Colonel Douglas Crevier McNair

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Colonel Douglas Crevier McNair

Birth
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
6 Aug 1944 (aged 37)
Yigo, Guam
Burial
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA Add to Map
Plot
O 44
Memorial ID
View Source
Name: McNair, Douglas C.

Date of death: August 6th, 1944 (Guam, the Mariana Islands in the Pacific Ocean)
Buried: National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific

BIOGRAPHY:
His father was Lieutenant General Lesley J. McNair, former commander of the Army Ground Forces, who had been killed in France two weeks before.
Colonel Douglas C. McNair is buried at National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific Honolulu/Hawaii, United States. Plot:O, Row: 0, Grave: 44.

SILVER STAR

Rank: Colonel
Unit: Chief of Staff 77th Infantry Division "Liberty Division", U.S. Army
Details: Posthumously awarded.

LEGION OF MERIT - US MILITARY

Rank: Colonel
Unit: Chief of Staff 77th Infantry Division "Liberty Division", U.S. Army
Details: Posthumously awarded.

PURPLE HEART

Rank: Colonel
Unit: Chief of Staff 77th Infantry Division "Liberty Division", U.S. Army

Army & Navy: From My Own Men
Time Magazine - Monday, Aug. 14, 1944
U.S. Army press officers in London had insisted that Lieut. General Lesley J. McNair, trainer of the Army's ground fighting forces, had been killed by the enemy. But too many-people knew better, and last week the tragic truth came out. Able, respected "Whitey" McNair had been killed by a bomb dropped from a U.S. plane.
Like many a plain front-line G.I., General McNair was hit by a wild salvo dropped in the heavy air preparations for the Normandy breakthrough (see WORLD BATTLEFRONTS).
Death from the errors of fellow soldiers is an old story in war—especially in combat involving aircraft. But few officers of such high rank have died that way. Most memorable accident in U.S. military history: the death of General Thomas ("Stonewall") Jackson, who was shot by his North Carolinians as he galloped at dusk through a grove of trees at Chancellorsville.
When his aides asked the mortally wounded Jackson if he was badly hurt, he answered with an air of wonderment but no bitterness: "I think I am—and all my wounds are from my own men." Supreme Headquarters' report included no dying words from Whitey McNair, a thoroughgoing professional soldier who must also have died without bitterness.
Whitey McNair left an only son to carry on. This week the War Department announced that redheaded, 37-year-old Colonel Douglas McNair, a West Pointer and an artilleryman like his father, had been killed in action on Guam.
Killed by a sniper while seeking a site for the Divisional CP.
Name: McNair, Douglas C.

Date of death: August 6th, 1944 (Guam, the Mariana Islands in the Pacific Ocean)
Buried: National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific

BIOGRAPHY:
His father was Lieutenant General Lesley J. McNair, former commander of the Army Ground Forces, who had been killed in France two weeks before.
Colonel Douglas C. McNair is buried at National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific Honolulu/Hawaii, United States. Plot:O, Row: 0, Grave: 44.

SILVER STAR

Rank: Colonel
Unit: Chief of Staff 77th Infantry Division "Liberty Division", U.S. Army
Details: Posthumously awarded.

LEGION OF MERIT - US MILITARY

Rank: Colonel
Unit: Chief of Staff 77th Infantry Division "Liberty Division", U.S. Army
Details: Posthumously awarded.

PURPLE HEART

Rank: Colonel
Unit: Chief of Staff 77th Infantry Division "Liberty Division", U.S. Army

Army & Navy: From My Own Men
Time Magazine - Monday, Aug. 14, 1944
U.S. Army press officers in London had insisted that Lieut. General Lesley J. McNair, trainer of the Army's ground fighting forces, had been killed by the enemy. But too many-people knew better, and last week the tragic truth came out. Able, respected "Whitey" McNair had been killed by a bomb dropped from a U.S. plane.
Like many a plain front-line G.I., General McNair was hit by a wild salvo dropped in the heavy air preparations for the Normandy breakthrough (see WORLD BATTLEFRONTS).
Death from the errors of fellow soldiers is an old story in war—especially in combat involving aircraft. But few officers of such high rank have died that way. Most memorable accident in U.S. military history: the death of General Thomas ("Stonewall") Jackson, who was shot by his North Carolinians as he galloped at dusk through a grove of trees at Chancellorsville.
When his aides asked the mortally wounded Jackson if he was badly hurt, he answered with an air of wonderment but no bitterness: "I think I am—and all my wounds are from my own men." Supreme Headquarters' report included no dying words from Whitey McNair, a thoroughgoing professional soldier who must also have died without bitterness.
Whitey McNair left an only son to carry on. This week the War Department announced that redheaded, 37-year-old Colonel Douglas McNair, a West Pointer and an artilleryman like his father, had been killed in action on Guam.
Killed by a sniper while seeking a site for the Divisional CP.