Richard Milford Blatchford was born at Fort Hamilton, New York on August 17, 1859,[1][2] He was the son of Samuel T. Blatchford (1822–1886) and Agnes Leadbeater Blatchford (1824–1911),[2] and his ancestors had come from Devonshire, England in the eighteenth century.[1] His great-grandfather was Reverend Samuel Blatchford, his great-uncle was the New York attorney Richard Milford Blatchford, and the U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Blatchford was a cousin.[2]
After a brief tour as a recruiter in New York, Blatchford was an instructor and inspector for the Missouri National Guard.[1] He served with the 11th Infantry Regiment almost continuously while rising through the ranks, and in April 1913 he was promoted to colonel and assigned to command of the regiment in Texas City, Texas.[1][3]
Continued career
In 1914, Blatchford was assigned to command the 12th Infantry Regiment, then stationed at the Presidio of San Francisco.[3] Blatchford's regiment, a part of the 8th Brigade under Brigadier General John J. Pershing, included 700 enlisted men and 30 commissioned officers.[6] In April 1914, while on training maneuvers near Stanford University,[6] Blatchford received orders for his regiment to travel with Pershing by rail to El Paso, Texas, where Pershing assembled the brigade to take part in the Mexican Border War.[7] The regiment was later stationed at Nogales, Arizona, where Blatchford made arrangements for Pershing's August 29, 1914 peace conference with Mexican generals Pancho Villa and Álvaro Obregón.[8][9][10]
While commanding the 12th, Blatchford organized a regimental school of musketry at the Presidio.[3] By late 1915, Blatchford had been detailed as commandant of the Army's School of Musketry (today's Infantry School) at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Blatchford was serving as commandant in April 1917, when America officially entered World War I.[3]
World War I
On May 15 Blatchford was promoted to brigadier general in the National Army.[1] He sailed for France in July 1917 to observe trench warfare and Allied training methods, and on July 25 he was appointed commanding general of the Line of Communications, part of the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), the commander of which was Pershing, an old friend and now a major general.[5] On August 5, 1917, he received another promotion, this time to major general in the National Army.[1] Blatchford failed to organize a functioning line of communication in France, resulting in inadequate transport of supplies to U.S. troops.[11][12] Unhappy with his performance, Pershing decided to replace Blatchford with Francis Kernan.[11][12] After being relieved of his command in Paris, Blatchford took charge of billeting at Neufchâteau.[12] According to Brigadier General Johnson Hagood, this job "certainly did not warrant a special headquarters with a major general in command," but Blatchford maintained a large staff for allocating billets and office space, including a colonel in charge of constructing new buildings.[11][12]
In November 1917, Pershing sent Blatchford back to the United States.[1][13] To spare his feelings and reputation, Pershing, now a full general, told him he was needed to train a combat unit and then lead it to France to take part in the fighting.[14] Blatchford later viewed this removal as a stain on his career and pursued the matter with Pershing after the war.[14] In response, Pershing wrote that Blatchford's performance had in fact been unsatisfactory, and that their "lifelong friendship" had caused Pershing to refrain from telling him so at the time.[14]
He retired on December 1, 1922, with his permanent rank of brigadier general.[8] In 1930, Congress passed legislation allowing the temporary generals of World War I to retire at the highest rank they had held, and Blatchford was promoted to major general on the retired list.[8]
Blatchford died in San Francisco on August 31, 1934.[5] He had no children by either of his two marriages.[1]
^ abcdMooney, James L., ed. (1964). "General R. M. Blatchford". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Vol. I. Washington, D.C.: Department of the Navy. Online excerpt at Hubert, Yves (ed.). "General R.M. Blatchford". Haze Gray and Underway. Retrieved October 17, 2011.