Lieutenant General Thomas Holcomb (5 August 1879 – 24 May 1965) was the seventeenth Commandant of the United States Marine Corps (1936–1943). He was the first Marine to achieve the rank of General. After retiring from the Marine Corps, Holcomb served as Minister to South Africa (1944-1948).
Holcomb was born on 5 August 1879 in New Castle, Delaware. He attended private schools there until 1893 when his family moved to Washington, D.C. He graduated from Western High School in 1897.
He was on duty with the Legation Guard in Peking, China, from September 1905 to September 1906. He was appointed a captain 13 May 1908 and from December of that year to July 1910, he again served with the Legation Guard at Peking. He continued on duty in Peking as Attache on the Staff of the American Minister for study of the Chinese language and remained until May 1911. In December 1911, he was again ordered to the Legation at Peking to continue his study of the Chinese language and continued in that capacity until May 1914.
Captain Holcomb served as Inspector of Target Practice in the Marine Corps from October 1914 to August 1917. While serving as such, he was promoted to the rank of major on 29 August 1916.
In recognition of his distinguished services in France, he was awarded the Navy Cross, the Silver Star with three Oak Leaf Clusters, a Meritorious Service Citation by the Commander-in-Chief, AEF, the Purple Heart, and was three times cited in General Orders of the Second Division, AEF. The French Government conferred on him the Cross of the Legion of Honor and three times awarded him the Croix de Guerre with Palm.
From August 1927 to February 1930, Col Holcomb commanded the Marine Detachment, American Legation, Peiping, China. In June 1930, he went to the Naval War College as a student, Senior Course. He graduated in June 1931. He was then ordered to the Army War College, graduating a year later.
From June 1932 to January 1935, prior to his appointment to brigadier general, he served in the Office of Naval Operations, Navy Department. He was promoted to brigadier general on 1 February 1935. He served as Commandant of the Marine Corps Schools at Quantico, Virginia, until November 1936.
With his advancement to lieutenant general on 20 January 1942, he became the highest-ranking officer ever to command the Marine Corps up to that time.
On 5 August 1943, when LtGen Holcomb reached the regular retirement age, President Franklin D. Roosevelt announced he was continuing LtGen Holcomb as Commandant of the Marine Corps, in recognition of his outstanding services in that capacity.
During LtGen Holcomb’s tour of duty as Commandant, the Marine Corps expanded from 16,000 to about 300,000. Also, on 13 February 1943, he officially announced that women were eligible to serve in the Marine Corps; a date that is recognized and celebrated as the anniversary of women in the Marine Corps . The general was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal for his outstanding work as Commandant in April 1944.
After nearly 44 years as a Marine, LtGen Holcomb retired on 1 January 1944. Because he had been specially commended for his performance of duty in actual combat, he was advanced one rank on the retired list in accordance with a newly passed Act of Congress. He thus became the first Marine ever to hold the rank of general.
A list of Gen Holcomb’s medals and decorations includes:
On 9 March 1944, President Roosevelt nominated Gen Holcomb for the position of United States Minister to the Union of South Africa. He resigned from this position on 15 June 1948.
In retirement, Holcomb lived in St. Mary's City, Maryland, where he managed the family farm until 1956. He then moved to Chevy Chase, Maryland. In 1962, he moved to Washington, D.C. Following a serious illness in the spring of 1964, he returned to his native New Castle.
General Holcomb died in New Castle 24 May 1965 at the age of 85. He was interred in Arlington National Cemetery.
1879 births | 1965 deaths | American World War I veterans | Burials at Arlington National Cemetery | Navy Cross recipients | People from Delaware | Recipients of the Purple Heart medal | United States Marine Corps Commandants | United States Marine Corps generals
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