Honeycutt graduated with Bachelor of Science degree in June 1904 and was commissioned second lieutenant in the Field Artillery branch. He returned to the Military Academy as a mathematics instructor from 1907 to 1911.[7] Honeycutt served in the various field artillery assignments and commanded 338th Field Artillery Regiment as the part of 88th Division during the World War I, where he trained the replacements at Camp Dodge, Iowa, until June 1918.[8]
Honeycutt returned to the United States in early September 1940, was promoted to the rank of brigadier general and assumed command of 13th Field Artillery Brigade at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Following the reactivation of 9th Infantry Division at Fort Bragg, he assumed additional duty as Commanding general of the division and also held command of Fort Bragg.[6][8]
On September 20, 1940, General Honeycutt was killed in Army plane crash accident near Woodbine, Georgia, while returning from Jacksonville, Florida, where he was for a conference on military matters. Two other men killed in the crash were: Capt. George F. Kehoe, pilot of the craft, and Corporal Robert J. Schmitz, radioman and mechanic.[5] Honeycutt was buried with full military honors at United States Military Academy Cemetery.
He was married to Margaret Harmon (1882–1979), a daughter of Colonel Millard F. Harmon and sister of lieutenant generals Millard F. Harmon Jr. and Hubert R. Harmon. From his marriage with Margaret, Honeycutt had one son, future Major General John T. Honeycutt and two daughters, Jane (1919–2011), a wife of Colonel William W. West, III and Margaret (1913–1972), a wife of Major general Donald P. Graul.
^ abTuchman, Barbara (1970). Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911-45. United States of America: Grove Press. p. 199. ISBN0-8021-3852-7.
^"Class of 1904—Register of Graduates". Register of Graduates and Former Cadets 1802–1971 of the United States Military Academy. The West Point Alumni Foundation Inc. 1971. p. 312. Retrieved July 31, 2022.