- General John J. Blackjack Pershing Blvd
- General John J. Blackjack Pershing
- General John J. Blackjack Pershingpershing
- General John J. Blackjack Pershing Las Vegas
'Black Jack' Pershing - Autographed Signed Check - Item 260346. Just two weeks after the Armistice, the soon-to-be General of the Armies pays a newspaper clipping service. Partly Printed Check signed: 'John J. Pershing', 7 1/2x3. Shop for General John J. Pershing related autographs, signed photographs, historical documents and manuscripts from the world's largest.
Pershing, the 'General of the Armies,' was an American army officer who had an illustrious tenure as the commander of the ‘American Expeditionary Forces' (AEF) on the Western Front during World War I. The war veteran was the president and the 'First Captain' of the ‘West Point' class of 1886. The Reason General John Pershing Was Called 'Black Jack' February is Black History Month in the United States. I have never done a specifically black history piece on this site, although I have from time to time suggested, for example, that Anglicans realise that the 'Anglican Communion' is now and should be the 'African Communion' with. 'Black Jack' Pershing is the highest ranked military officer buried here at Arlington National Cemetery, and the second highest ranked military officer in United States history. He was appointed General of the Armies, which indicates command over all branches of US armed services, on September 3, 1919. John Joseph 'Black Jack' Pershing (September 13, 1860 – July 15, 1948), was a general officer in the United States Army who led the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I. Pershing is the only person to be promoted in his own lifetime to the highest rank ever held in the United States Army— General of the Armies (a retroactive Congressional edict passed in 1976 promoted George Washington to the same rank but with higher seniority).
John Joseph 'Blackjack' Pershing (1860-1948) was born in Linn County, Missouri. He was a great American general who led the Expeditionary Force during World War I, and had a hand in many other campaigns during his life. General Pershing was also the Professor of Military Science at the University of Nebraska and taught tactics at The United States Military Academy at West Point. General Pershing was a strict disciplinarian, cold, distant, and demanding, but known well for being fair and just, as well as, being a tireless organizer, and a courageous leader of men.Career Highlights
- 1891 - Prof. of Military Science and Tactics, University of Nebraska
- 1898 - Serves in the Spanish-American War
- 1901 - Awarded rank of Captain
- 1906 - Promoted to rank of Brigadier General
- 1909 - Military Governor of Moro Province, Philippines
- 1916 - Promoted to rank of Major General
- 1919 - Promoted to General of the Armies
- 1921 - Appointed Appointed Chief of Staff
- 1924 - Retires from active duty Education West Point
Just before World War I, there were a number of terrorist attacks on the United States forces in the Philippines by Muslim extremists. So Gen. Pershing captured 50 terrorists and had them tied to posts for execution. He then had his men bring in two pigs and slaughter them in front of the now horrified terrorists. Muslims detest pork because they believe pigs are filthy animals. Some of them simply refuse to eat it, while others won't even touch pigs at all, nor any of their by-products. To them, eating or touching a pig, its meat, its blood, etc., is to be instantly barred from paradise (and those virgins) and doomed to hell. The soldiers then soaked their bullets in the pig blood, and proceeded to execute 49 of the terrorists by firing squad. The soldiers then dug a big hole, dumped in the terrorists' bodies and covered them in pig blood and entrails. They let the 50th man go. And for the next forty-two years, there was not a single Muslim extremist attack anywhere in the world. Maybe it is time for this segment of history to repeat itself? The question is, where do we find another Blackjack Pershing?
The recent decision to turn Pershing Park, near the White House, into a National World War I Memorial has re-focused attention on the commander of the American Expeditionary Force (A.E.F.)----General John J. 'Black Jack' Pershing. The man himself had a wide and varied career even before the War.
Early Life
If not quite born in a log cabin, Pershing's beginnings were humble enough. His father was a foreman in the Hannibal & St. Louis railroad, raising his growing family in a shanty near Laclede, Missouri. Pershing himself was born there on September 13, 1860.
When Pershing was still in his teens, he took his first job as a schoolteacher in an Afro-American school. Local bullies tried to attack Pershing for this, but he always fought back----and won. Meanwhile during the summer months he attended Kirkville Normal School, getting an A.B. degree in 1880.
And then came the moment that changed the rest of his life, and that of many other people. By chance, Pershing came across an ad for West Point, seeking 'honest, strong, God-fearing boys.' He took the entrance tests, achieved 'top honors,' and joined West Point in 1882.
General John J. Blackjack Pershing Blvd
Pershing graduated in 1886, 30th in a class of 77. His first posting was at Fort Bayard, New Mexico, where, among other things, he became a 1st lieutenant commanding a unit of Afro-American cavalry, the 'buffalo soldiers.' One theory is that this is where he got his nickname of 'Black Jack' Pershing. Another explanation is that it was an old army term for a punishment detail. Apparently, Pershing could be a strict disciplinarian at times.
Returning to West Point as an instructor, he served in Cuba during the 1898 Spanish American War, achieving the rank of Captain. In 1899, he was sent to the Philippines, to put down revolts by the Moros tribe.
In September 1904 President Theodore Roosevelt appointed him as a brigadier general, ahead of 862 other officers with more seniority. In 1914 Pershing was sent to the Mexican border. In 1916 and 1917 he entered Mexico itself, in a futile effort to catch Pancho Villa, who had been attacking Americans across the border.
General John J. Blackjack Pershing
World War I
Pershing became a major-general just before the United States entered World War I on April 6, 1917. This time he was appointed over the heads of 5 other major-generals, to become the commander of the AEF. On June 13, 1917, he landed in France, at Boulogne. Pershing's arrival in Paris was greeting by tens of thousands of well-wishers lining the streets, waving American flags and shouting 'Vive l'Amerique!'.
The American military at this time was a small, mostly inexperienced force, the result of decades of neglect and budget-cutting. It would take time to turn it into a professional force numbering in the millions, and able to fight a major war.
Meanwhile, there soon followed a major development that would increase the pressure on Pershing in particular and the western front in general. Germany had defeated Russia on the eastern front, imposing the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in January 1918, whereby Germany occupied eastern Europe almost as far as Moscow, a continent-sized empire. This freed up a large number of German soldiers to send to the western front in France and Belgium.
The recent decision to turn Pershing Park, near the White House, into a National World War I Memorial has re-focused attention on the commander of the American Expeditionary Force (A.E.F.)----General John J. 'Black Jack' Pershing. The man himself had a wide and varied career even before the War.
Early Life
If not quite born in a log cabin, Pershing's beginnings were humble enough. His father was a foreman in the Hannibal & St. Louis railroad, raising his growing family in a shanty near Laclede, Missouri. Pershing himself was born there on September 13, 1860.
When Pershing was still in his teens, he took his first job as a schoolteacher in an Afro-American school. Local bullies tried to attack Pershing for this, but he always fought back----and won. Meanwhile during the summer months he attended Kirkville Normal School, getting an A.B. degree in 1880.
And then came the moment that changed the rest of his life, and that of many other people. By chance, Pershing came across an ad for West Point, seeking 'honest, strong, God-fearing boys.' He took the entrance tests, achieved 'top honors,' and joined West Point in 1882.
General John J. Blackjack Pershing Blvd
Pershing graduated in 1886, 30th in a class of 77. His first posting was at Fort Bayard, New Mexico, where, among other things, he became a 1st lieutenant commanding a unit of Afro-American cavalry, the 'buffalo soldiers.' One theory is that this is where he got his nickname of 'Black Jack' Pershing. Another explanation is that it was an old army term for a punishment detail. Apparently, Pershing could be a strict disciplinarian at times.
Returning to West Point as an instructor, he served in Cuba during the 1898 Spanish American War, achieving the rank of Captain. In 1899, he was sent to the Philippines, to put down revolts by the Moros tribe.
In September 1904 President Theodore Roosevelt appointed him as a brigadier general, ahead of 862 other officers with more seniority. In 1914 Pershing was sent to the Mexican border. In 1916 and 1917 he entered Mexico itself, in a futile effort to catch Pancho Villa, who had been attacking Americans across the border.
General John J. Blackjack Pershing
World War I
Pershing became a major-general just before the United States entered World War I on April 6, 1917. This time he was appointed over the heads of 5 other major-generals, to become the commander of the AEF. On June 13, 1917, he landed in France, at Boulogne. Pershing's arrival in Paris was greeting by tens of thousands of well-wishers lining the streets, waving American flags and shouting 'Vive l'Amerique!'.
The American military at this time was a small, mostly inexperienced force, the result of decades of neglect and budget-cutting. It would take time to turn it into a professional force numbering in the millions, and able to fight a major war.
Meanwhile, there soon followed a major development that would increase the pressure on Pershing in particular and the western front in general. Germany had defeated Russia on the eastern front, imposing the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in January 1918, whereby Germany occupied eastern Europe almost as far as Moscow, a continent-sized empire. This freed up a large number of German soldiers to send to the western front in France and Belgium.
Now the question was, could the Allies on the western front, bled white by 3 years of war, hold out until the Americans arrived in sufficient numbers to make a difference? Germany's spring offensive did push back the Allied lines to within some 50 miles of Paris, but the Allied lines held and did not break.
Needless to say, the British, French, and others were frantic to get as many American soldiers into action as possible, as soon as possible. They wanted to integrate American soldiers into their depleted units at once. Pershing, however, insisted on keeping his men under one unified command, which led to delays. Occasionally, he even had shouting matches on the subject with other Allied leaders.
But when the AEF got into action, it made a difference, pushing back the German army at places such as Catigny, Chateau-Thierry, St. Michiel, and Meuse-Argonne. By mid-1918 the German government was faced with 2 million American soldiers among the Allied ranks, and 2 million more on the way.
Germany agreed to surrender, doing so on November 11, 1918. It was called Armistice Day. (Armistice Day became a federal holiday in the United States in 1938, before being changed to Veterans Day in 1954).
Post-War
At this point there came what was probably the low point of Pershing's career. Pershing was of the opinion that the War should continue until Germany was fully occupied. Otherwise, they might convince themselves that Germany hadn't really lost, and might decide to try again.
In fact, in the 1920s and 1930s, just such a myth appeared, that Germany had not actually been defeated, but had been 'stabbed in the back' by the new Weimar republic. It made a useful rallying cry for demagogues such as Hitler.
General John J. Blackjack Pershingpershing
Nevertheless, Armistice Day was decided on as the end of World War I. But on November 11, Pershing still ordered his men into battle, resulting in an extra and avoidable 3500 casualties.
After World War I, Pershing lived quietly, unsuccessfully warning the Harding administration not to cut back the armed forces to a bare-bone level of 115,000, in case of another war someday. In 1922, Pershing was interviewed in the May 19 New York Times, warning: 'It is inconceivable that the lessons of the war, to learn which we paid such a tremendous price…have seemingly gone unheeded by the people of our country.'
In 1939 he paid a last visit to France, and lived to witness the new war he had been warning against.
General John J. Blackjack Pershing Las Vegas
There is now a statue of General Pershing in Pershing Park, gazing in the direction of the General Sherman equestrian statue across the street.