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Cornelius E. Ryan

Cornelius Edward Ryan CBE (May 12, 1896 – June 6, 1972) was a highly decorated officer in the United States Army with the rank of major general. During his 40 years of active service, he participated in both World Wars and Korean War and held several important assignments including commands of 101st Airborne Division, Berlin Occupation Sector or as Chief of Korean Military Advisory Group.[1][2]

Early career edit

Cornelius E. Ryan was born on May 12, 1896, in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of Thomas B. Ryan and Julia B. Driscoll. Following high school, he entered the University of Connecticut in Storrs, Connecticut, where he was active in football and basketball squads and reached the rank of first sergeant in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps.[3][4]

Ryan graduated with Bachelor of Science degree in summer 1917 and was commissioned second lieutenant in the Infantry Branch on August 15, 1917. He was then assigned to the 49th Infantry Regiment at Syracuse, New York and spent several next months with intensive training for combat deployment in France. His regiment was later attached to the 83rd Division and embarked for France in July 1918, where it was stationed in the rear area, providing replacement personnel for front-line units. While in France, Ryan participated in the training of Polish legions and returned to the United States in early 1919.[2][3]

He remained with 49th Infantry at Fort Snelling, Minnesota until May 1921, when he was transferred to 34th Infantry Regiment at Camp Meade, Maryland. After one year there, he was sent to Fort Benning, Georgia, where he assumed duty as assistant to the post logistics officer. Ryan spent three months in this capacity and entered the Company Officers' Course at local Army Infantry School in September 1922.

Following the graduation in June 1923, he returned to Camp Meade, where he completed the Tank School. Ryan was then sent to Cambridge, Massachusetts for a one-year course at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

In August 1927, Ryan was ordered to Versailles, France, where he was detailed to the Centre D'Études des Chars de Combat (The Center for Combat Tank Studies a.k.a. Tank School). He graduated a few months later and joined the 507th French Tank Regiment in Metz, where he served as observer for two months and then returned to the United States.[3]

Ryan was sent to the University of California, Berkeley in early 1930 and assumed duty as assistant professor of military science & tactics. He spent six years in this capacity and subsequently joined 23rd Infantry Regiment at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Ryan remained there until September 1938, when he entered the course at the Army Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Upon the graduation as major in June 1939, Ryan was appointed an instructor in the Tank section at the Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia. He served consecutively under Brigadier generals Asa L. Singleton, Courtney Hodges, Omar Bradley and Leven C. Allen and was appointed Chief of the Automotive Section. While in this capacity, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel in August 1940 and to the temporary rank of colonel on December 24, 1941.[2]

World War II edit

During the first years of the United States participation in the World War II, Ryan participated in the training of Army officers with his automotive section until February 1943, when his services were requested by his old superior, Lieutenant General Courtney Hodges, now commanding general of Third United States Army at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. The Third Army was tasked with the training of replacements, and Ryan as its assistant chief of staff for operations, had the opportunity to proved again his skills during the planning of training. For his service at Army Infantry School and with Third Army, Ryan was decorated with two Army Commendation Medals.[2][5][3]

In June 1943, he was sent to the European Theater of Operations, when he was requested by his another old superior from Infantry School, General Omar Bradley. Ryan was attached to the headquarters, Twelfth United States Army Group as assistant chief of staff for military plans and training. He served in this capacity during the Battle of Normandy, Ardennes Campaign, Rhineland Campaign and Western Allied invasion of Germany and was promoted to the temporary rank of brigadier general on January 7, 1945.[2][5][3]

For his service in this capacity, Ryan was decorated with Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit and Bronze Star Medal. His service was also recognized by the Allies and he was decorated with: Order of the British Empire; Legion of Honour and Croix de Guerre with Palm by France; Order of Adolphe of Nassau and War Cross by Luxembourg; Order of Leopold II and Croix de Guerre with Palm by Belgium; Order of Orange-Nassau by the Netherlands; and War Cross by Czechoslovakia.[6][7][3][8]

Postwar period edit

In August 1945, three months after the surrender of Nazi Germany, Ryan was transferred to the headquarters, Fifteenth United States Army under General Leonard T. Gerow. He served under him and later under General George S. Patton as assistant chief of staff for military plans and training during the occupation of Germany in North Rhine-Westphalia, the Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland.[3]

Ryan was ordered to Berlin in May 1946 and assumed duty as deputy commanding general, Berlin Sector under Major General Frank A. Keating. He remained in that capacity until October that year, when he was ordered to Frankfurt am Main for duty as commanding general, General Headquarters, U.S. Forces, European Theater.[1][3]

He was transferred back to Berlin in May 1947 and assumed duty as commanding general, Berlin Sector with additional duty as deputy military governor and U.S. Representative on the Berlin Allied Kommandatura. While in this capacity, he was co-responsible for the governing of the city of Berlin, which was divided in four sectors occupied by Great Britain, France, United States and Soviet Union and took part in the regular meetings despite the worsening political situation. For his service in postwar Germany, Ryan received his third Army Commendation Medal.[1][3]

Ryan returned to the United States in September 1947 after 51 months of overseas duty and assumed duty as chief of staff, V Corps under Major General Stafford LeRoy Irwin at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He was ordered to Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky in October 1948 and assumed duty as assistant division commander, 101st Airborne Division under Major General William R. Schmidt.[1][5][3]

Korean War edit

Ryan participated in the training of airborne units and ultimately relieved Schmidt as division commander in August 1950. He continued to train replacement airborne personnel for combat units in Korea until May 1951 and received his fourth Army Commendation Medal based on the letter from the U.S. Army Assistant Chief of Operations, Lieutenant General Maxwell D. Taylor.[5][3][9]

He gained the reputation of great troops trainer and got the attention of commanding general, Second United States Army, James Van Fleet, under which 101st Airborne Division fell under. Van Fleet was meanwhile ordered to Korea to command the United States Eighth Army and did not forget Ryan's qualities. Van Fleet was not fully satisfied with the progress of Korean Military Advisory Group under Brigadier General Francis W. Farrell and asked War Department for Ryan as Farrell's replacement.[5][9]

Ryan was ordered to Korea and assumed duty as Chief, Korean Military Advisory Group (KMAG) on July 7, 1951. His main task was to transform the Republic of Korea Army (ROKA) into a fighting force capable of carrying its weight in United States Eighth Army and make Korean Military Advisory Group responsive to the needs of the Republic of Korea Army. He developed strong relation with his counterparts, generals Lee Chong-chan and Paik Sun-yup and worked together on plans to make a new army.[5][9]

He visited frontline areas on daily basis with South Korean counterpart and toured the battle lines, training centers, and other installations to evaluate personally the effect of KMAG's programs on ROKA units in the field. Ryan supervised all aspects of ROKA military organization and administration, from the induction and training of soldiers, to the formation and equipping of new units, to their employment on the battlefield. He restarted the pre-war program of sending Koreans to the United States for basic and advance infantry and artillery training. Ryan also closely monitored Operation Rat Killer led by ROKA command.[5][9]

When Ryan arrived in Korea, KMAG had 920 officers and men assigned to it and by September 1951, Ryan supervised 1,308 advisors. He later increased the number of KMAG advisors to the total strength of 1,812 personnel by January 1952. Altogether, 499,751 trainees passed through the KMAG Replacement Training Center system from July 1950 through August 1953.[5][9]

Under his leadership, KMAG transformed into a first-class military training and advisory mission. Under his experienced direction, KMAG then inaugurated a series of training and organizational reforms that laid the basis for a Korean Army capable of fighting the Chinese on more equal terms. Ryan served in Korea until mid-May 1953, when he was succeeded by Brigadier General Gordon B. Rogers. For his service with KMAG, Ryan was decorated with his second Army Distinguished Service Medal and also received Order of Military Merit (South Korea) Ulchi with gold star and Order of Military Merit (South Korea) Taiguk with silver star by the Republic of Korea. He was promoted to major general in November 1952.[7][2][5][9]

Later service edit

Following his return stateside and two-month leave, Ryan was ordered to Fort Dix, New Jersey, where he assumed command of 9th Infantry Division with additional command of that installation. His new command was responsible for the training of replacements for troops both in Europe and Korea. The 9th Infantry Division was stationed at Fort Dix until May 1954, where it was transferred to Fort Carson, Colorado and replaced by newly activated 69th Infantry Division.[10]

Ryan assumed command of 69th Infantry Division in May 1954 and was again responsible for the training of replacements until November 1955, when he was ordered to Paris, France for duty as Chief of the Military Assistance Advisory Group there. He served in that capacity until June 1957, when he retired after almost 40 years of active duty. The Government of France upgraded his Legion of Honour from Officer grade to Commander for his service in Paris.

Retirement and death edit

Ryan's retirement did not last long, and he was offered the full-time job of executive vice chairman of the Presidents Committee on Governments Contracts by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in October 1957. While in this capacity, he was responsible for eliminating employment discrimination on government contracts. Ryan visited a number of CEOs of important federal contractors, including Alcoa, General Electric and Bethlehem Steel.[11][12]

He later settled in Menlo Park, California, where he died at the Veterans Administration Hospital after long illness on June 6, 1972, aged 76. He was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia together with his wife, Inez B. Ryan. They had two sons, both West Point graduates, Major Walter Joseph Ryan and Captain Edward F. Ryan, and one daughter Elizabeth.[3]

Decorations edit

Here is Major General Ryan's ribbon bar:[7]

 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
       
       
 
 
 
 
 
 
1st Row Army Distinguished Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster
2nd Row Legion of Merit Bronze Star Medal Army Commendation Medal
with three Oak Leaf Clusters
World War I Victory Medal
with one Battle Clasp
3rd Row American Defense Service Medal American Campaign Medal European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal
with five 3/16 inch service stars
World War II Victory Medal
4th Row Army of Occupation Medal Korean Service Medal
with five 3/16 inch service stars
National Defense Service Medal Polish Cross for American Volunteers
5th Row Commander of the Legion of Honor (France) French Croix de guerre 1939-1945 with Palm Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire Commander of the Order of Adolphe of Nassau (Luxembourg)
6th Row Luxembourg War Cross Commander of the Order of Leopold II (Belgium) Belgian Croix de Guerre with Palm Commander of the Order of Orange-Nassau (the Netherlands)
7th Row Czechoslovak War Cross 1939–1945 Korean Order of Military Merit Ulchi with Gold star Korean Order of Military Merit Taiguk with Silver star United Nations Korea Medal

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Biography of Major-General Cornelius E. Ryan (1896 - 1972), USA". generals.dk. generals.dk Websites. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "BG Cornelius E. Ryan". 6941st-gdbn.com. USA 6941st Guard Battalion Websites. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Gen. C. E. Ryan, 76, Served in 3 Wars". The New York Times. 9 June 1972. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  4. ^ "Nutmeg, 1917 yearbook". archives.lib.uconn.edu. University of Connecticut Archives & Special Collections. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Fighting in a Korean War: The American Advisory Missions From 1946-1953 by Bryan Robert Gibby, B.S., M.A." etd.ohiolink.edu. The Ohio State University. Retrieved 1 June 2004.
  6. ^ "OBE citation". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. 2014-10-17. Retrieved 2013-05-30.
  7. ^ a b c "Valor awards for Cornelius E. Ryan". valor.militarytimes.com. Militarytimes Websites. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  8. ^ "Britain decorates 65 U.S. Officers, The New York Times, Thursday, July 22, 1948, page 5". timesmachine.nytimes.com. New York Times Websites. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d e f "The Korean Military Advisory Group (KMAG): A Model for Success?" (PDF). apps.dtic.mil. Defense Technical Information Center Websites. (PDF) from the original on November 8, 2019. Retrieved 1 June 2004.
  10. ^ Army Information Digest, Volume 10, Number 2. Stackpole Books. 2006. p. 81. Retrieved December 8, 2017.
  11. ^ Army, Navy, Air Force Journal. Army and Navy Journal Incorporated. 1957. p. 182. Retrieved December 8, 2017.
  12. ^ Golland, David (2011). Constructing Affirmative Action: The Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. p. 81. ISBN 978-0813129983. Retrieved December 8, 2017.

External links edit

  • Generals of World War II
Military offices
Preceded by
Homer W. Kieffer
Commanding General 9th Infantry Division
July 1953 – May 1954
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief, Korean Military Advisory Group
July 7, 1951 – May 14, 1953
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commanding General 101st Airborne Division
August 1950 – May 1951
Succeeded by

cornelius, ryan, this, article, about, american, military, officer, other, uses, cornelius, ryan, disambiguation, cornelius, edward, ryan, 1896, june, 1972, highly, decorated, officer, united, states, army, with, rank, major, general, during, years, active, se. This article is about the American military officer For other uses see Cornelius Ryan disambiguation Cornelius Edward Ryan CBE May 12 1896 June 6 1972 was a highly decorated officer in the United States Army with the rank of major general During his 40 years of active service he participated in both World Wars and Korean War and held several important assignments including commands of 101st Airborne Division Berlin Occupation Sector or as Chief of Korean Military Advisory Group 1 2 Cornelius Edward RyanMG Cornelius E RyanBorn 1896 05 12 May 12 1896Boston Massachusetts USDiedJune 6 1972 1972 06 06 aged 76 Menlo Park California USAllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1917 1957RankMajor generalService number0 7375UnitInfantry BranchCommands held9th Infantry Division69th Infantry DivisionKorean Military Advisory Group101st Airborne DivisionBerlin SectorBattles warsWorld War IWorld War II Battle of Normandy Battle of the Bulge Rhineland Campaign Western Allied invasion of GermanyKorean War Operation Rat KillerAwardsDistinguished Service Medal 2 Legion of MeritBronze Star MedalArmy Commendation Medal 4 Contents 1 Early career 2 World War II 3 Postwar period 4 Korean War 5 Later service 6 Retirement and death 7 Decorations 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly career editCornelius E Ryan was born on May 12 1896 in Boston Massachusetts the son of Thomas B Ryan and Julia B Driscoll Following high school he entered the University of Connecticut in Storrs Connecticut where he was active in football and basketball squads and reached the rank of first sergeant in the Reserve Officers Training Corps 3 4 Ryan graduated with Bachelor of Science degree in summer 1917 and was commissioned second lieutenant in the Infantry Branch on August 15 1917 He was then assigned to the 49th Infantry Regiment at Syracuse New York and spent several next months with intensive training for combat deployment in France His regiment was later attached to the 83rd Division and embarked for France in July 1918 where it was stationed in the rear area providing replacement personnel for front line units While in France Ryan participated in the training of Polish legions and returned to the United States in early 1919 2 3 He remained with 49th Infantry at Fort Snelling Minnesota until May 1921 when he was transferred to 34th Infantry Regiment at Camp Meade Maryland After one year there he was sent to Fort Benning Georgia where he assumed duty as assistant to the post logistics officer Ryan spent three months in this capacity and entered the Company Officers Course at local Army Infantry School in September 1922 Following the graduation in June 1923 he returned to Camp Meade where he completed the Tank School Ryan was then sent to Cambridge Massachusetts for a one year course at Massachusetts Institute of Technology In August 1927 Ryan was ordered to Versailles France where he was detailed to the Centre D Etudes des Chars de Combat The Center for Combat Tank Studies a k a Tank School He graduated a few months later and joined the 507th French Tank Regiment in Metz where he served as observer for two months and then returned to the United States 3 Ryan was sent to the University of California Berkeley in early 1930 and assumed duty as assistant professor of military science amp tactics He spent six years in this capacity and subsequently joined 23rd Infantry Regiment at Fort Sam Houston Texas Ryan remained there until September 1938 when he entered the course at the Army Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth Kansas Upon the graduation as major in June 1939 Ryan was appointed an instructor in the Tank section at the Army Infantry School at Fort Benning Georgia He served consecutively under Brigadier generals Asa L Singleton Courtney Hodges Omar Bradley and Leven C Allen and was appointed Chief of the Automotive Section While in this capacity he was promoted to lieutenant colonel in August 1940 and to the temporary rank of colonel on December 24 1941 2 World War II editDuring the first years of the United States participation in the World War II Ryan participated in the training of Army officers with his automotive section until February 1943 when his services were requested by his old superior Lieutenant General Courtney Hodges now commanding general of Third United States Army at Fort Sam Houston Texas The Third Army was tasked with the training of replacements and Ryan as its assistant chief of staff for operations had the opportunity to proved again his skills during the planning of training For his service at Army Infantry School and with Third Army Ryan was decorated with two Army Commendation Medals 2 5 3 In June 1943 he was sent to the European Theater of Operations when he was requested by his another old superior from Infantry School General Omar Bradley Ryan was attached to the headquarters Twelfth United States Army Group as assistant chief of staff for military plans and training He served in this capacity during the Battle of Normandy Ardennes Campaign Rhineland Campaign and Western Allied invasion of Germany and was promoted to the temporary rank of brigadier general on January 7 1945 2 5 3 For his service in this capacity Ryan was decorated with Distinguished Service Medal Legion of Merit and Bronze Star Medal His service was also recognized by the Allies and he was decorated with Order of the British Empire Legion of Honour and Croix de Guerre with Palm by France Order of Adolphe of Nassau and War Cross by Luxembourg Order of Leopold II and Croix de Guerre with Palm by Belgium Order of Orange Nassau by the Netherlands and War Cross by Czechoslovakia 6 7 3 8 Postwar period editIn August 1945 three months after the surrender of Nazi Germany Ryan was transferred to the headquarters Fifteenth United States Army under General Leonard T Gerow He served under him and later under General George S Patton as assistant chief of staff for military plans and training during the occupation of Germany in North Rhine Westphalia the Rhineland Palatinate and Saarland 3 Ryan was ordered to Berlin in May 1946 and assumed duty as deputy commanding general Berlin Sector under Major General Frank A Keating He remained in that capacity until October that year when he was ordered to Frankfurt am Main for duty as commanding general General Headquarters U S Forces European Theater 1 3 He was transferred back to Berlin in May 1947 and assumed duty as commanding general Berlin Sector with additional duty as deputy military governor and U S Representative on the Berlin Allied Kommandatura While in this capacity he was co responsible for the governing of the city of Berlin which was divided in four sectors occupied by Great Britain France United States and Soviet Union and took part in the regular meetings despite the worsening political situation For his service in postwar Germany Ryan received his third Army Commendation Medal 1 3 Ryan returned to the United States in September 1947 after 51 months of overseas duty and assumed duty as chief of staff V Corps under Major General Stafford LeRoy Irwin at Fort Bragg North Carolina He was ordered to Camp Breckinridge Kentucky in October 1948 and assumed duty as assistant division commander 101st Airborne Division under Major General William R Schmidt 1 5 3 Korean War editRyan participated in the training of airborne units and ultimately relieved Schmidt as division commander in August 1950 He continued to train replacement airborne personnel for combat units in Korea until May 1951 and received his fourth Army Commendation Medal based on the letter from the U S Army Assistant Chief of Operations Lieutenant General Maxwell D Taylor 5 3 9 He gained the reputation of great troops trainer and got the attention of commanding general Second United States Army James Van Fleet under which 101st Airborne Division fell under Van Fleet was meanwhile ordered to Korea to command the United States Eighth Army and did not forget Ryan s qualities Van Fleet was not fully satisfied with the progress of Korean Military Advisory Group under Brigadier General Francis W Farrell and asked War Department for Ryan as Farrell s replacement 5 9 Ryan was ordered to Korea and assumed duty as Chief Korean Military Advisory Group KMAG on July 7 1951 His main task was to transform the Republic of Korea Army ROKA into a fighting force capable of carrying its weight in United States Eighth Army and make Korean Military Advisory Group responsive to the needs of the Republic of Korea Army He developed strong relation with his counterparts generals Lee Chong chan and Paik Sun yup and worked together on plans to make a new army 5 9 He visited frontline areas on daily basis with South Korean counterpart and toured the battle lines training centers and other installations to evaluate personally the effect of KMAG s programs on ROKA units in the field Ryan supervised all aspects of ROKA military organization and administration from the induction and training of soldiers to the formation and equipping of new units to their employment on the battlefield He restarted the pre war program of sending Koreans to the United States for basic and advance infantry and artillery training Ryan also closely monitored Operation Rat Killer led by ROKA command 5 9 When Ryan arrived in Korea KMAG had 920 officers and men assigned to it and by September 1951 Ryan supervised 1 308 advisors He later increased the number of KMAG advisors to the total strength of 1 812 personnel by January 1952 Altogether 499 751 trainees passed through the KMAG Replacement Training Center system from July 1950 through August 1953 5 9 Under his leadership KMAG transformed into a first class military training and advisory mission Under his experienced direction KMAG then inaugurated a series of training and organizational reforms that laid the basis for a Korean Army capable of fighting the Chinese on more equal terms Ryan served in Korea until mid May 1953 when he was succeeded by Brigadier General Gordon B Rogers For his service with KMAG Ryan was decorated with his second Army Distinguished Service Medal and also received Order of Military Merit South Korea Ulchi with gold star and Order of Military Merit South Korea Taiguk with silver star by the Republic of Korea He was promoted to major general in November 1952 7 2 5 9 Later service editFollowing his return stateside and two month leave Ryan was ordered to Fort Dix New Jersey where he assumed command of 9th Infantry Division with additional command of that installation His new command was responsible for the training of replacements for troops both in Europe and Korea The 9th Infantry Division was stationed at Fort Dix until May 1954 where it was transferred to Fort Carson Colorado and replaced by newly activated 69th Infantry Division 10 Ryan assumed command of 69th Infantry Division in May 1954 and was again responsible for the training of replacements until November 1955 when he was ordered to Paris France for duty as Chief of the Military Assistance Advisory Group there He served in that capacity until June 1957 when he retired after almost 40 years of active duty The Government of France upgraded his Legion of Honour from Officer grade to Commander for his service in Paris Retirement and death editRyan s retirement did not last long and he was offered the full time job of executive vice chairman of the Presidents Committee on Governments Contracts by President Dwight D Eisenhower in October 1957 While in this capacity he was responsible for eliminating employment discrimination on government contracts Ryan visited a number of CEOs of important federal contractors including Alcoa General Electric and Bethlehem Steel 11 12 He later settled in Menlo Park California where he died at the Veterans Administration Hospital after long illness on June 6 1972 aged 76 He was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery Virginia together with his wife Inez B Ryan They had two sons both West Point graduates Major Walter Joseph Ryan and Captain Edward F Ryan and one daughter Elizabeth 3 Decorations editHere is Major General Ryan s ribbon bar 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1st Row Army Distinguished Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster2nd Row Legion of Merit Bronze Star Medal Army Commendation Medal with three Oak Leaf Clusters World War I Victory Medal with one Battle Clasp3rd Row American Defense Service Medal American Campaign Medal European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with five 3 16 inch service stars World War II Victory Medal4th Row Army of Occupation Medal Korean Service Medal with five 3 16 inch service stars National Defense Service Medal Polish Cross for American Volunteers5th Row Commander of the Legion of Honor France French Croix de guerre 1939 1945 with Palm Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire Commander of the Order of Adolphe of Nassau Luxembourg 6th Row Luxembourg War Cross Commander of the Order of Leopold II Belgium Belgian Croix de Guerre with Palm Commander of the Order of Orange Nassau the Netherlands 7th Row Czechoslovak War Cross 1939 1945 Korean Order of Military Merit Ulchi with Gold star Korean Order of Military Merit Taiguk with Silver star United Nations Korea MedalSee also editKorean Military Advisory GroupReferences edit a b c d Biography of Major General Cornelius E Ryan 1896 1972 USA generals dk generals dk Websites Retrieved 12 April 2017 a b c d e f BG Cornelius E Ryan 6941st gdbn com USA 6941st Guard Battalion Websites Retrieved 12 April 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l Gen C E Ryan 76 Served in 3 Wars The New York Times 9 June 1972 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Nutmeg 1917 yearbook archives lib uconn edu University of Connecticut Archives amp Special Collections Retrieved 12 April 2017 a b c d e f g h i Fighting in a Korean War The American Advisory Missions From 1946 1953 by Bryan Robert Gibby B S M A etd ohiolink edu The Ohio State University Retrieved 1 June 2004 OBE citation discovery nationalarchives gov uk 2014 10 17 Retrieved 2013 05 30 a b c Valor awards for Cornelius E Ryan valor militarytimes com Militarytimes Websites Retrieved 12 April 2017 Britain decorates 65 U S Officers The New York Times Thursday July 22 1948 page 5 timesmachine nytimes com New York Times Websites Retrieved June 19 2018 a b c d e f The Korean Military Advisory Group KMAG A Model for Success PDF apps dtic mil Defense Technical Information Center Websites Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2019 Retrieved 1 June 2004 Army Information Digest Volume 10 Number 2 Stackpole Books 2006 p 81 Retrieved December 8 2017 Army Navy Air Force Journal Army and Navy Journal Incorporated 1957 p 182 Retrieved December 8 2017 Golland David 2011 Constructing Affirmative Action The Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky p 81 ISBN 978 0813129983 Retrieved December 8 2017 External links editGenerals of World War IIMilitary officesPreceded byHomer W Kieffer Commanding General 9th Infantry DivisionJuly 1953 May 1954 Succeeded byDonald P BoothPreceded byFrancis W Farrell Chief Korean Military Advisory GroupJuly 7 1951 May 14 1953 Succeeded byGordon B RogersPreceded byWilliam R Schmidt Commanding General 101st Airborne DivisionAugust 1950 May 1951 Succeeded byRay E Porter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cornelius E Ryan amp oldid 1185943668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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