Following his graduation, he was commissioned second lieutenant in the Marine Corps and ordered to The Basic School at Marine Corps Base Quantico for basic officer training. His first combat assignment was when Riseley was assigned to the 8th Marine Regiment and sailed within 1st Marine Brigade under Brigadier General Ben H. Fuller to Haiti. He was stationed at Port-au-Prince until October 1925, when he was ordered back to the United States. Assigned back to the Naval Academy, Riseley was appointed quartermaster of the local marine barracks and served in that capacity until February 1927.
He was subsequently transferred to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, South Carolina and appointed Aide-de-camp to commanding general of the 2nd Brigade of Marines, Brigadier General Logan Feland. The 2nd Brigade was sent to Nicaragua in January 1928, but Riseley has been transferred back to Haiti in April of that year. He was subsequently appointed captain within Garde d'Haïti and commanded constabulary unit of the Pétion-Ville district. Riseley spent next five years in that capacity and was decorated with Haitian Distinguished Service Medal with Diploma for his service there.
Riseley has returned to the United States in May 1933 and was ordered to the Marine Corps Schools at Quantico Base, where he attended Company Officers Course. He later attended Army Cavalry School at Fort Riley, Kansas. Upon the graduation in June 1937, Riseley returned to Quantico and was appointed an instructor in the Marine Corps Schools. In August 1939, he was appointed Senior Marine Officer on the staff of the Battleship Division Three.
He was subsequently assigned duties as assistant chief of staff and operations officer of the 2nd Marine Division, now under Major General Julian C. Smith and was tasked with the special assignment to experiment with the landing of tanks, amphibious tractors, and rubber boats on coral reefs under various surf conditions. Information gained in these tests was applied at Tarawa and later landings.[2] He has been decorated with second Navy Presidential Unit Citation for Tarawa campaign.
Riseley remained in this capacity until December 17, 1943, when he relieved Colonel Maurice G. Holmes as commanding officer of the 6th Marine Regiment. During the summer of 1944, Colonel Riseley led his regiment ashore during the combats at Saipan and Tinian. He was subsequently decorated with the Legion of Merit with Combat "V" and third Navy Presidential Unit Citation for his leadership during the campaign. However, at the beginning of September 1944, Riseley relinquished his command to Colonel Gregon A. Williams and returned to the United States the following month.
Following his return, Riseley reported to the Headquarters Marine Corps in Washington, D.C., and subsequently was appointed commanding officer of the Marine barracks at Camp Pendleton, California in November 1944. He remained in this capacity until March 1945, when he attended the Army and Navy Staff College. Upon the graduation in September 1945, Riseley was assigned to the staff of Fifth Fleet under admiral Raymond A. Spruance as Marine Fleet Officer. He subsequently participated in the Occupation duties in the Japanese waters until April 1946.
While serving in this capacity, Riseley was promoted to the rank of brigadier general in January 1951 and subsequently assigned the duties of chief of staff of the Marine Corps School at Quantico base in July 1951. Riseley was transferred to Kāneʻohe Bay, where he took command of First Provisional Marine Air-Ground Task Force at Marine Corps Base Hawaii. While in Hawaii, he was promoted to the rank of Major General in September 1953. His next assignment came in October 1953, when he has been assigned duties as the deputy commander of the Marine Corps Base at Camp Pendleton.
Major General James P. Riseley was succeeded by Brigadier General Sidney S. Wade on June 30, 1959, and finally retired from the Marine Corps the next day after 41 years of service. He was advanced to the rank of lieutenant general on the retired list for having been specially commended in combat.
He was first married to Catharine Hohne and had 3 children (Claudette, Cynthia, and James P. jr.) and later divorced in 1937 and remarried in 1941.
He and his second wife, Marry Mossman, resided in Roswell, New Mexico, where he worked on his autobiography Uncle Jim, USMC: Recollections of Lt. Gen. James P. Riseley, United States Marine Corps (Ret.). Riseley died on March 2, 1992, and is buried at Santa Fe National Cemetery with his second wife, Mary Mossman Riseley. They had two daughters, Mary Burton and Margaret Cobourn.
Decorations
Here is the ribbon bar of Lieutenant General James P. Riseley:[3]