Frank Tompkins
Frank Tompkins
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File:Frank Tompkins.jpg | |
Born | September 28, 1868 Washington, D.C. |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Northfield, Vermont |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/ |
United States Army |
Years of service | 1891–1923 |
Rank | Colonel |
Battles/wars | Spanish–American War |
Awards | Distinguished Service Cross Silver Star Purple Heart (3) |
Other work | Author |
Colonel Frank Tompkins (September 28, 1868 – December 21, 1954) was an officer in the United States Army. Tompkins served in numerous conflicts including the Spanish–American War in Cuba, the Philippine–American War, the Mexican Border War, and World War I. Recommended by General John J. Pershing for the Medal of Honor, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his leadership during the 1916 Battle of Columbus, New Mexico.
Biography
Frank Tompkins was born September 28, 1868 in Washington, D.C., one of three surviving sons of Lieutenant Colonel Charles Henry Tompkins, a quartermaster officer in the United States Army, and Augusta Root (Hobbie) Tompkins. During the American Civil War Tompkins's father received the Medal of Honor leading his troop of the U.S. 5th Cavalry in a mounted charge at the Battle of Fairfax Court House and was later brevetted a brigadier general. His father later became Assistant Quartermaster General of the United States Army.
Tompkins came from a noted military family. His grandfather was an 1820 graduate of the United States Military Academy and a veteran of the Mexican War, and his great-uncle Daniel D. Tompkins was the sixth Vice President of the United States. Tompkins's older brother was Colonel Selah "Tommy" Tompkins, a career officer with the 7th Cavalry who was its lieutenant colonel during the Punitive Expedition and led American forces during the Third Battle of Ciudad Juarez in 1919. His younger brother, also named Daniel D. Tompkins, became a colonel during World War I.
Educated at private schools in St. Paul Minnesota and Chicago, Illinois, Tompkins graduated from Shattuck Military Academy and Braden's (West Point) Preparatory School at Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York.
Tompkins married Alice Gertrude Barr, daughter of Colonel Thomas F. Barr (later Judge Advocate General of the United States Army), on January 4, 1893 while stationed on Governors Island in New York City. They had two sons, the first dying in infancy. Tompkins' second son, Francis Parker Tompkins, was born in 1896 at Fort Leavenworth and graduated from West Point in 1918. While a major serving in the Office of Chief of Cavalry, Francis Tompkins served in June 1940 as the cavalry branch representative on the subcommittee of the Ordnance Technical Committee responsible for drawing up the specifications for the development of the jeep,[1] and during World War II commanded Combat Command R of the 7th Armored Division from the Battle of the Bulge to the end of hostilities.[2]
Military career
Although his father and grandfather were alumni of the Military Academy, Frank Tompkins eschewed an appointment himself and entered the Army directly from civilian life, commissioned a second lieutenant in the 8th Cavalry on August 1, 1891. Three months later he accepted an open second lieutenant's positiion with the 7th Cavalry, where he remained until 1898. In 1897 he graduated from the Infantry and Cavalry School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Tompkins was promoted to first lieutenant in the 2nd Cavalry on July 12, 1898, and to captain in the newly created 11th Cavalry in February 1901, commanding Troop G in Batangas Province in the Philippines between March 1901 and March 1904. His unit engaged in counter-guerrilla operations against General Miguel Malvar and his 3,000 insurrectos during the successful final campaign of the Philippine–American War between December 1, 1901 and April 30, 1902. Tompkins accompanied the regiment to its new station at Fort Des Moines, Iowa. From October 1906 to March 1909 his unit served in Cuba as part of the Army of Pacification. In September 1910 Tompkins became a professor of military science in tactics at Norwich University, Vermont. He served three tours as its commandant of cadets, from 1910–1913, 1916–1917, and 1919–1923.
On March 9, 1916, Tompkins, now a major, commanded the 3rd Squadron of the 13th Cavalry at Columbus, New Mexico and was acting as regimental executive officer when it was attacked by revolutionary forces under Pancho Villa. Using a small force of two troops (approximately 60 men), he pursued Villa's much larger force 15 miles into Mexico, engaged its rear guard four times (the first was a mounted charge) and inflicted severe casualties reported as 75 to 100 dead without losing a man. During the Punitive Expedition that ensued, Tompkins led several provisional squadrons in "flying columns" deep into Mexico in search of Villa. Encountering hostile troops of the de facto Carranza government at the Battle of Parral, Tompkins retreated, conducting a rear guard action to avoid an all-out battle likely to result in war between the United States and Mexico. He was wounded twice during the campaign, in the knee during the Villa raid on Columbus and in the chest and shoulder from a rifle bullet at Parral. Tompkins received the Distinguished Service Cross for valor at Columbus and in Mexico. He returned to Norwich in September 1916 for his second tour as commandant while recuperating from his wounds.
After the United States entered World War I, Tompkins became a lieutenant colonel in May 1917 and ordered to the 18th Cavalry Regiment. Before this took place, however, he was promoted to colonel in June and his orders changed to take command of the 301st Infantry Regiment ("Boston's Own"), 76th Division, being formed for training at Fort Devens, Massachusetts. He sailed with his regiment to France on July 6, 1918, and on arrival found that the division had been designated by the American Expeditionary Force as one of six depot divisions to receive, train, and process replacement troops. Tompkins asked Pershing, now commanding the AEF, for transfer to a combat division and was assigned command of the 110th Infantry of the 28th Division on the Vesle River. He reported August 12 and led the 110th during the Oise-Aisne Campaign until September 7, when he was severely wounded and temporarily blinded at Baslieux-lès-Fismes in a mustard gas attack. Tompkins was hospitalized near Paris until November and found unfit for further front line duty.
Tompkins returned to the United States in December 1918, stationed at Fort Myer, Virgina until March 1919, when he again became a professor and commandant of cadets at Norwich. He was retired on July 1, 1920, with a service disability in a reorganization of the army but was immediately recalled to duty until 1923 to finish his tour at Norwich. He then retired again but remained affiliated with Norwich as a trustee until his death in 1954 at the age of eighty-six.
In 1934 his book "Chasing Villa" was published and is considered the most comprehensive account of the Punitive Expedition by a participant. Tompkins Hall, now a wing of the Technology Center in the Engineering, Math and Science Complex, was dedicated to him in February 1952.
References
- ↑ "Chronology of the 1/4-ton Liaison Car Development" Early Jeep Documents repository, willys-overland.com. Retrieved 28 April 2015
- ↑ Francis P. Tompkins 1918, Memorial Page July 10, 1971, West Point Association of Graduates.org. Retrieved 28 April 2015
- Pages with broken file links
- 1868 births
- 1954 deaths
- United States Army colonels
- Recipients of the Distinguished Service Cross (United States)
- American military personnel of the Spanish–American War
- American military personnel of the Philippine–American War
- American military personnel of World War I
- People of the Mexican Revolution