Over his decorated military career he rose to the position of Inspector General of the Army. Following his retirement from the armed forces, he served as an executive at Michigan's Donnelly-Kelley Glass Company.
He was born on November 3, 1894, in Denver, Colorado. His father was Angelo Noce, who founded the first Italian newspaper in Colorado (La Stella) and led the push for the Columbus Day holiday. Daniel learned woodworking and carpentry in high school and made furniture as a hobby throughout his life. He received an appointment to West Point and took up boxing, breaking his nose twice. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in April 1917, and dropped his first name of Angelo shortly thereafter. He was appointed a Second Lieutenant.
Upon graduation he was in the Cavalry, later transferring into the Army Corps of Engineers.
He married Mildred Newcomb Wilson, the granddaughter of Astronomer Simon Newcomb, in 1918 in Washington DC.[1]
Military career
World War I
Noce served in France during World War I. In March, 1918 he was appointed Adjutant of the 602nd Engineer Regiment, and he advanced to regimental commander in August. He commanded the regiment during the Saint-Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne Offensives, and remained in Germany on occupation duty until 1919.
Post-World War I
In 1920 Noce sued in the U.S. Court of Claims for longevity pay he claimed was due to him. His claim was based on the argument that his time in service should count from when he entered West Point, and not when he received his commission. He prevailed in the lower court in a decision that could have affected the pay of thousands of Army officers, but the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the decision.
In the 1930s he and his young family were stationed in the Philippines.
From 1937 to 1939 he was District Engineer in Memphis, Tennessee, supervising Mississippi Riverlevee and dam maintenance and flood control. From 1940 to 1941 he was District Engineer in Los Angeles, California, overseeing harbor expansion and defense in anticipation of World War II.
World War II
Noce served throughout World War II. In 1942 he was named to command the Engineer Amphibian Command at Camp Edwards, Massachusetts as a brigadier general. In this assignment he developed organizations, equipment, and techniques used in the D-Day invasion and the Allied offensive in the Pacific Islands.
In 1946 Noce he was appointed Director of the War Department's Civil Affairs Division, serving until 1948 and receiving promotion to lieutenant general. In this assignment he led a mission to expand cultural and economic relations between the Philippines and China, and the Philippines and Japan following World War II.
From 1949 to 1952 he was Chief of Staff for the U.S. European Command in Germany, and played an important part in implementing rebuilding efforts undertaken as part of the Marshall Plan.
In 1952 he was appointed Inspector General of the Army, where he served until his 1954 retirement.
After retiring from the Army he was an executive with Michigan's Donnelly-Kelley Glass Company.
Retirement and death
Upon his retirement in 1955, Lt. General Daniel Noce purchased a 1200-acre farm near Sperryville, Virginia and produced award-winning yields of corn and prized Black Angus beef.
He served on the Rappahannock River Basin Advisory Committee, which advised state and local governments about water use and long term planning, including construction of the proposed Salem Church Dam.
General Noce was the father of Mildred Wilson Noce (1922–1968) and Colonel Robert Wilson Noce (1926–2005), a 1949 West Point graduate who commanded a squadron of armored cavalry (1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment) of the 4th Infantry Division during the Vietnam War.