Jump to content

Major General's Dress Blue Uniform- DSC, POW, Army Security Agency Chief


CNY Militaria
 Share

Recommended Posts

CNY Militaria

I was very happy to add this to my collection recently. The jacket and cap belonged to Major General Charles G. D-E-N. H-O.L-M. Here are his career highlights, of which there are many, as taken from his obituary.

 

On the night of May 5, 1943, then-Lt. Col. D. was among 464 U.S. and British prisoners of war who were marched though the wrecked docks of Tunis and loaded onto a freighter for passage to Italian stockades. Lt. Col. D., commander of the 1st Battalion of the 16th Infantry, and 150 of his men had been captured a few days earlier during fierce fighting against German forces in the rugged mountains of northern Tunisia.

 

Col. D. and his fellow prisoners -- all of them terrified, most of them suffering from dysentery -- were locked in the ship's dank hold while, in Atkinson's words, "near misses opened seams in the hull and cannon fire riddled the upper decks. German anti-aircraft crews answered, and after a second attack blue smoke draped the listing vessel."

With his ship slowly sinking, the Italian captain managed to head it toward Tunis harbor. A third Allied attack landed a bomb in the forecastle; it was a dud. Atkinson quoted a lieutenant: "Not one of us doubted the transport was going to sink. We began beating the cage and yelling to be released."

 

After a fourth attack, the Italian crew abandoned ship, and the crewless captain beached the freighter on an even keel several hundred yards offshore. He and his German gunners freed the prisoners and rowed away in the last remaining lifeboat. As the attacks continued throughout the afternoon of May 7, Col. D's men draped across the deck large red crosses they had shaped out of upholstery ripped from the ship's saloon. Allied pilots failed to see the crosses or considered them a ruse.

 

The ordeal ended when several British soldiers swam ashore during the night seeking help, and a doughty Frenchman in a motorboat managed to persuade approaching Allied forces to halt the bombardment. According to Atkinson, Col. D reported more than 4,000 cannon and machine-gun holes in the ship's hull. One man was killed, three wounded.

 

He was born in Pittsburgh and graduated from West Point in 1938. After his service in North Africa as executive officer and commander of the 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry Division, he became commander of the 16th Infantry Battalion and the 143rd Infantry Regiment, 36th Infantry Division, seeing action in Sicily and other parts of Italy and across the Rhine River.

 

In a Sicily invasion diary account that appeared in Stars and Stripes on July 17, 1943, soldier James A. Burchard recounted how, a few days earlier, a buddy of his named Johnson, with Col. D and two other officers, had just topped a hill in a Jeep when a shell exploded nearby. One was killed outright, another was hit in the chest and Col. D was hit in the left shoulder. Desperately trying to get the officer with the chest wound back to camp, Johnson steered while Col. D worked the pedals.

 

For his service during the war, he received the Distinguished Service Cross, two Silver Stars, two Bronze Star Medals and two Purple Hearts. After the war, he served at the Army ground forces headquarters; at West Point; at the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa.; in Tehran; and at the Pentagon. He spent several years in Japan, overseeing intelligence efforts across Indochina.

 

From 1965 to 1973, he was commanding general of the Army Security Agency, where he supervised the integration with the rest of Army military intelligence into the present-day U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command. He was inducted into the Military Intelligence Corps Hall of Fame in 1988.

 

Gen. D retired as a major general in 1973. He didn't talk much about his wartime exploits, although he told his son of the Tunis ordeal about six months before his death, just before he lost the ability to speak. His reticence was typical of his generation. In other respects, he was a pacifist, his son recalled. He couldn't stand being around guns.

 

Other research has shown that he was known for wearing wrinkled, unkempt uniforms, having long hair, and not wearing his ribbons and awards. A true war hero in every respect.

DSCN2433.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

CNY Militaria

He did receive one (it was instituted in 1985), but wouldn't be reflected on this uniform since he retired in 1973.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

CNY Militaria

Thanks for all of the comments. A few interesting notes about him that I found during research:

 

He would wear a huge fur coat over his uniform while driving around in a sports car, and often had long sideburns. When an MP once asked him how he could have the sideburns, he replied that he was on leave, but asked who would attempt to correct him anyways?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...