General Cochran was born in Tallahassee, FL on September 29, 1929, son of the late James F. Cochran, Jr. and Helen Saxon Cochran. A graduate of Leon County High School, he received a BA from the University of Florida and a MBA from George Washington University. He served 30 years as an officer in the US Army attending numerous schools and earning multiple medals for valor including the Silver Star and the Bronze Star with "V" device. He was also a recipient of the Purple Heart. He fought in both the Korean and Vietnam wars. In 1967 and '68, he commanded 1st Battalion 28th Infantry in the Republic of Vietnam where his radio call sign was Defiant 6; a designation he treasured for the rest of his life. During his years in the US Army, he served with great distinction as a coma Airborne Infantryman, culminating in his command of the 24th Infantry Division at Ft. Stewart, GA from 1979 to 1981. Following his retirement from the US Army, he went on to have a successful career in private industry. In 1987, Frank and his wife Faye fulfilled a lifelong dream of building a year-round house on St. Teresa beach. He was a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, the Society of the Cincinnati and the US Army Ranger Association.
General Cochran was preceded in life by his mother and father, his sister Jane, his son James F. Cochran IV, and his wife Faye Cole Cochran. He is survived by his son LTC (R) Lewis C. Cochran and wife Karen Casey Cochran; daughter Faye Cochran Woolf and husband William David Woolf; grandsons James F. Cochran V, Lewis C. Cochran Jr., John C. Cochran; and granddaughter, Eliza Cay Woolf. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made in his memory to the Society of the Cincinnati www.societyofthecincinnati.org or the Wounded Warrior Project www.woundedwarriorproject.org.
General Cochran was born in Tallahassee, FL on September 29, 1929, son of the late James F. Cochran, Jr. and Helen Saxon Cochran. A graduate of Leon County High School, he received a BA from the University of Florida and a MBA from George Washington University. He served 30 years as an officer in the US Army attending numerous schools and earning multiple medals for valor including the Silver Star and the Bronze Star with "V" device. He was also a recipient of the Purple Heart. He fought in both the Korean and Vietnam wars. In 1967 and '68, he commanded 1st Battalion 28th Infantry in the Republic of Vietnam where his radio call sign was Defiant 6; a designation he treasured for the rest of his life. During his years in the US Army, he served with great distinction as a coma Airborne Infantryman, culminating in his command of the 24th Infantry Division at Ft. Stewart, GA from 1979 to 1981. Following his retirement from the US Army, he went on to have a successful career in private industry. In 1987, Frank and his wife Faye fulfilled a lifelong dream of building a year-round house on St. Teresa beach. He was a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, the Society of the Cincinnati and the US Army Ranger Association.
General Cochran was preceded in life by his mother and father, his sister Jane, his son James F. Cochran IV, and his wife Faye Cole Cochran. He is survived by his son LTC (R) Lewis C. Cochran and wife Karen Casey Cochran; daughter Faye Cochran Woolf and husband William David Woolf; grandsons James F. Cochran V, Lewis C. Cochran Jr., John C. Cochran; and granddaughter, Eliza Cay Woolf. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made in his memory to the Society of the Cincinnati www.societyofthecincinnati.org or the Wounded Warrior Project www.woundedwarriorproject.org.