In February 1942, he joined the 3rd Cavalry Regiment at Fort Benning, Georgia, and soon advanced to regimental commander. He was the final commander of the regiment as a horse cavalry formation, and in the summer of 1942 it fielded tanks and was reorganized as the 3rd Armored Regiment.[9]
General Rogers was next assigned as G-2 for Army Ground Forces, serving in this post until September 1945.[14]
Post-World War II
After the war, Rogers was assigned to the War Department General Staff as chief of the Training Branch in the Office of the Director of Intelligence.[15]
Rogers graduated from the Army War College in 1951, afterwards remaining at the college as a member of the faculty and acting deputy commandant.[18][19]
Following that assignment, he was appointed commanding general of the 3rd Armored Division, based at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Under his command, the division was reorganized from a training unit to a deployable one and plans were made to relocate it to West Germany.[25][26][27]
Following his division command, Rogers served in Munich, West Germany, as commander of the Southern Area Command and deputy commander of the Seventh Army. In 1958, he became commander of VII Corps.[28][29][30]
From 1959 until his 1961 retirement, Rogers was deputy commander of the Continental Army Command at Fort Monroe, Virginia. In this position, he chaired the Army Aircraft Requirements Review Board (or Rogers Board), which made recommendations contained in the Army's long-term Aircraft Development Plan, as well as recommendations for the creation of air assault units.[31][32][33][34][35]
Post-military career
After his retirement from the Army General Rogers served as Director of the NATO Mutual Weapons Development Team.[36]
In 1934, Rogers married Mary Louise Watson (1910–1963) in Washington, DC.[46] One of their children, Gordon Byrom Rogers Jr. (born October 21, 1934) graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1957. The younger Rogers was a career Army officer who served in the Vietnam War and attained the rank of brigadier general.[47][48][49]
In 1964, Rogers married Mildred Montague Kimball at her ranch in Sedalia, Colorado.[50]
Other
In his memoir, David Hackworth cites Rogers as an example of Korean War senior officers who received undeserved awards for valor. According to Hackworth, Rogers received the Silver Star for nothing more than spending a short time at a forward command post while serving as assistant division commander of the 40th Infantry Division. Hackworth indicated that his perception of this incident led him to decide that the military's awards process had become devalued, and that senior officers should almost never be recommended for valor medals.[51]
^"Army Command Change"(PDF). Edison Township and Fords Beacon. 2 July 1958. Archived from the original(PDF) on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
^Assembly Magazine, published by West Point Alumni Association, Volumes 18-19, 1959, p. 48