GENERAL DOUGLAS MACARTHUR - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 03/12/1932 - HFSID 47121
Sale Price $1,360.00
Reg. $1,600.00
DOUGLAS MacARTHUR
MacArthur sends a sincere letter in regards to a woman who had lost her husband.
Typed Letter Signed: "Douglas MacArthur" as General, Chief of Staff, 2½ pages, 7x9. War Department, Office of the Chief of Staff, Washington, D.C., 1932 March 12. To Mrs. Walter S. Schuyler, Carmel, California. Sends condolences upon the death of her husband, Brigadier General Walter S. Schuyler, United States Army, Retired, and goes into great detail on "The long and eventful military career of General Schuyler", which "extended over a period of nearly forty-three years' active commissioned service....". Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964) graduated #1 in his class at West Point (1903) and rose to brigadier general as a combat leader in France during World War I. He was named US Army Chief of Staff in 1930, and lost popularity by forcibly expelling the Depression era Bonus Army from Washington (1932). Through most of the 1930s, he was chief military advisor to the Philippines, a US protectorate preparing for independence. He commanded U.S. Army forces in the Far East (1941-1942), becoming Allied Supreme Commander in the Southwest Pacific in 1942. In December 1944, he was promoted to 5-star General of the Army. General MacArthur later accepted the surrender of Japan aboard the battleship Missouri on September 2, 1945. As Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers in charge of the Occupation of Japan, MacArthur presided over a sweeping and largely successful transformation of Japan, including a new, democratic constitution. Supreme Commander of United Nations forces in Korea (1950-1951), he was dismissed by President Harry S Truman in April 1951, for his continued public statements advocating extension of the war to Communist China. He supported Republican Dwight Eisenhower's successful Presidential candidacy in 1952, but had little influence on the new President, who negotiated peace in Korea instead of following MacArthur's recommendation to expand the war. After leaving the Army, MacArthur gave two well remembered speeches: his farewell address to the US Congress (1951) and a final speech at West Point (1962).Lightly creased. Folds, horizontal fold at the tops of the "M" and "t" in MacArthur. 1-inch circular stain on 2nd page at upper margin. Overall, fine condition.
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