Robert Lee Bullard

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Template:Short description

Script error: No such module "For". Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Lieutenant General Robert Lee Bullard (January 5, 1861 – September 11, 1947) was a senior officer of the United States Army. He was involved in conflicts in the American Western Frontier, the Philippines, and World War I, where he commanded the 1st Infantry Division (nicknamed "The Big Red One") during the Battle of Cantigny while serving on the Western Front. He later was an administrator in Cuba.

Military career

A native of Alabama, Bullard attended the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama, now Auburn University, and the United States Military Academy (USMA) at West Point, New York, graduated twenty-seventh in a class of thirty-nine in 1885. Among his classmates included several officers who would become future general officers, such as Beaumont B. Buck, Joseph E. Kuhn, Henry P. McCain, Robert Michie, George W. Burr, John D. Barrette, John M. Carson Jr., Robert A. Brown, Charles H. Muir, William F. Martin, Daniel B. Devore and Willard A. Holbrook.

He was promoted to first lieutenant in 1892. He served in various capacities in the Spanish–American War, and in the Philippines from 1902 to 1904. He was made lieutenant colonel in 1906. In 1907, he was special investigator for the U.S. provisional government in Cuba, and the following year was superintendent of public instruction there. In 1911, he was promoted to colonel.Template:Sfn He attended the U.S. Army War College from 1911 to 1912.Template:Sfn

Bullard's Indians

The 39th Volunteer Infantry was unit of United States Volunteers raised to fight in the Philippine–American War. Bullard was promoted to colonel and given command of the unit. It was nicknamed the "Bullard's Indians" due to the type of tactics the unit employed.Template:Sfn

World War I

After the American entry into World War I, in April 1917, Bullard was quickly promoted to brigadier general (June 1917) and major general in the National Army (August 1917). He took over command of the 1st Infantry Division ("Big Red One") from William L. Sibert, holding this post from December 1917 to July 1918.Template:Sfn The division was then serving in France as part of the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), commanded by General John J. Pershing.Template:Sfn

He led his division in the Battle of Cantigny (May 28, 1918) and captured the village of Cantigny. It had been held by the German Eighteenth Army. It was the site of a German advance observation point and strongly fortified. This was the first sustained American offensive of the war. It was considered a success in that it expanded the American front by about a mile.Template:Sfn General Pershing said of the attack:

The enemy reaction against our troops at Cantigny was extremely violent, and apparently he was determined at all costs to counteract the most excellent effect the American success had produced. For three days his guns of all calibers were concentrated on our new position and counter-attack succeeded counter-attack. The desperate efforts of the Germans gave the fighting at Cantigny a seeming tactical importance entirely out of proportion to the numbers involved."2

Bullard was fluent in French and often served in joint U.S.–French operations. He also held a low opinion of Black American troops, writing in his diary that they were "hopelessly inferior." Historian Tyler E. Stovall described this view as part of a tradition of white U.S. military officers ascribing any failings on the part of African-American soldiers to "innate racial inadequacies".[1]

File:111-SC-15836 - NARA - 55191774 (Bullard à Tartigny).jpg
General John J. Pershing, Major General Robert Lee Bullard and members of Bullard's staff about to leave Chateau Tartigny to attend a review and decoration parade. Tartigny, France, June 30, 1918.

General Pershing created the Second U.S. Army in October 1918 and appointed Bullard as its first commander with the rank of lieutenant general. At the same time he turned over command of the U.S. First Army to Lieutenant General Hunter Liggett. Pershing retained his position as commander of the AEF with authority over both of the armies.Template:Sfn

File:111-SC-28466 - NARA - 55216386 (cropped) (cropped).jpg
Major General Robert Lee Bullard, the newly appointed commander of the U.S. Second Army, pictured here with members of his staff at Second Army's headquarters at Toul, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France, October 20, 1918. On Bullard's left is his chief of staff, Brigadier General Stuart Heintzelman.

Bullard's military actions have also been subject to criticism. In the Battle of Montfaucon, Bullard reportedly refused orders to turn the flank of the German troops with his 4th Division as he did not want to help Major General George H. Cameron, commander of V Corps, get credit for taking the German fortress at Montfaucon.[2] Due to his alleged disobedience or deliberate misinterpretation of orders, the 79th Division, part of Cameron's V Corps, had no support to their right and suffered unnecessarily severe casualties as they performed a frontal attack on the fortress.[3] Additionally, Bullard continued to conduct offensive operations, with full knowledge that the Armistice with Germany was due to take effect in a few hours, was criticized by Alden Brooks in his post-war account of the war, As I Saw It (1930).

For his services during the war Bullard was awarded the Army Distinguished Service Medal, the citation for which reads:

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Post war

File:Hughes party for Brazil LCCN2014715067.jpg
Bullard (far left) travels to Brazil with Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes in August 1922.

The Second Army was deactivated in April 1919 and Bullard reverted to his permanent rank of major general in June 1920. He was assigned to corps command in the much smaller post war U.S. Army. He retired from active duty in 1925 to concentrate on writing.Template:Sfn He served as last president of the National Security League from 1925 until he disbanded it in 1947.[4]

Bullard wrote American Soldiers Also Fought in 1936.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

He died on September 11, 1947, at the age of 86.Template:Sfn Bullard is buried at the U.S. Military Academy Post Cemetery, with his wife Ella (Reiff) Bullard (5 November 1870 to 3 March 1963).

Writing

He was author of the following books:

Bullard also wrote several magazine articles.

Military awards

Dates of rank

Insignia Rank Component Date
None Cadet United States Military Academy 1 July 1881
None in 1885 Second Lieutenant Regular Army 14 June 1885
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First Lieutenant Regular Army 2 April 1892
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Captain Regular Army 22 June 1898
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Colonel Volunteers 6 August 1898
(Honorably discharged from Volunteers on 6 May 1901.)
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Major Regular Army 1 April 1901
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Lieutenant Colonel Regular Army 31 October 1906
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Colonel Regular Army 11 March 1911
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Brigadier General Regular Army 16 June 1917
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Major General National Army 5 August 1917
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Lieutenant General Emergency 1 November 1918
(Date of rank 16 October 1918. Discharged and reverted to
permanent rank 30 June 1920.)
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Major General Regular Army 16 February 1919
(Date of rank 27 November 1918.)
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Major General Retired List 15 January 1925
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Lieutenant General Retired List 21 June 1930

Source: Army Register, 1926[6]

Bibliography

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Notes

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<templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>^2 Source Records of the Great War, Vol. VI, ed. Charles F. Horne, National Alumni 1923

References

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External links

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Military offices
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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Commanding General Second Army
1918–1919 Template:S-ttl/check
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