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Matthew Ridgway

Matthew Bunker Ridgway (March 3, 1895 - March 1993) was an American military general. His major commands were in the United States Army where he was most famous for salvaging the United Nations war effort in the Korean War.

Born in Fort Monroe, Virginia, he graduated West Point in 1917, and was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army. After returning to West Point as an instructor in Spanish the year after he graduated, Ridgway completed the officers' course at the Infantry School in Fort Benning, Georgia, after which he was given command of the 15th Infantry. This was followed by a posting to Nicaragua, where he helped supervise free elections in 1927.

In 1930, he became an advisor to the Governor General of the Philippines. A few years later, he attended the Command and General Staff School in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas; at the same time (the mid-1930s), he was Assistant Chief of Staff of VI Corps. Thereafter, he held positions of Deputy Chief of Staff (2nd Army) and Assistant Chief of Staff (4th Army) of two army units. General George Marshall was impressed, and soon after the outbreak of World War II, he assigned Ridgway to the War Plans Division.

In August 1942, Ridgway was promoted to brigadier general, and was given command of the 82nd Airborne Division, one of the army's two airborne assault divisions. He helped plan the airborne invasion of Sicily, in 1943, and a year later, he helped plan the airborne operations on D-Day. In the Normandy operations, he jumped with his troops, which fought for 33 days in advancing to St-Sauveur-le-Vicomte. In September of 1944, Ridgway was given the command of the XVIII Airborne Corps, and led his troops into Germany. The year after, he was promoted to lieutenant general.

He held a command at Luzon for some time in 1945, before being given command of the US forces in the Mediterranean Theatre, also gaining the title of Deputy Supreme Allied Commander, Mediterranean. He was given command of US forces in the Caribbean in the late 1940s, before being given the position of Deputy Chief of Staff, under chief of staff General Joe L. Collins.

Ridgway's most important command assignment occured in 1950, upon the death of Lieutenant General Walton Walker. Upon Walker's death, he received command of the 8th US Army, which deployed in South Korea. He led his troops in the counter-offensive in 1951, and when General Douglas MacArthur was sent back to the U.S., Ridgway was promoted to general, and given command of United Nations forces in Korea.

Military historians generally credit Ridgway with turning the 8th US Army from a defeated, broken army, into one that fought the overwhelming masses of troops from the People's Republic of China to a standstill. During this period, Ridgway's leadership by personal example, as well as his through knowledge of basic military operational principles, set a leadership standard few in US Army history could match.

In May 1952, Ridgway replaced General Dwight D. Eisenhower as the Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (SACEUR). However, he upset other European military leaders by surrounding himself with American staff, and returned to the U.S. to replace General Collins as the Chief of Staff of the United States Army. In that position, Ridgway is credited by historians as having delayed US entry into the Vietnam War, when President Eisenhower asked for his assessment of military involvement in the situation. In response, Ridgway prepared a comprehensive outline of the massive commitment that would be necessary, which dissuaded the President from intervening. However, the experience sorely tested the relationship Ridgway had enjoyed during World War II with Eisenhower, and he retired from the US Army in 1955.

The year after, he published his autobiography, The Memoirs of Matthew B. Ridgway. For a while, he held the position of chairman of the board of trustees of the Mellon Institute for Industrial Research in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He died in March of 1993, with the permanent rank of general in the United States Army.




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