Major General John Porter
Lucas (January 14, 1890 – December 24, 1949), affectionately remembered as "Old Luke," was a senior officer
of the United States Army who saw service in World War I and World
War II. He is most notable for being the commander of the U.S. VI
Corps during the Battle of Anzio (Operation Shingle) in the Italian
Campaign of World War II.
Major
General Porter's parents were Charles Lucas (1861-1923) and Mary
Porter (1830-?). Charles was the son of John W. Lucas (1824-1881) and
Mary Lucas (1793-1826). And John W. was the son of John Lucas
(1787-1825) and Mary (Lucas) Lucas (1793-1826). So, Major General
John Porter was the great-grandson of the founder of Lucasville and
yet another Lucas in the family to become a notable military figure
in U.S. history.
Major General Lucas was
born on January 14, 1890, in Kearneysville, West Virginia. He was a
graduate of West Point in the class of 1911. Commissioned as a
cavalry officer, he transferred to the Field Artillery in 1920 and
spent the first few years of his service in the Philippines before
returning to the US in August 1914.
In January 1915, Lucas
became commander of the 13th Cavalry Regiment Machine Gun Troop. On
March 9, 1916, he distinguished himself in action against Pancho
Villa's raiders during the Battle of Columbus, “fighting his way
alone and bare-footed through attacking Villistas from his quarters
to the camp's guard tent.” There he organized resistance with a
single machine gun until the remainder of his unit and a supporting
troop arrived, then maneuvered his men to repel the attackers.
Lucas joined the 33rd
Infantry Division in August 1917 at Camp Logan, Texas, where he
continued to serve MG George Bell, Jr., commander of the 33rd, as
Aide de Camp. CPT Lucas then led the division's Infantry School of
Arms while the division trained for World War I.
Promoted to Major on
January 15, 1918, Lucas was given command of the 108th Field Signal
Battalion (the Signal Battalion for the 33rd Infantry Division) and
sailed to France with this unit. He simultaneously served as the
Division Signal Officer. While serving as commander of the 108th, he
was seriously wounded in action near Amiens, France on June 23, 1918.
Major Lucas was the
battalion's first casualty, being struck by a fragment from a German
high-explosive shell. Evacuated to a hospital in England, he was
later sent back to the United States on convalescent leave, where he
recovered from his wounds. His wounds were severe enough to prevent
him from rejoining the 33rd Infantry Division. He was promoted to
Lieutenant Colonel on October 31, 1918. Following the war, he would
revert to his permanent rank of Captain.
After World War I, Captain
Lucas was assigned as a military science instructor for the
University of Michigan R.O.T.C. program in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In
1920, he rejoined the Field Artillery. He was promoted to Major in
1920, and in that year also entered the Field Artillery School at
Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Recognized for his leadership and abilities, he
served on the War Department General Staff from 1932-36. Lucas served
various other positions until July 1941 when he was notified that he
would be given command of the 3rd Infantry Division.
In the spring of 1943
Lucas was sent overseas to the Mediterranean Theater of Operations.
He entered the North African campaign as an observer for the War
Department and later became a deputy to General Dwight David
Eisenhower, the Supreme Allied Commander in the theater. There, in
the aftermath of the disastrous airborne drops in Operation Husky, he
recommended to General Eisenhower that "the organization of
Airborne Troops into [units as large as] divisions is unsound".
He briefly took command of II Corps in September, taking over from
Lieutenant General Omar Nelson Bradley.
On September 20, 1943,
Major General Lucas was given command of the Sixth Corps, taking over
from Major General Ernest J. Dawley. He led the corps in the early
stages of the Italian Campaign, coming under command of the U.S.
Fifth Army, commanded by Lieutenant General Mark Clark. VI Corps
crossed the Volturno Line in October and was involved in severe
mountain warfare fighting until December when the corps HQ was pulled
out of the line in preparation for an amphibious assault, codenamed
Operation Shingle.
During the Sicily
Campaign, Lucas succeeded General Omar S. Bradley as Commander of the
U.S. Second Corps, and since he later served as Commander of the
Sixth Corps, he became one of the few Army officers ever to be
awarded the Navy Distinguished Service Medal.
On February 22, 1944,
Lucas was relieved of VI Corps command after Shingle, the amphibious
landing at Anzio. Lucas was highly critical of the plans for the
Anzio battle, believing his force was not strong enough to accomplish
its mission. His confidence was not reinforced when the mission was
scaled back by last-minute orders and advice from his commander,
Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark, who told him not to "stick his
neck out.” Lucas's forces held the beachhead until May 23, when the
staged withdrawal of the German 14th Army permitted the Allies'
long-awaited breakout.
“A commander can
make a decision simply by ruling out what appears to him to be
impractical or unfeasible. This was how Maj. Gen. John P. Lucas,
commander of the VI Corps in Italy, viewed and resolved his command
problem immediately after the Anzio landing in January 1944. He
rejected a course of action that to him appeared unwise or imprudent.
“Yet two
alternatives were in fact valid and open to him, though neither
satisfied him completely. One seemed to him to verge on recklessness,
the other could perhaps be criticized as overcautious. With orders
from the next higher echelon of command deliberately left vague,
General Lucas was free to choose. Thus he alone would shape the
pattern of events that was to develop at Anzio.”
Martin
Blumenson. Chapter 13, “General Lucas at Anzio.”
Command
Decisions. 1960.
Major General John P.
Lucas, has been frequently maligned for failing to use greater
initiative in quickly seizing the Alban Hills as soon as the Allies
landed at Anzio. The assault on his military skills is not justified.
Had General Lucas seized the Alban Hills, as the plan intended, he
would likely have lost his entire Corps to German counterattack.
Thus, any criticism of
Lucas's actions in Anzio must be analyzed. Some historians feel the
Allied strategic leaders dealt the operational commander, Major
General John Lucas, a poor hand and he eventually made the best of it
…
“The failure of
Operation Shingle was not Lucas' alone. It was a failure of strategic
decision-making by Churchill and the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS)
that absorbed Allied resources far out of proportion with its
military or political benefit.”
Commander
Roger W. Sassman. “Operation SHINGLE and Major General John P.
Lucas.” USAWC STRATEGY RESEARCH PROJECT. 1999.
After nine days of
preparation to reinforce his position and four weeks of extremely
tough fighting, Lucas was relieved by Clark and replaced with Major
General Lucian K. Truscott as the commander of VI Corps at Anzio.
Lucas spent three weeks as Clark's deputy at Fifth Army headquarters
before returning to the United States.
In March 1944, Lucas was
assigned as deputy commander and later as commander of the U.S.
Fourth Army, headquartered at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. After the war,
he was made Chief of the US Military Advisory Group to the
Nationalist Chinese government, led by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek.
In 1948, Lucas was
assigned as Deputy Commander of the reactivated Fifth Army in
Chicago, Illinois. While still on active duty in that post, he died
suddenly at Naval Station Great Lakes Naval Hospital, near Chicago on
December 24, 1949. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery with
his wife Sydney Virginia Lucas (1892–1959). An obituary written by
long-time associate and friend Major General Laurence B. Keiser
appeared in the October, 1950 issue of The Assembly, the
magazine of the Association of West Point graduates.
A camp in Sault Ste.
Marie, Michigan, was named after Major General Lucas in honor of his
service. And, the polo field at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, was renamed
Lucas Field in his honor. Lucas was widely known as a polo player in
his youth. Lucas Street at Fort Sill is also named in his honor. On
June 28, 1962, Lucas Place at Fort Eustis was named in his honor.
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