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Frederick J. Clarke

Frederick James Clarke (1 March 1915 – 4 February 2002) was a civil and military engineer with the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Clarke was one of three commissioners appointed to run the District of Columbia from 1960 to 1963. He rose to the rank of lieutenant General as the Chief of Engineers.

Frederick J. Clarke
Lieutenant General Frederick J. Clarke
Born(1915-03-01)1 March 1915
Little Falls, New York
Died4 February 2002(2002-02-04) (aged 86)
Fort Belvoir, Virginia
Buried
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchUnited States Army
Years of service1937–1973
Rank Lieutenant General
Commands held
Battles/wars
Awards
Other work
Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia
In office
1 August 1960 – 8 July 1963
Preceded byAlvin C. Welling
Succeeded byCharles Marsden Duke

A 1937 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, where he graduated fourth in his class, Clarke earned a Master of Science degree in civil engineering from Cornell University in 1940. During World War II he commanded an engineer battalion on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic, and he supervised the construction of a military airfield there that became a key refueling point for transatlantic flights to Africa. He then served on the staff of the Army Service Forces. After the war ended he was area engineer of the Manhattan Project's Hanford Engineer Works, and was executive officer of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project at Sandia Base.

As district engineer of the Trans-East District of the Corps from 1957 to 1959, he was responsible for military construction in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. From 1960 to 1963 he was one of the three federally appointed commissioners that governed the District of Columbia and initiated the construction of the Washington Metro railway and subway system. As chairman of the District's zoning commission, he participated in early debates over the proposals to build a bridge near the Three Sisters Islands in the Potomac River. He was the Director of Military Construction in the Office of the Chief of Engineers from 1963 1965, the Commanding General of the Army Engineer Center and Commandant of the United States Army Engineer School at Fort Belvoir from 1965 to 1966, and Deputy Chief of Engineers from 1966 to 1969. As Chief of Engineers from 1969 to 1973 he guided the Corps as it devoted increased attention to the environmental impact of its work.

Early life edit

Clarke was born in Little Falls, New York on 1 March 1915. His father was a machine shop foreman at a local dairy equipment manufacturer.[1] His mother died in the 1918 influenza pandemic. He had a sister.[2] He was educated at a parochial elementary school and the local high school in Little Falls.[1] Following his junior high school year he worked for Western Union during the summer, and after graduation he joined it full time as a teletype operator.[3] He intended to save enough money to study engineering at the University of Michigan, and attempted to save $500 (equivalent to $10,597 in 2023) for tuition. One day he saw an advertisement for a competitive examination for entry to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, and he took it.[4] A local man who had graduated from West Point thirty years before gave him a letter of introduction to his local congressman,[5] Representative James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. of New York's 39th congressional district, who appointed him.[1]

Clarke entered West Point on 1 July 1933.He graduated fourth in the class of 1937 on 12 June 1937 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Corps of Engineers. He was assigned to the 5th Engineer Regiment at Fort Belvoir, Virginia,[6] While at West Point he met and courted Isabel Van Slyke, who worked for the League of Nations Association as a research assistant.[7] They were married in the Chapel of the Most Holy Trinity at West Point in September 1938.[1] They had a son, Pat, and two daughters, Isabel and Nancy.[8] Engineering officers normally earned additional qualification soon after graduation,[9] and he entered Cornell University, where he studied structural and soil engineering. He received his Master of Science degree in civil engineering in September 1940.[1] He was promoted to first lieutenant on 12 June 1940 and captain on 9 September 1940.[10]

World War II edit

In August 1940, Clarke assumed command of Company C of the 15th Engineer Battalion, which was based at Fort Bragg, North Carolina,[10] as part of the 9th Infantry Division.[1] In June 1941 he joined the 38th Engineer Regiment at Fort Jackson, South Carolina.[10] After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that brought the United States Into World War II, he attended an abbreviated wartime Command and General Staff College course at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.[11] He then assumed command of the 1st Battalion, 38th Engineer Regiment. In February 1942, his battalion sailed to Ascension Island in the South Atlantic, where he supervised the construction of a military airfield there that became a key refueling point for transatlantic flights to Africa.[11] He was promoted to major on 1 February 1942.[10]

His battalion's next assignment was to construct a chain of airbases across Africa, but when he returned to the United States in July 1942 to collect the plans, he was reassigned to the planning division of the headquarters of Army Service Forces in Washington, D.C.. He was engaged in long-range logistical planning for communications, airfield and port construction, road and railway rehabilitation, and hospitals. "My logistics training was one hour at the Leavenworth course" he later recalled. "All I remembered was that what went on the ship last came off first."[8] But the commander of Army Service Forces, Lieutenant General Brehon B. Somervell wanted a major who had attended the Command and General Staff College, and had served overseas. This reduced the number of potential candidates greatly. His group drew up lists of supplies required for campaigns in Africa, China and the Pacific. Some of these contingencies occurred while others did not. As the war in Europe ended, he was involved in the frenzied planning effort to redirect supplies to the Pacific.[12] He was promoted to lieutenant colonel on 22 December 1942 and colonel on 15 May 1945.[10] He visited theater commands in Europe, South America and the Pacific, and after the war in Germany and Japan.[11] He was awarded the Legion of Merit for his service.[10][13]

Post war edit

After the war ended, Clarke was assigned to the Manhattan Engineer District as part of a process of replacing its reservist officers with regulars.Hanford Engineer Works in October 1945. He succeeded Colonel Franklin T. Matthias as the area engineer at the Hanford Engineer Works in January 1946. He was responsible for the production of plutonium there, and oversaw the town of Richland, with a population of 25,000 people, although it was declining from its wartime peak. The Manhattan Project ended on 31 December 1946, but Clarke stayed on at Hanford as the Atomic Energy Commission's area operations officer until September 1947. He was then transferred to Sandia Base near Albuquerque, New Mexico, as executive officer of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project at the personal request of its commander, Lieutenant General Leslie R. Groves Jr.. At Sandia he oversaw the construction of new facilities and the establishment of training programs for weapons assembly teams. He was awarded the Commendation Ribbon for his service.[10][11][14]

In December 1949, Clarke went to Okinawa as executive officer of the engineer district there.[10] The base there was being expanded to counter the communist People's Republic of China, and a $500 million construction program (equivalent to $6402.8 million in 2023) was under way. This was accelerated after the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950, but much of the necessary equipment and supplies was diverted to the pressing needs of operations in the Korean peninsula.[15] He attended a four-month course at the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia,[16] and then became chief of the Atomic Section of the Army's Research and Development Division, under the Assistant Chief of Staff, G-4, Lieutenant General Williston B. Palmer, who made him his executive officer in April 1953. In February 1954, Clarke attended the three-month Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School. He briefly served as head of the Construction Management Branch of G-4, where he was concerned with the funding, manufacture and emplacement of Nike missile batteries. He then became head of the Production Mobilization Branch, with responsibility for the readiness of the national munitions and armament industries, and was special assistant to Palmer's successor, Lieutenant General Carter B. Magruder.[15] He attended the National War College in 1956 and 1957.[17]

 
In his role of Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia, Clarke hands astronaut John Glenn the key to the city at a White House Reception

Clarke's last overseas assignment was as district engineer of the Trans-East District from 1957 to 1959. From his headquarters at Karachi in Pakistan, he oversaw U.S. military construction in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, and initiated transportation surveys in East Pakistan and Burma. He oversaw $140 million worth of military construction programs (equivalent to $1518.77 million in 2023) in Pakistan alone. Works included Karachi Airport and Dhahran Airport in Saudi Arabia, and design studies for road from Rangoon to Mandalay in Burma, all in support of United States Air Force (USAF) spy flights over the Soviet Union.[18][19] On returning to the United States in 1959, her served for a year as chief of staff of the United States Army Engineer Training Center at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.[18]

From 1874 to 1967, the District of Columbia was governed by three federally appointed commissioners (one a civil engineer, selected from the Army Corps of Engineers). On 1 August 1960, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Clarke as the District's Engineer Commissioner. He was the technician-in-chief, called to address the problems such as traffic gridlock, economic development and low levels of funding. At one point early in his term, he was the only commissioner available for full-time duty, because one post was vacant and the other commissioner had suffered a heart attack. In the early 1960s, he participated in talks that led to the compact agreement for construction of the Washington Metro railway and subway system. As chairman of the District's zoning commission, he participated in early debates over the controversial proposal to build an interstate bridge near the Three Sisters Islands in the Potomac River, and over a planned freeway through the heart of the District.[18][20]

After his term as Engineer Commissioner ended on 8 July 1963,[20] he was the Director of Military Construction in the Office of the Chief of Engineers from 1963 to 1964. In this role he handled the military construction programs of the Army and the USAF. The USAF construction program mainly involved building missile silos for the new intercontinental ballistic missiles. He was also involved with the development of the Kennedy Space Center in Florida for NASA, and $75 million (equivalent to $746.41 million in 2023) of Agency for International Development projects in the Middle East and Africa. He mounted the disaster relief effort after the 1964 Alaska earthquake because a Corps of Engineers officer was the man on the spot.[21]

In July 1965, Clarke became the commanding General of the Army Engineer Center and Commandant of the United States Army Engineer School at Fort Belvoir. With the escalation of the Vietnam War, he supervised the training of engineer units for duty in Vietnam. He established a ten-month training course to prepare field officers for command at the battalion level and for duty on staffs of divisions and higher formations. Shorter courses were created to turn out platoon commanders, and he re-established the Officer Candidate School there to turn qualified enlisted personnel into junior officers. Now a major general, he was appointed the Deputy Chief of Engineers in December 1966. During his tour of duty, he was principally concerned with engineer activities in support of the war in Vietnam.[21] On 1 August 1969, he became the Chief of Engineers, with the rank of lieutenant general. His office had an annual budget of $1.8 billion (equivalent to $14.96 billion in 2023) for civil engineering works in the United States and $1 billion (equivalent to $8.31 billion in 2023) for military construction.[22] Clarke guided the Corps of Engineers as it devoted increased attention to the environmental impact of its work.[19] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1973.[23]

When Clarke retired from the Army on 1 July 1973 after 36 years of service,[13] he was the last member of the West Point class of 1937 on active duty.[8]

Later life edit

 
Grave in Arlington National Cemetery

After leaving the Army, Clarke served as executive director of the National Commission on Water Quality. In the 1980s, he was a consultant to the Tippetts, Abbett, McCarthy, Stratton engineering firm.[24] He died in Fort Belvoir, Virginia, on 4 February 2002,[8] and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.[25]

Dates of rank edit

Insignia Rank Component Date Reference
 
Second Lieutenant United States Army Corps of Engineers 12 June 1937 [10][13]
 
First Lieutenant United States Army Corps of Engineers 12 June 1940 [10][13]
 
Captain Army of the United States 9 September 1940 [10]
 
Major Army of the United States 1 February 1942 [10]
 
Lieutenant Colonel Army of the United States 22 December 1942 [10][13]
 
Colonel Army of the United States 15 May 1945 [10][13]
 
Lieutenant Colonel (reverted) Army of the United States 1 June 1946 [10][13]
 
Captain United States Army Corps of Engineers 12 June 1947 [10]
 
Major United States Army Corps of Engineers 15 July 1948 [10][13]
 
Colonel Army of the United States 29 June 1951 [13]
 
Lieutenant Colonel United States Army Corps of Engineers 1 July 1954 [10][13]
 
Brigadier general (temporary) United States Army 1 December 1960 [13]
 
Brigadier general United States Army 12 June 1962 [13]
 
Major general (temporary) United States Army February 1965 [13]
 
Major general United States Army 22 August 1967 [13]
 
Lieutenant general United States Army 1 August 1969 [13]
 
Lieutenant general Retired 1 July 1973 [13]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Clarke 1980, p. iv.
  2. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 5.
  3. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 7.
  4. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 3.
  5. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 12.
  6. ^ Cullum 1940, p. 1175.
  7. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 32.
  8. ^ a b c d "Frederick J. Clarke 1937". West Point Association of Graduates. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
  9. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 36.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Cullum 1950, p. 897.
  11. ^ a b c d Clarke 1980, p. v.
  12. ^ Clarke 1980, pp. 82–87.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Clarke 1980, p. xii.
  14. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 584, 599–600.
  15. ^ a b Clarke 1980, p. vi.
  16. ^ Clarke 1980, pp. 107–109.
  17. ^ Clarke 1980, p. 108.
  18. ^ a b c Clarke 1980, p. vii.
  19. ^ a b . Portraits and Profiles of Chief Engineers. Archived from the original on 19 June 2005. Retrieved 22 August 2005.
  20. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 6 October 2015.
  21. ^ a b Clarke 1980, p. viii.
  22. ^ Clarke 1980, pp. ix–x.
  23. ^ "Lt. Gen. Frederick J. Clarke". National Academy of Engineering. 27 October 2022.
  24. ^ Clarke 1980, p. x.
  25. ^ "Burial Detail: Clarke, Frederick James". United States Army. 27 October 2022 – via ANC Explorer.

References edit

  • Clarke, Frederick J. (1980). "Interviews with Lieutenant General Frederick J. Clarke" (Interview). Engineer Memoirs. Interviewed by Cowdrey, Albert E.; Robinson, Michael C.; Spray, Ann; Sullen, Hoy. Washington, DC: United States Army Corps of Engineers Historical Division.
  • Cullum, George W. (1940). Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the US Military Academy at West Point New York since its Establishment in 1802: Supplement Volume VIII 1930–1940. Chicago, Illinois: R. R. Donnelly and Sons, The Lakeside Press. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  • Cullum, George W. (1950). Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the US Military Academy at West Point New York since its Establishment in 1802: Supplement Volume IX 1940–1950. Chicago, Illinois: R. R. Donnelly and Sons, The Lakeside Press. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  • Jones, Vincent (1985). (PDF). United States Army in World War II. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 10913875. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
Military offices
Preceded by Chief of Engineers
1969–1973
Succeeded by

frederick, clarke, frederick, james, clarke, march, 1915, february, 2002, civil, military, engineer, with, united, states, army, corps, engineers, clarke, three, commissioners, appointed, district, columbia, from, 1960, 1963, rose, rank, lieutenant, general, c. Frederick James Clarke 1 March 1915 4 February 2002 was a civil and military engineer with the United States Army Corps of Engineers Clarke was one of three commissioners appointed to run the District of Columbia from 1960 to 1963 He rose to the rank of lieutenant General as the Chief of Engineers Frederick J ClarkeLieutenant General Frederick J ClarkeBorn 1915 03 01 1 March 1915Little Falls New YorkDied4 February 2002 2002 02 04 aged 86 Fort Belvoir VirginiaBuriedArlington National CemeteryAllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1937 1973RankLieutenant GeneralCommands heldChief of EngineersUnited States Army Engineer SchoolHanford Engineer WorksBattles warsWorld War IIKorean warVietnam WarAwardsDistinguished Service MedalLegion of MeritCommendation RibbonOther workEngineer Commissioner of the District of ColumbiaIn office 1 August 1960 8 July 1963Preceded byAlvin C WellingSucceeded byCharles Marsden Duke A 1937 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point New York where he graduated fourth in his class Clarke earned a Master of Science degree in civil engineering from Cornell University in 1940 During World War II he commanded an engineer battalion on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic and he supervised the construction of a military airfield there that became a key refueling point for transatlantic flights to Africa He then served on the staff of the Army Service Forces After the war ended he was area engineer of the Manhattan Project s Hanford Engineer Works and was executive officer of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project at Sandia Base As district engineer of the Trans East District of the Corps from 1957 to 1959 he was responsible for military construction in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia From 1960 to 1963 he was one of the three federally appointed commissioners that governed the District of Columbia and initiated the construction of the Washington Metro railway and subway system As chairman of the District s zoning commission he participated in early debates over the proposals to build a bridge near the Three Sisters Islands in the Potomac River He was the Director of Military Construction in the Office of the Chief of Engineers from 1963 1965 the Commanding General of the Army Engineer Center and Commandant of the United States Army Engineer School at Fort Belvoir from 1965 to 1966 and Deputy Chief of Engineers from 1966 to 1969 As Chief of Engineers from 1969 to 1973 he guided the Corps as it devoted increased attention to the environmental impact of its work Contents 1 Early life 2 World War II 3 Post war 4 Later life 5 Dates of rank 6 Notes 7 ReferencesEarly life editClarke was born in Little Falls New York on 1 March 1915 His father was a machine shop foreman at a local dairy equipment manufacturer 1 His mother died in the 1918 influenza pandemic He had a sister 2 He was educated at a parochial elementary school and the local high school in Little Falls 1 Following his junior high school year he worked for Western Union during the summer and after graduation he joined it full time as a teletype operator 3 He intended to save enough money to study engineering at the University of Michigan and attempted to save 500 equivalent to 10 597 in 2023 for tuition One day he saw an advertisement for a competitive examination for entry to the United States Military Academy at West Point New York and he took it 4 A local man who had graduated from West Point thirty years before gave him a letter of introduction to his local congressman 5 Representative James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr of New York s 39th congressional district who appointed him 1 Clarke entered West Point on 1 July 1933 He graduated fourth in the class of 1937 on 12 June 1937 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Corps of Engineers He was assigned to the 5th Engineer Regiment at Fort Belvoir Virginia 6 While at West Point he met and courted Isabel Van Slyke who worked for the League of Nations Association as a research assistant 7 They were married in the Chapel of the Most Holy Trinity at West Point in September 1938 1 They had a son Pat and two daughters Isabel and Nancy 8 Engineering officers normally earned additional qualification soon after graduation 9 and he entered Cornell University where he studied structural and soil engineering He received his Master of Science degree in civil engineering in September 1940 1 He was promoted to first lieutenant on 12 June 1940 and captain on 9 September 1940 10 World War II editIn August 1940 Clarke assumed command of Company C of the 15th Engineer Battalion which was based at Fort Bragg North Carolina 10 as part of the 9th Infantry Division 1 In June 1941 he joined the 38th Engineer Regiment at Fort Jackson South Carolina 10 After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that brought the United States Into World War II he attended an abbreviated wartime Command and General Staff College course at Fort Leavenworth Kansas 11 He then assumed command of the 1st Battalion 38th Engineer Regiment In February 1942 his battalion sailed to Ascension Island in the South Atlantic where he supervised the construction of a military airfield there that became a key refueling point for transatlantic flights to Africa 11 He was promoted to major on 1 February 1942 10 His battalion s next assignment was to construct a chain of airbases across Africa but when he returned to the United States in July 1942 to collect the plans he was reassigned to the planning division of the headquarters of Army Service Forces in Washington D C He was engaged in long range logistical planning for communications airfield and port construction road and railway rehabilitation and hospitals My logistics training was one hour at the Leavenworth course he later recalled All I remembered was that what went on the ship last came off first 8 But the commander of Army Service Forces Lieutenant General Brehon B Somervell wanted a major who had attended the Command and General Staff College and had served overseas This reduced the number of potential candidates greatly His group drew up lists of supplies required for campaigns in Africa China and the Pacific Some of these contingencies occurred while others did not As the war in Europe ended he was involved in the frenzied planning effort to redirect supplies to the Pacific 12 He was promoted to lieutenant colonel on 22 December 1942 and colonel on 15 May 1945 10 He visited theater commands in Europe South America and the Pacific and after the war in Germany and Japan 11 He was awarded the Legion of Merit for his service 10 13 Post war editAfter the war ended Clarke was assigned to the Manhattan Engineer District as part of a process of replacing its reservist officers with regulars Hanford Engineer Works in October 1945 He succeeded Colonel Franklin T Matthias as the area engineer at the Hanford Engineer Works in January 1946 He was responsible for the production of plutonium there and oversaw the town of Richland with a population of 25 000 people although it was declining from its wartime peak The Manhattan Project ended on 31 December 1946 but Clarke stayed on at Hanford as the Atomic Energy Commission s area operations officer until September 1947 He was then transferred to Sandia Base near Albuquerque New Mexico as executive officer of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project at the personal request of its commander Lieutenant General Leslie R Groves Jr At Sandia he oversaw the construction of new facilities and the establishment of training programs for weapons assembly teams He was awarded the Commendation Ribbon for his service 10 11 14 In December 1949 Clarke went to Okinawa as executive officer of the engineer district there 10 The base there was being expanded to counter the communist People s Republic of China and a 500 million construction program equivalent to 6402 8 million in 2023 was under way This was accelerated after the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950 but much of the necessary equipment and supplies was diverted to the pressing needs of operations in the Korean peninsula 15 He attended a four month course at the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk Virginia 16 and then became chief of the Atomic Section of the Army s Research and Development Division under the Assistant Chief of Staff G 4 Lieutenant General Williston B Palmer who made him his executive officer in April 1953 In February 1954 Clarke attended the three month Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School He briefly served as head of the Construction Management Branch of G 4 where he was concerned with the funding manufacture and emplacement of Nike missile batteries He then became head of the Production Mobilization Branch with responsibility for the readiness of the national munitions and armament industries and was special assistant to Palmer s successor Lieutenant General Carter B Magruder 15 He attended the National War College in 1956 and 1957 17 nbsp In his role of Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia Clarke hands astronaut John Glenn the key to the city at a White House Reception Clarke s last overseas assignment was as district engineer of the Trans East District from 1957 to 1959 From his headquarters at Karachi in Pakistan he oversaw U S military construction in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and initiated transportation surveys in East Pakistan and Burma He oversaw 140 million worth of military construction programs equivalent to 1518 77 million in 2023 in Pakistan alone Works included Karachi Airport and Dhahran Airport in Saudi Arabia and design studies for road from Rangoon to Mandalay in Burma all in support of United States Air Force USAF spy flights over the Soviet Union 18 19 On returning to the United States in 1959 her served for a year as chief of staff of the United States Army Engineer Training Center at Fort Leonard Wood Missouri 18 From 1874 to 1967 the District of Columbia was governed by three federally appointed commissioners one a civil engineer selected from the Army Corps of Engineers On 1 August 1960 President Dwight D Eisenhower appointed Clarke as the District s Engineer Commissioner He was the technician in chief called to address the problems such as traffic gridlock economic development and low levels of funding At one point early in his term he was the only commissioner available for full time duty because one post was vacant and the other commissioner had suffered a heart attack In the early 1960s he participated in talks that led to the compact agreement for construction of the Washington Metro railway and subway system As chairman of the District s zoning commission he participated in early debates over the controversial proposal to build an interstate bridge near the Three Sisters Islands in the Potomac River and over a planned freeway through the heart of the District 18 20 After his term as Engineer Commissioner ended on 8 July 1963 20 he was the Director of Military Construction in the Office of the Chief of Engineers from 1963 to 1964 In this role he handled the military construction programs of the Army and the USAF The USAF construction program mainly involved building missile silos for the new intercontinental ballistic missiles He was also involved with the development of the Kennedy Space Center in Florida for NASA and 75 million equivalent to 746 41 million in 2023 of Agency for International Development projects in the Middle East and Africa He mounted the disaster relief effort after the 1964 Alaska earthquake because a Corps of Engineers officer was the man on the spot 21 In July 1965 Clarke became the commanding General of the Army Engineer Center and Commandant of the United States Army Engineer School at Fort Belvoir With the escalation of the Vietnam War he supervised the training of engineer units for duty in Vietnam He established a ten month training course to prepare field officers for command at the battalion level and for duty on staffs of divisions and higher formations Shorter courses were created to turn out platoon commanders and he re established the Officer Candidate School there to turn qualified enlisted personnel into junior officers Now a major general he was appointed the Deputy Chief of Engineers in December 1966 During his tour of duty he was principally concerned with engineer activities in support of the war in Vietnam 21 On 1 August 1969 he became the Chief of Engineers with the rank of lieutenant general His office had an annual budget of 1 8 billion equivalent to 14 96 billion in 2023 for civil engineering works in the United States and 1 billion equivalent to 8 31 billion in 2023 for military construction 22 Clarke guided the Corps of Engineers as it devoted increased attention to the environmental impact of its work 19 He was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1973 23 When Clarke retired from the Army on 1 July 1973 after 36 years of service 13 he was the last member of the West Point class of 1937 on active duty 8 Later life edit nbsp Grave in Arlington National Cemetery After leaving the Army Clarke served as executive director of the National Commission on Water Quality In the 1980s he was a consultant to the Tippetts Abbett McCarthy Stratton engineering firm 24 He died in Fort Belvoir Virginia on 4 February 2002 8 and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery 25 Dates of rank editInsignia Rank Component Date Reference nbsp Second Lieutenant United States Army Corps of Engineers 12 June 1937 10 13 nbsp First Lieutenant United States Army Corps of Engineers 12 June 1940 10 13 nbsp Captain Army of the United States 9 September 1940 10 nbsp Major Army of the United States 1 February 1942 10 nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Army of the United States 22 December 1942 10 13 nbsp Colonel Army of the United States 15 May 1945 10 13 nbsp Lieutenant Colonel reverted Army of the United States 1 June 1946 10 13 nbsp Captain United States Army Corps of Engineers 12 June 1947 10 nbsp Major United States Army Corps of Engineers 15 July 1948 10 13 nbsp Colonel Army of the United States 29 June 1951 13 nbsp Lieutenant Colonel United States Army Corps of Engineers 1 July 1954 10 13 nbsp Brigadier general temporary United States Army 1 December 1960 13 nbsp Brigadier general United States Army 12 June 1962 13 nbsp Major general temporary United States Army February 1965 13 nbsp Major general United States Army 22 August 1967 13 nbsp Lieutenant general United States Army 1 August 1969 13 nbsp Lieutenant general Retired 1 July 1973 13 Notes edit a b c d e f Clarke 1980 p iv Clarke 1980 p 5 Clarke 1980 p 7 Clarke 1980 p 3 Clarke 1980 p 12 Cullum 1940 p 1175 Clarke 1980 p 32 a b c d Frederick J Clarke 1937 West Point Association of Graduates Retrieved 27 October 2022 Clarke 1980 p 36 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Cullum 1950 p 897 a b c d Clarke 1980 p v Clarke 1980 pp 82 87 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Clarke 1980 p xii Jones 1985 pp 584 599 600 a b Clarke 1980 p vi Clarke 1980 pp 107 109 Clarke 1980 p 108 a b c Clarke 1980 p vii a b Lieutenant General Frederick J Clarke Portraits and Profiles of Chief Engineers Archived from the original on 19 June 2005 Retrieved 22 August 2005 a b DCPL MLK Washingtoniana Division FAQs DC Commissioners Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 6 October 2015 a b Clarke 1980 p viii Clarke 1980 pp ix x Lt Gen Frederick J Clarke National Academy of Engineering 27 October 2022 Clarke 1980 p x Burial Detail Clarke Frederick James United States Army 27 October 2022 via ANC Explorer References editClarke Frederick J 1980 Interviews with Lieutenant General Frederick J Clarke Interview Engineer Memoirs Interviewed by Cowdrey Albert E Robinson Michael C Spray Ann Sullen Hoy Washington DC United States Army Corps of Engineers Historical Division Cullum George W 1940 Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the US Military Academy at West Point New York since its Establishment in 1802 Supplement Volume VIII 1930 1940 Chicago Illinois R R Donnelly and Sons The Lakeside Press Retrieved 13 October 2015 Cullum George W 1950 Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the US Military Academy at West Point New York since its Establishment in 1802 Supplement Volume IX 1940 1950 Chicago Illinois R R Donnelly and Sons The Lakeside Press Retrieved 13 October 2015 Jones Vincent 1985 Manhattan The Army and the Atomic Bomb PDF United States Army in World War II Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 10913875 Archived from the original PDF on 7 October 2014 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Military offices Preceded byWilliam F Cassidy Chief of Engineers1969 1973 Succeeded byWilliam C Gribble Jr Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Nuclear technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frederick J Clarke amp oldid 1224107039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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