James A. Woodruff

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Born(1877-06-19)19 June 1877
Died20 August 1969(1969-08-20) (aged 92)
AllegianceUnited States
James A. Woodruff
Born(1877-06-19)19 June 1877
Died20 August 1969(1969-08-20) (aged 92)
AllegianceUnited States
Branch United States Army
Service years1899–1943
Rank Major General
Commands
Conflicts
AwardsDistinguished Service Medal

James Albert Woodruff (19 June 1877 – 20 August 1969) was a military engineer and United States Army major general. During World War I, he supervised the harvesting, milling and shipping of lumber for the allied forces in France. As colonel of the 20th Engineers and Attached Service Troops, he had direct command of over 20,000 officers and men in fourteen battalions harvesting French timber and operating 282 sawmills.[1] A skilled leader and educator, he held many other commands over the course of his 44-year military career.

Woodruff was born at Fort Shaw, Montana, the son of 1871 West Point graduate Charles A. Woodruff. As a military dependent, his family soon moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico. He lived in several more places before settling in San Francisco, where he began high school. Woodruff completed high school in Washington, D.C. and then attended St. Luke's Preparatory School in Wayne, Pennsylvania.[2] He entered the United States Military Academy in June 1895 with an appointment from his father's home state of Vermont, eventually becoming Cadet First Captain. Woodruff graduated first in his class in February 1899 and was commissioned in the Army Corps of Engineers.[2][3] He later graduated from the Army Engineer School in March 1901, the Army Staff College in July 1906 and the Army War College in May 1917.[4][5]

Military career

Family and later life

References

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