jpg
|caption=
|caption=
|birth_date={{Birth date|1868|04|02}}
|birth_date={{Birth date|1868|04|02}}
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|placeofburial_label=
|placeofburial_label=
|placeofburial=
|placeofburial=
|birth_place=[[Nashville, Tennessee]]
|birth_place=[[Nashville, Tennessee]], United States
|death_place=[[Sewanee, Tennessee]]
|death_place=[[Sewanee, Tennessee]], United States
|placeofburial_coordinates = <!-- {{coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} -->
|placeofburial_coordinates = <!-- {{coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} -->
|nickname=
|nickname=
|allegiance={{flag|United States of America|1891}}
|allegiance={{flag|United States|1891}}
|branch={{army|USA}}
|branch={{army|United States}}
|serviceyears=1892 - 1932
|serviceyears=1892−1932
|servicenumber=0-71
|rank=[[File:US-O8 insignia.svg|35px]] [[Major general (United States)|Major General]]
|battles=[[World War I]]
|unit=
|rank=[[File:US-O8 insignia.svg|25px]] [[Major general (United States)|Major General]]
|commands=[[List of United States Military Academy alumni (Superintendents)|Superintendent of the United States Military Academy]]
|unit=[[File:USA - Army Field Artillery Insignia.svg|25px]] [[Field Artillery Branch (United States)|Field Artillery Branch]]<br>[[File:Coast Artilliary Insignia.png|25px]] [[United States Army Coast Artillery Corps|Coast Artillery Corps]]
|awards=[[Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army)|Distinguished Service Medal]]
|commands=[[371st Sustainment Brigade (United States)|62nd Field Artillery Brigade]]<br>[[37th Infantry Division (United States)|37th Division]]<br>[[36th Infantry Division (United States)|36th Division]]<br>[[Superintendent of the United States Military Academy]]
|awards=[[Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army)|Army Distinguished Service Medal]]
|relations=
|relations=
|laterwork=
|laterwork=
}}
}}
[[Major general (United States)|Major General]] '''William Ruthven Smith''' (April 2, 1868 – July 15, 1941) was a career [[United States Army]] officer who commanded the [[36th Infantry Division (United States)|36th Division]] during its deployment in France during the final months of [[World War I]]. He later became [[Superintendent of the United States Military Academy]] at [[West Point, New York]].

'''William Ruthven Smith''' (April 2, 1868 – July 15, 1941) was a career [[United States Army]] officer who commanded the [[36th Infantry Division (United States)|36th Infantry Division]] during its deployment in France during [[World War I]] and later became [[List of United States Military Academy alumni (Superintendents)|Superintendent of the United States Military Academy]] at [[West Point, New York]].


==Early life==
==Early life==
William Ruthven Smith was born on April 2, 1868, in [[Nashville, Tennessee]], son of Robert McPhail and Lititia (Trimble) Smith. The younger Smith attended [[Vanderbilt University]]<ref name=TSHA>Texas State Historical Association, ''Handbook of Texas Online''</ref> and was appointed to the [[United States Military Academy]] from his native state, graduating 10th out of 62 cadets in his class of 1892.<ref name=Cullum3459>Cullum, ''Biographical register'', #3459</ref>
William Ruthven Smith was born on April 2, 1868, in [[Nashville, Tennessee]], son of Robert McPhail and Lititia (Trimble) Smith. The younger Smith attended [[Vanderbilt University]]<ref name=TSHA>Texas State Historical Association, ''Handbook of Texas Online''</ref> and was appointed to the [[United States Military Academy]] from his native state, graduating 10th out of 62 cadets in his class of 1892.<ref name=Cullum3459>Cullum, ''Biographical register'', #3459</ref> His classmates included numerous men who would later attain [[general officer]] rank, such as [[Charles Pelot Summerall]], [[Tracy Campbell Dickson]], [[Frank W. Coe]], [[Julian Robert Lindsey]], [[James Ancil Shipton]], [[Louis Chapin Covell]], [[Preston Brown (United States Army officer)|Preston Brown]], [[George Blakely]], [[Robert Mearns]], [[Peter Weimer Davison]], [[Howard Russell Hickok]], [[Henry Howard Whitney]], [[John E. Woodward]], [[John McAuley Palmer (United States Army officer)|John McAuley Palmer]] and [[George Columbus Barnhardt]].


==Military career==
==Military career==
[[File:William Ruthven Smith - Soldiers all; portraits and sketches of the men of the A. E. F. (1920) (14759353736).jpg|thumb|left|Portrait of Major General William Ruthven Smith.]]
Smith's early postings alternated between garrison service in [[field artillery]] and teaching at West Point as instructor of the separate subjects of [[chemistry]], [[mathematics]], [[Ammunition#Ordnance ammunition|ordnance]], and [[gun]]nery. Made [[Captain (United States)|captain]] of the new [[Coast Artillery Corps]] in 1901, he was a student of the school of submarine defense and commanded [[Fort Monroe]] in 1908. In the years preceding [[World War I]], Smith commanded anti-submarine technology schools and departments, in early 1917 stretching "the first submarine net put down in America, 2000 yards long, 84 feet at deepest point, extending from Fort Monroe to Fort Wool and closing entrance to [[Hampton Roads]]"<ref name=Cullum3459/>


Smith's early postings alternated between garrison service in [[field artillery]] and teaching at West Point as instructor of the separate subjects of [[chemistry]], [[mathematics]], [[Ammunition#Ordnance ammunition|ordnance]], and [[gun]]nery. Made [[Captain (United States)|captain]] of the new [[Coast Artillery Corps]] in 1901, he was a student of the school of submarine defense and commanded [[Fort Monroe]] in 1908. In December 1901, Smith married Mary Prince Davis, the daughter of Brigadier General [[George B. Davis]].{{sfn|Davis|1998|p=341}} They were the parents of two children who died young and two who lived to adulthood, Katherine Alexander Smith and Colonel William R. Smith Jr.{{sfn|Davis|1998|p=341}} In the years preceding [[World War I]], Smith commanded anti-submarine technology schools and departments, in early 1917 stretching "the first submarine net put down in America, 2000 yards long, 84 feet at deepest point, extending from Fort Monroe to Fort Wool and closing entrance to [[Hampton Roads]]"<ref name=Cullum3459/>
Promoted to [[Colonel (United States)|colonel]] of the Coast Artillery Corps in May, 1917, Smith was made a [[Brigadier general (United States)|brigadier general]] of the [[National Army (USA)|National Army]] and assigned to train the 62nd Field Artillery Brigade, 37th Division (Ohio National Guard). After training that command for nine months at [[Camp Sheridan (Alabama)|Camp Sheridan]], [[Alabama]], Smith traveled with the Guard unit to its embarkation for Europe, but was left on the docks when their ships departed on June 10, 1918, by order of the War Department.<ref name=Cullum3459/>


Smith was given command of the [[36th Infantry Division (United States)|36th Infantry Division]] and promoted to [[Major general (United States)|major general]] of the National Army in the Summer of 1918. After arriving in [[Brest, France]], the 36th Division, Smith established a combat course for training at [[Bar-sur-Aube]].<ref name=TSHA/> In October 1918, Smith led the 36th Division while with [[2nd Infantry Division (United States)|2nd Division]] it was attached to the French [[Fourth Army (France)|Fourth Army]] under [[Henri Gouraud (French Army officer)|Henri Gouraud]] on its push to the [[Aisne River]].<ref =WhiteVI>White, ''36th Division in World War I'', Ch. VI</ref> Smith remained in command of the division's demobilization in June 1919, when his National army rank dissolved, his rank reverted again to colonel, U.S. Army.<ref name=TSHA/>
Promoted to [[Colonel (United States)|colonel]] of the Coast Artillery Corps in May, 1917, the month following the [[American entry into World War I]], Smith was made a [[Brigadier general (United States)|brigadier general]] of the [[Army of the United States|National Army]] and assigned to train the [[371st Sustainment Brigade (United States)|62nd Field Artillery Brigade]], part of the [[37th Infantry Division (United States)|37th Division]] (Ohio National Guard). After training that command for nine months at [[Camp Sheridan (Alabama)|Camp Sheridan]], [[Alabama]], Smith traveled with the Guard unit to its embarkation for Europe, but was left on the docks when their ships departed on June 10, 1918, by order of the [[United States Department of War|War Department]].<ref name=Cullum3459/>


[[File:111-SC-40509 - NARA - 55240141 Major General William R. Smith ; Brig.Gen. Hulen ; Brig.Gen. Pagram Whitworth. Lignieres, Yonne, France (cropped).jpg|thumb|right|The commander of the 36th Division, Major General William R. Smith (left), together with his two infantry brigade commanders, Brigadier General [[John Augustus Hulen|John A. Hulen]], commanding the 71st Brigade, and Brigadier General Pegram Whitworth, commanding the 72nd Brigade, pictured here at Lignieres, Yonne, France, December 8, 1918.]]
After promotion again to brigadier, this time of the regular army, Smith served in several garrison commands in the [[Philippines]], [[Fort Sam Houston]], Fort Monroe again, and [[Honolulu, Hawaii]], then returned to the academy, this time to occupy the superintendent's [[billet]] from 1928 until 1932.<ref name=TSHA/> During his tour as superintendent, Smith helped secure [[Stewart Air National Guard Base|Stewart Field]] in nearby [[Newburgh, New York]] as a base for the [[United States Army Air Corps|Army Air Corps]] and USMA pilot training.<ref name=Bryant181>Bryant, ''A Gift for Giving'', p. 181</ref>

Smith was given command of the [[36th Infantry Division (United States)|36th Division]] and promoted to [[Major general (United States)|major general]] of the National Army in the summer of 1918. After arriving in [[Brest, France]], the 36th Division, Smith established a combat course for training at [[Bar-sur-Aube]].<ref name=TSHA/> In October, Smith led the 36th Division while with the [[2nd Infantry Division (United States)|2nd Division]] it was attached to the [[Fourth Army (France)|French Fourth Army]] under [[Henri Gouraud (general)|Henri Gouraud]] on its push to the [[Aisne River]].<ref =WhiteVI>White, ''36th Division in World War I'', Ch. VI</ref> Smith remained in command of the division's demobilization in June 1919, seven months after the [[Armistice of 11 November 1918|Armistice with Germany]], when his National Army rank dissolved, his rank reverted again to colonel, U.S. Army.<ref name=TSHA/> For his service during the war he was awarded the Army Distinguished Service Medal, the citation for which reads:

{{Quote|The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Army Distinguished Service Medal to Brigadier General William Ruthven Smith, United States Army, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services to the Government of the United States, in a duty of great responsibility during World War I. As Commanding General, 36th Division, by his thorough and ceaseless efforts, coupled with a keen insight into the principles of military training, General Smith brought his division to such a high standard of discipline and proficiency as to achieve conspicuous results in a major operation without previous service under fire. The excellent conduct of his division subsequent to the signing of the armistice reflects great credit on him. His services have been of great value to the American Expeditionary Forces.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://valor.militarytimes.com/hero/18186|title=Valor awards for William R. Smith|publisher=}}</ref>}}

After promotion again to brigadier general, this time of the regular army, Smith served in several garrison commands in the [[Philippines]], [[Fort Sam Houston]], Fort Monroe again, and [[Honolulu, Hawaii]], then returned to the United States Military Academy, this time to occupy the superintendent's [[billet]], which he did from 1928 until 1932.<ref name=TSHA/> During his tour as superintendent, Smith helped secure [[Stewart Air National Guard Base|Stewart Field]] in nearby [[Newburgh, New York]] as a base for the [[United States Army Air Corps|Army Air Corps]] and USMA pilot training.<ref name=Bryant181>Bryant, ''A Gift for Giving'', p. 181</ref> Also during this period, his aide-de-camp was [[Floyd Lavinius Parks]], who became a lieutenant general after [[World War II]].


==Civilian career ==
==Civilian career ==
Line 40: Line 47:


==Death and legacy ==
==Death and legacy ==
He died on July 15, 1941, in [[West Point, New York]].{{sfn|Davis|1998|p=342}} Battery Smith at [[Fort Miles]], Delaware (also called Battery 118) was named for him, armed with two [[16"/50 caliber Mark 2 gun|16-inch guns]].<ref>[http://www.fortwiki.com/Battery_118 Battery 118 at FortWiki.com]</ref>
He died on July 15, 1941 in [[West Point, New York]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Davis Jr.|first=Henry Blaine|title=Generals in Khaki|publisher=Pentland Press, Inc.|year= 1998
|ISBN= 1571970886|oclc=40298151|page=342}}</ref> Battery Smith at [[Fort Miles]], Delaware (also called Battery 118) was named for him, armed with two [[16"/50 caliber Mark 2 gun|16-inch guns]].<ref>[http://www.fortwiki.com/Battery_118 Battery 118 at FortWiki.com]</ref>

==Notes==
{{Reflist|2}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
*{{cite book |last1=Bryant |first1=James C. |title=A Gift for Giving:the story of Lamar Rich Plunkett |url=https://books.google.com/?id=T64TrTPQ3-oC&pg=PA181 |year=1993 |publisher = Mercer University Press |isbn= 978-0-86554-430-7|page= 181 |chapter=7: War Years at West Point }}

*{{cite book |last1=Cullum |first1=George Washington |authorlink1=George Washington Cullum |others=Edward Singleton Holden, Charles Braden, Wirt Robinson |title=Biographical register of the officers and graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.: from its establishment, in 1802, to 1890, with the early history of the United States Military Academy |url=https://books.google.com/?id=F8wtAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA620 |accessdate=May 1, 2009 |edition=3 |series=3459 |volume=5 |year=1920 |publisher=[[Houghton Mifflin]] |location=New York |page=620 }}
==Bibliography==
*{{cite web |first= |last= |author=Texas State Historical Association |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=William Ruthven Smith |url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fsm74 |archiveurl= |work=[[Handbook of Texas Online]] |publisher= |location= |page= |pages= |language= |doi= |date= |month= |year= |archivedate= |accessdate=May 1, 2009 |quote= }}
*{{cite book |last1=Bryant |first1=James C. |title=A Gift for Giving:the story of Lamar Rich Plunkett |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T64TrTPQ3-oC&pg=PA181 |year=1993 |publisher = Mercer University Press |isbn= 978-0-86554-430-7|page= 181 |chapter=7: War Years at West Point }}
*{{cite web |first=White |last=Lonnie J. |author= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=36th Division in World War I |url=http://www.texasmilitaryforcesmuseum.org/36division/archives/wwi/white/chap6b.htm |archiveurl= |work= |publisher=Military History Associates |location= |page= |pages= |language= |doi= |date= |month= |year=1999 |archivedate= |accessdate=May 1, 2009 |quote= }}
*{{cite book |last1=Cullum |first1=George Washington |author-link1=George Washington Cullum |others=Edward Singleton Holden, Charles Braden, Wirt Robinson |title=Biographical register of the officers and graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.: from its establishment, in 1802, to 1890, with the early history of the United States Military Academy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F8wtAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA620 |access-date=May 1, 2009 |edition=3 |series=3459 |volume=5 |year=1920 |publisher=[[Houghton Mifflin]] |location=New York |page=620 }}
*{{cite journal |last=Wardrop |first=G. Douglas, ed. |date= June 1922|title=Army and Navy Aeronautics |journal=Aerial Age Weekly |volume=15 |issue=16 |page=416 |publisher=Aerial Age Company |location=New York |url=https://books.google.com/?id=PBAvAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA416 }}
*{{cite book|last=Davis|first=Henry Blaine Jr.|date=1998|title=Generals in Khaki|location=[[Raleigh, North Carolina]]|publisher=Pentland Press|isbn=1571970886|oclc=40298151}}
*{{cite web |author=Texas State Historical Association |title=William Ruthven Smith |url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fsm74 |work=[[Handbook of Texas Online]] |access-date=May 1, 2009 }}
*{{cite web |first=White |last=Lonnie J. |title=36th Division in World War I |url=http://www.texasmilitaryforcesmuseum.org/36division/archives/wwi/white/chap6b.htm |publisher=Military History Associates |year=1999 |access-date=May 1, 2009 }}
*{{cite journal |editor-last=Wardrop |editor-first=G. Douglas |date= June 1922|title=Army and Navy Aeronautics |journal=Aerial Age Weekly |volume=15 |issue=16 |page=416 |publisher=Aerial Age Company |location=New York |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PBAvAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA416 }}

==External links==
{{Commons category|William Ruthven Smith}}


{{s-start}}
{{s-start}}
{{s-mil}}
{{s-mil}}
{{s-bef|before=[[Edwin St. John Greble]] <small> (last permanent commander)</small>}}
{{succession box | before = [[Edwin B. Winans (U.S. Army general)|Edwin B. Winans]] | title = [[List of United States Military Academy alumni (Superintendents)|Superintendents of the United States Military Academy]] | years = 1929–1932| after = [[William Durward Connor]] }}
{{s-ttl|title=[[36th Infantry Division (United States)|Commanding General 36th Division]]|years=1918–1919}}
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{{s-end}}

{{United States Military Academy superintendents}}
{{United States Military Academy superintendents}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, William Ruthven}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, William Ruthven}}
[[Category:United States Army generals]]
[[Category:United States Military Academy alumni]]
[[Category:United States Military Academy alumni]]
[[Category:United States Army Coast Artillery Corps personnel]]
[[Category:United States Army Field Artillery Branch personnel]]
[[Category:1868 births]]
[[Category:1868 births]]
[[Category:1941 deaths]]
[[Category:1941 deaths]]
[[Category:19th-century United States Army personnel]]
[[Category:Superintendents of the United States Military Academy]]
[[Category:Superintendents of the United States Military Academy]]
[[Category:People from Nashville, Tennessee]]
[[Category:Military personnel from Nashville, Tennessee]]
[[Category:United States Army generals of World War I]]
[[Category:United States Army generals of World War I]]
[[Category:People from Sewanee, Tennessee]]
[[Category:People from Sewanee, Tennessee]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Distinguished Service Medal (US Army)]]
[[Category:United States Army generals]]
[[Category:Vanderbilt University alumni]]
[[Category:United States Military Academy faculty]]

Latest revision as of 18:36, 6 January 2024

William Ruthven Smith
Born(1868-04-02)April 2, 1868
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
DiedJuly 15, 1941(1941-07-15) (aged 73)
Sewanee, Tennessee, United States
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service1892−1932
Rank Major General
Service number0-71
Unit Field Artillery Branch
Coast Artillery Corps
Commands held62nd Field Artillery Brigade
37th Division
36th Division
Superintendent of the United States Military Academy
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal

Major General William Ruthven Smith (April 2, 1868 – July 15, 1941) was a career United States Army officer who commanded the 36th Division during its deployment in France during the final months of World War I. He later became Superintendent of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.

Early life[edit]

William Ruthven Smith was born on April 2, 1868, in Nashville, Tennessee, son of Robert McPhail and Lititia (Trimble) Smith. The younger Smith attended Vanderbilt University[1] and was appointed to the United States Military Academy from his native state, graduating 10th out of 62 cadets in his class of 1892.[2] His classmates included numerous men who would later attain general officer rank, such as Charles Pelot Summerall, Tracy Campbell Dickson, Frank W. Coe, Julian Robert Lindsey, James Ancil Shipton, Louis Chapin Covell, Preston Brown, George Blakely, Robert Mearns, Peter Weimer Davison, Howard Russell Hickok, Henry Howard Whitney, John E. Woodward, John McAuley Palmer and George Columbus Barnhardt.

Military career[edit]

Portrait of Major General William Ruthven Smith.

Smith's early postings alternated between garrison service in field artillery and teaching at West Point as instructor of the separate subjects of chemistry, mathematics, ordnance, and gunnery. Made captain of the new Coast Artillery Corps in 1901, he was a student of the school of submarine defense and commanded Fort Monroe in 1908. In December 1901, Smith married Mary Prince Davis, the daughter of Brigadier General George B. Davis.[3] They were the parents of two children who died young and two who lived to adulthood, Katherine Alexander Smith and Colonel William R. Smith Jr.[3] In the years preceding World War I, Smith commanded anti-submarine technology schools and departments, in early 1917 stretching "the first submarine net put down in America, 2000 yards long, 84 feet at deepest point, extending from Fort Monroe to Fort Wool and closing entrance to Hampton Roads"[2]

Promoted to colonel of the Coast Artillery Corps in May, 1917, the month following the American entry into World War I, Smith was made a brigadier general of the National Army and assigned to train the 62nd Field Artillery Brigade, part of the 37th Division (Ohio National Guard). After training that command for nine months at Camp Sheridan, Alabama, Smith traveled with the Guard unit to its embarkation for Europe, but was left on the docks when their ships departed on June 10, 1918, by order of the War Department.[2]

The commander of the 36th Division, Major General William R. Smith (left), together with his two infantry brigade commanders, Brigadier General John A. Hulen, commanding the 71st Brigade, and Brigadier General Pegram Whitworth, commanding the 72nd Brigade, pictured here at Lignieres, Yonne, France, December 8, 1918.

Smith was given command of the 36th Division and promoted to major general of the National Army in the summer of 1918. After arriving in Brest, France, the 36th Division, Smith established a combat course for training at Bar-sur-Aube.[1] In October, Smith led the 36th Division while with the 2nd Division it was attached to the French Fourth Army under Henri Gouraud on its push to the Aisne River.[4] Smith remained in command of the division's demobilization in June 1919, seven months after the Armistice with Germany, when his National Army rank dissolved, his rank reverted again to colonel, U.S. Army.[1] For his service during the war he was awarded the Army Distinguished Service Medal, the citation for which reads:

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Army Distinguished Service Medal to Brigadier General William Ruthven Smith, United States Army, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services to the Government of the United States, in a duty of great responsibility during World War I. As Commanding General, 36th Division, by his thorough and ceaseless efforts, coupled with a keen insight into the principles of military training, General Smith brought his division to such a high standard of discipline and proficiency as to achieve conspicuous results in a major operation without previous service under fire. The excellent conduct of his division subsequent to the signing of the armistice reflects great credit on him. His services have been of great value to the American Expeditionary Forces.[5]

After promotion again to brigadier general, this time of the regular army, Smith served in several garrison commands in the Philippines, Fort Sam Houston, Fort Monroe again, and Honolulu, Hawaii, then returned to the United States Military Academy, this time to occupy the superintendent's billet, which he did from 1928 until 1932.[1] During his tour as superintendent, Smith helped secure Stewart Field in nearby Newburgh, New York as a base for the Army Air Corps and USMA pilot training.[6] Also during this period, his aide-de-camp was Floyd Lavinius Parks, who became a lieutenant general after World War II.

Civilian career[edit]

After retirement, Smith returned to his native state of Tennessee, settling in Sewanee where he became superintendent of the local military academy (now St. Andrew's-Sewanee School) and served in that capacity until his death.[1]

Death and legacy[edit]

He died on July 15, 1941, in West Point, New York.[7] Battery Smith at Fort Miles, Delaware (also called Battery 118) was named for him, armed with two 16-inch guns.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Texas State Historical Association, Handbook of Texas Online
  2. ^ a b c Cullum, Biographical register, #3459
  3. ^ a b Davis 1998, p. 341.
  4. ^ White, 36th Division in World War I, Ch. VI
  5. ^ "Valor awards for William R. Smith".
  6. ^ Bryant, A Gift for Giving, p. 181
  7. ^ Davis 1998, p. 342.
  8. ^ Battery 118 at FortWiki.com

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]

Military offices
Preceded by
Edwin St. John Greble (last permanent commander)
Commanding General 36th Division
1918–1919
Succeeded by
Post deactivated
Preceded by Superintendent of the United States Military Academy
1929–1932
Succeeded by