David Wooster King

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Lt. Col. David Wooster King (5 July 1893 – 5 September 1975) was an American Army officer, legionnaire and author.[1]

King was born in Wickford, Rhode Island, the son of Jose Berre King ( Hart) and Louise Wooster. His maternal grandfather Jerome Bonapart King had established the hugely successful family firm, Knickerbocker Plaster Mills, in New York. His uncle Vincent C. King was a New York Assemblyman in the 1860s.[2]

He was a student at Harvard University from 1912–1914, he subsequently enlisted in the French Foreign Legion in August 1917. He later transferred to the French Army in 1915[verification needed]

In November 1917 was commissioned as a 1st lieutenant in the United States Army. The following month he received a diplomatic passport.

He was also an author, and wrote a book about his experiences in the Legion and the French Army, L.M.8046: An Intimate Story of the French Foreign Legion, alternate title: Ten Thousand Shall Fall, (NY: Duffield & Company, 1927).[3]

In 1926, his father's estate was worth more than $3 million (equivalent to $58,971,000 in 2025)[4]

He died in Chester, Connecticut.[1]

References

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