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Leonard Wood

5th Chief of Staff of the United States Army

Leonard Wood

5th Chief of Staff of the United States Army

FieldValue
nameLeonard Wood
imageGen. Leonard Wood Trim.jpg
captionWood 1920s
officeGovernor-General of the Philippines
term_startOctober 14, 1921
term_endAugust 7, 1927
presidentWarren G. Harding
Calvin Coolidge
predecessorCharles Yeater (acting)
successorEugene A. Gilmore (acting)
office1Chief of Staff of the United States Army
term_start1April 22, 1910
term_end1April 21, 1914
predecessor1J. Franklin Bell
successor1William W. Wotherspoon
office2Governor of Moro Province
term_start2July 25, 1903
term_end2April 16, 1906
deputy2Tasker H. Bliss
predecessor2Position established
successor2Tasker H. Bliss
office3Governor of Cuba
term_start3December 23, 1899
term_end3May 20, 1902
predecessor3John R. Brooke
successor3Tomás Estrada Palma (President)
birth_date
birth_placeWinchester, New Hampshire, U.S.
death_date
death_placeBoston, Massachusetts, U.S.
restingplaceArlington National Cemetery
partyRepublican
educationHarvard University (MD, 1884)
spouse
children3
embedyes
embed_titleMilitary career
allegianceUnited States
branchUnited States Army
branch_labelService
serviceyears1885–1921
servicenumber0-2
unitUnited States Army Medical Corps
rankMajor General
commandsChief of Staff of the United States Army
Sixth Corps Area
10th Division
89th Division
Southern Department
Department of the East
Philippines Division
1st United States Volunteer Cavalry
battlesApache Wars
Spanish–American War
Philippine–American War
World War I
awardsMedal of Honor
Army Distinguished Service Medal
signatureLeonard Wood (1860-1927) signature (cropped).jpg
module

Calvin Coolidge Sixth Corps Area 10th Division 89th Division Southern Department Department of the East Philippines Division 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry Spanish–American War Philippine–American War World War I Army Distinguished Service Medal Leonard Wood (October 9, 1860 – August 7, 1927) was a United States Army major general, physician, and public official. He served as the Chief of Staff of the United States Army, Military Governor of Cuba, and Governor-General of the Philippines. He began his military career as an army doctor on the frontier, where he received the Medal of Honor. During the Spanish–American War, he commanded the Rough Riders, with Theodore Roosevelt as his second-in-command. Wood was bypassed for a major command in World War I, but then became a prominent Republican Party leader and a leading candidate for the 1920 presidential nomination.

Born in Winchester, New Hampshire, Wood became an army surgeon after earning a Doctor of Medicine degree from Harvard Medical School. He received the Medal of Honor for his role in the Apache Wars and became the personal physician to the President of the United States. At the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, Wood and Roosevelt organized the Rough Riders, a volunteer cavalry regiment. Wood was promoted to the rank of brigadier general during the war and fought in the Battle of San Juan Hill and other engagements. After the war, Wood served as the Military Governor of Cuba, where he instituted improvements to medical and sanitary conditions. President William Howard Taft made Wood the Army Chief of Staff in 1910, and Wood held that position until 1914. Several Republican leaders supported Wood for the role of commander of the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I, but the Woodrow Wilson administration selected John J. Pershing.

After Roosevelt's death in 1919, many of Roosevelt's former supporters backed Wood for the presidential nomination at the 1920 Republican National Convention. Wood received the most votes on the first four ballots of the convention, but the Republicans nominated Warren G. Harding. Wood retired from the army in 1921 and was appointed Governor-General of the Philippines later that year. He held that position until his death in 1927.

Biographer Jack Lane sums up his importance:

Early life and education

Wood was born in Winchester, New Hampshire, on October 9, 1860, one of three children born to Dr. Charles Jewett Wood (1829–1880) and Caroline Elizabeth (Hagar) Wood (1836–1910). His family was of English descent, and Wood was descended from Mayflower passengers William White, Francis Cooke, Stephen Hopkins and Richard Warren. He served as Governor General of the Mayflower Society from 1915 to 1921. Wood was also a member of the General Society of Colonial Wars and the Sons of the Revolution. He was president of the Sons of the Revolution from 1910 to 1911.

Wood was raised in Pocasset, Massachusetts, and educated by a private tutor, then attended Pierce Academy in Middleborough, Massachusetts. Wood tried unsuccessfully for an appointment to the United States Naval Academy and considered going to sea on an Arctic expedition or as a commercial fisherman. In 1880, his sister Barbara died, followed soon after by the death of his father. Wood's mother was able to support herself and Wood's brother Jacob by taking in boarders, while Wood moved away to further his education and obtain a profession. With the assistance of a relative, Wood was introduced to wealthy businessman H. H. Hunnewell, a philanthropist who had provided college tuition for other promising young men. Hunnewell agreed to fund Wood's education at Harvard Medical School, and Wood began attending courses in October 1880. According to Hunnewell, who considered his financial support to young men attending college loans and not grants, but did not attempt to obtain repayment, Wood was the only beneficiary who ever paid him back. Wood worked diligently and consistently improved his class standing to the point where he earned a scholarship that provided additional financial support for his studies.

In 1884, Wood received his MD degree. He interned at Boston City Hospital, but was fired near the end of the year for exceeding his authority by conducting surgical procedures without supervision. He then took over the struggling Boston office of a classmate who had been hired by the Southern Pacific Railway. Wood practiced medicine in late 1884 and into the following year, but business was not steady and he did not have a reliable income. In 1885, he completed the examinations for a commission in the Army Medical Corps, attracted to the military by the possibilities for immediate employment and a regular salary. He finished second of 59 applicants, but there was only one vacancy, so Wood was not immediately offered a commission.

Early military career

Wood as assistant surgeon at the start of his career

In June 1885, Wood was contracted by the U.S. Army to act as an assistant surgeon without rank, and he was posted to the Department of Arizona. In January 1886, Wood was nominated by the president for appointment in the U.S. Army as assistant surgeon with the rank of first lieutenant. His appointment was among several the United States Senate delayed confirming until July 27, 1886. Until that time, he continued as a contract surgeon and was stationed with the 4th Cavalry at Fort Huachuca, Arizona. Wood participated in the last campaign against Geronimo in the summer of 1886.

Medal of Honor action

In 1898, Wood received the Medal of Honor for his actions during the 1886 Geronimo campaign, including carrying dispatches 100 miles through hostile territory, and commanding a detachment of the 8th Infantry Regiment whose officers had been killed in hand-to-hand combat against the Apaches. Nelson A. Miles, the overall commander of the expedition, and Henry Ware Lawton, Wood's commander in the field, recommended Wood for a brevet promotion or a Medal of Honor, and lobbied persistently for 12 years until the medal was approved.

Citation for Medal of Honor

The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pleasure in presenting the Medal of Honor to Assistant Surgeon Leonard Wood, United States Army, for extraordinary heroism in the Summer of 1886, in action in the Apache Campaigns in Arizona Territory. Assistant Surgeon Wood voluntarily carried dispatches through a region infested with hostile Indians, making a journey of 70 miles in one night and walking 30 miles the next day. Also for several weeks, while in close pursuit of Geronimo's band and constantly expecting an encounter, commanded a detachment of Infantry, which was then without an officer, and to the command of which he was assigned upon his own request.

Awarded for Actions During: Indian Campaigns Service: Army Unit: 4th U.S. Cavalry Date of Issue: April 8, 1898{{efn|In 1916, James Hay, a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives, included in military legislation a provision that attempted to revoke Wood's Medal of Honor, arguing that he was ineligible as a contract surgeon at the time of the actions for which he received the medal. With Wood a possible Republican presidential candidate in 1916, the attempt to revoke his award was seen by Wood's supporters as retaliation by Hay for former Secretary of War Lindley Miller Garrison's refusal to remove Wood as Chief of Staff of the Army at the start of Democrat Woodrow Wilson's presidential administration. The bill's supporters argued they were responding to lobbying by the Medal of Honor Legion and other interested parties that advocated revoking many Medals of Honor they believed had been improperly awarded.

Wood was eligible based on records showing that when he received his commission as a first lieutenant on July 27, 1886, the effective date was January 26, 1886, prior to the period of the actions for which he received the award. The countering view rested on an Adjutant General of the Army opinion that civilians were ineligible and at the time of his cited action, Wood was a civilian, so his award was not lawful. The Judge Advocate General of the Army had also previously ruled that "a medal of honor could not legally ... be awarded to a person for alleged distinguished service rendered while serving in the field as an acting assistant surgeon." In addition, Wood had received his award for distinguished service under arduous conditions, but not heroism while in actual combat, which was a requirement for eligibility.

A panel headed by Nelson Miles, who had originally recommended Wood for the Medal of Honor, reviewed the disputed awards, including Wood's. In keeping with the Adjutant General and Judge Advocate General opinions, Wood's Medal of Honor could have been rescinded, as the Miles board did for 911 others, including Dr. Mary Edwards Walker and "Buffalo Bill" Cody. Instead, the panel recommended that Wood retain his award, which one historian has called a "a clear conflict of interest" on Miles' part.}}

In late July 1886, Wood's appointment was confirmed and he received his commission as a first lieutenant. In February 1887, he was appointed acting captain and temporary medical director of the Department of Arizona during the illness of his superior. At the end of 1887, Wood's medical duties took him to Fort Lowell, Arizona Territory, followed by duty at Fort Selden, Fort Stanton, and Fort Wingate, New Mexico. In 1888, Wood was assigned to surgeon's duties at Fort McDowell, Arizona. In 1889, Wood was reassigned to the Presidio of San Francisco.

Wood was promoted to captain in 1891. In 1892, he was part of a contingent of Presidio soldiers that traveled to Benicia Barracks to assist units of the California National Guard during the conduct of their annual training encampment.

Georgia Tech football

Georgia Institute of Technology

While stationed at Fort McPherson in Atlanta, Wood enrolled in graduate school at Georgia Tech in order to be eligible for the school's football team. He organized the school's 1893 team, served as coach, and played left guard. Wood led Georgia Tech to a 2–1–1 record, including a 28–6 victory over the University of Georgia.

Spanish–American War

Wood was personal physician to Presidents Grover Cleveland and William McKinley through 1898. During his White House service, Wood developed a friendship with Theodore Roosevelt, then Assistant Secretary of the Navy. At the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, Wood and Roosevelt organized the 1st Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, popularly known as the Rough Riders. Wood successfully commanded the regiment during the June 24, 1898 Battle of Las Guasimas. When the brigade commander, Samuel B. M. Young, became ill, Wood received a field promotion to brigadier general of volunteers. He assumed command of 2nd Brigade, Cavalry Division, Fifth Army Corps (which included the Rough Riders) and led the brigade to a famous July 1, 1898, victory in the combined assaults on Kettle Hill and San Juan Hill that came to be known as the Battle of San Juan Heights.

After San Juan Heights, Wood led the 2nd Cavalry Brigade for the rest of the war. He stayed in Cuba afterward and was appointed military governor of Santiago later in 1898, then served as governor of Cuba from 1899 to 1902. In that capacity, he relied on his medical experience to institute improvements to medical and sanitary conditions. He also introduced numerous reforms similar to those of the Progressive Movement in the U.S., including improvements to the educational and court systems. Though he did institute these improvements, Wood's motivations as military governor remain unclear. In a report to Washington in 1900, he outlined that Cuban stability would be reached when "money can be borrowed at a reasonable rate of interest and when capital is willing to invest in the island." He was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army shortly before moving to his next assignment. On May 15, 1902, prior to leaving office as military governor, Wood issued an order excluding Chinese immigrants.

Philippine–American War

Wood visited several European countries in 1902. His tour included reviewing German troops during Kaiser Wilhelm II's annual parade in August, which he attended with Samuel B. M. Young and Henry C. Corbin, and a tour of the United Kingdom's Military College at Sandhurst in November. In 1903, Wood proceeded to the Philippines during the Philippine–American War, where he served as governor of Moro Province until 1906, then commanded the Philippine Division from 1906 to 1908. He was promoted to major general in 1903 despite significant opposition from members of the United States Senate who believed he had not served long enough in the lower grades and had been promoted because of political influence, not merit.

Wood received criticism for his command of U.S. Marines during the First Battle of Bud Dajo in March 1906, during which hundreds of women and children were killed. Though Wood did not directly command the assault, he took full responsibility for the resulting massacre, claiming that the high civilian casualties were the result of Moro men using women and children as human shields, as well as some Moro women dressing as men to join the fight. At Wood's instigation, Governor-General Henry Clay Ide reported that the women and children killed were the result of collateral damage from artillery fire, but that there had been no massacre. Some of Wood's critics accused him of being a "glory hound" for ordering Marines to storm the dormant volcano crater where the battle took place instead of besieging the Moro encampment.

Due to the backlash over Bud Dajo, Wood resigned as governor of Moro Province in April 1906 and was succeeded by brigadier general Tasker H. Bliss. He returned to the United States in 1908 and was assigned to command the Department of the East, with headquarters in New York City. He remained in this post until 1910, when he was appointed Army Chief of Staff.

Army Chief of Staff

National Portrait Gallery

Wood was named Army Chief of Staff in 1910 by President William Howard Taft, whom he had met while both were in the Philippines; he is the only medical officer to have held the position. As Chief of Staff, Wood implemented several programs, among which were the forerunner of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) program, and the Preparedness Movement, a campaign for universal military training and wartime conscription. The Preparedness Movement led to implementation of the Selective Service System shortly before World War I. As chief of staff, Wood reorganized the general staff into three divisions – Mobile Army, Coast Artillery, and War College – each headed by an assistant chief of staff. The three divisions he created did not last, but the overall result of his reorganization was the recognition that decentralization, which continued under his successors, enabled streamlined planning and decision making, which facilitated operations and training as the army began to prepare for U.S. entry into the war.

Commander of Army Eastern Department

In 1914, Wood completed his term as chief of staff and was succeeded by William Wallace Wotherspoon. As commander of the army's Eastern Department for the second time, Wood was a strong advocate of the Preparedness Movement, led by Republicans, which alienated him from President Woodrow Wilson, a Democrat who pursued an isolationist and pacifist foreign policy. Wood made speeches and wrote articles to advocate preparedness and in 1915 a collection of these works were published as a pro-preparedness book, The Military Obligation of Citizenship. In 1916 he was elected as an honorary member of the Rhode Island Society of the Cincinnati. He served as a member of Harvard University's board of overseers from 1917 to 1923.

World War I

Wood {{circa}} 1919

With American entry into World War I looming in early 1917, the most likely choice to lead American forces in France was Major General Frederick Funston. Funston died of a heart attack in February, leaving President Woodrow Wilson to choose from among the army's six other major generals. Wood was recommended by several prominent Republicans, including Henry Cabot Lodge. Despite this support, when the U.S. entered the war in April, Wood's prior criticism of the Wilson administration led Secretary of War Newton D. Baker to recommend John J. Pershing, the most junior of the serving major generals and a Republican, but one who had been less vocal than Wood.

Major General Leonard Wood (left) and state governors reviewing the 10th Division, which Wood was then commanding, at Camp Funston, Texas, pictured here in either 1918 or 1919.

During the war Wood was relegated to stateside roles, including command of the Southern Department in 1917. He then commanded the 89th and 10th Divisions, which he organized and trained at Camp Funston, Kansas. While on an inspection tour of the Western Front in January 1918, Wood was slightly injured by shrapnel from a US mortar round that exploded during a test. Wood was preparing to travel to France with the 89th Division in May 1918 when he was relieved by Wilson. He was disappointed at being continued in stateside service, but effectively organized and trained the 10th Division. During most of the war, Wood's aide-de-camp was John C. H. Lee, who attained the rank of lieutenant general during World War II.

Wood received the Army Distinguished Service Medal and the Legion of Honor (Grand Officer) from France to recognize his superior service during the war. The citation for his Army DSM reads:

After the war, Wood was appointed to command the Sixth Corps Area, which he led from 1919 to 1921.

1920 presidential campaign

Campaign button from Wood's 1920 presidential campaign, which uses his name to make a play on words

After having considered a presidential candidacy in 1916, in 1920 Wood was a serious contender for the Republican nomination. The major candidates were Senator Hiram Johnson of California, a progressive who opposed U.S. involvement in the League of Nations; Governor Frank Orren Lowden of Illinois, who supported women's suffrage and Prohibition, and opposed U.S. entry into the League of Nations; and Wood, whose military career made him the personification of competence and ties to Theodore Roosevelt earned him the backing of many of Roosevelt's former supporters, including William Cooper Procter. Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio was a dark horse candidate, running as a favorite son in order to maintain his hold on Ohio's Republican Party and secure his reelection to the Senate. At the convention, Wood led on the first four ballots, was second on the fifth, tied for first with Lowden on the sixth, and led again on the seventh. With none of the three front runners able to obtain a majority, support for Harding started to grow and he won the nomination on the tenth ballot. Delegates nominated Calvin Coolidge for vice president, and the Harding-Coolidge ticket went on to win the general election.

Governor-General of the Philippines

Portrait by Charles Walinger {{circa}} 1920s
Wood with his Philippine cabinet, 1923

Wood retired from the U.S. Army in 1921, after which he was chosen to serve as provost of the University of Pennsylvania. The college granted him a leave of absence before he assumed the position, enabling him to carry out a one-year appointment as Governor General of the Philippines. The Wood-Forbes mission appointed by Harding in 1921 to consider Filipino independence concluded that the Philippines was not ready for self-governance. In 1922, Wood decided to remain in the Philippines, so he resigned the provost's position.

1927 Philippine Islands passport signed by Leonard Wood.

Wood's Philippines tenure was characterized by tension between him and key Filipino officials. In his first year, Wood vetoed 16 measures passed by the Philippine Legislature, an act denounced by critics as a "misuse of the veto power" when they noted that his predecessor, Francis Burton Harrison, had vetoed only five measures during his entire seven and a half year governorship. The conflict increased in 1923, precipitated by the case of Ray Conley, a Manila Police detective who was accused of immorality and official misconduct. Interior Secretary Jose P. Laurel sought Conley's removal but Wood ordered Laurel to reinstate him. Laurel then tendered his resignation. The Filipino members of Wood's cabinet, including the entire Council of State, protested Wood's action by following Laurel's example. These events, the "Cabinet Crisis of 1923", strained relations between Wood's government and Filipino leaders, which lasted until his death in 1927.

The cabinet crisis was also exacerbated by disagreement between Wood and Filipino officials over Wood's economic reform agenda following the 1921 Philippine financial crisis. Wood reiterated his opposition to independence in 1925, arguing that while most government roles were filled by Filipinos, the U.S. should keep the Philippines for its own strategic interests. As the conflict between Wood and Filipino officials continued, Wood used the Philippine Constabulary to silence criticism of his administration, with critics accusing him of effectively turning the Philippines into a "surveillance state". In another effort to control public perception of his governorship, Wood directed Rafael Crame, an experienced intelligence officer who formerly served in the constabulary's Information Department, to organize a "subtle strategy" to demoralize the islands' burgeoning nationalist movement. The Philippine Legislature tried to sabotage Wood's economic reform agenda by influencing the Board of Control, the entity that chose boards of directors for corporations in the Philippines. Wood responded by removing Senate President Manuel L. Quezon and House Speaker Manuel Roxas from the board, which resulted in Wood becoming the sole authority over all Philippine government-owned corporations. Wood also won Philippine Supreme Court approval to appoint a new Board of Control. The nine-member court was structured to give American justices a one-vote majority, and the court decided in Wood's favor by one vote.

Death and burial

Grave at Arlington National Cemetery

Wood was diagnosed in 1910 with a benign meningioma, which was successfully resected by Harvey Cushing. He made a full recovery, but the tumor later recurred. Wood died in Boston on August 7, 1927, during surgery on the brain tumor. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, Section 21, Grave S-10.

The successful removal of Wood's first brain tumor represented an important milestone, indicating to the public the advances that had been made in the nascent field of neurosurgery and extending Wood's life by almost two decades. His brain is held at the Yale University School of Medicine as part of an historic collection of Harvey Cushing's patients' preserved brains.

Family

Wood with his wife and children

Wood was serving in Monterey, California, in 1888 when he met Louise Adriana Condit Smith (1869–1943), who was vacationing with her uncle and legal guardian, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Johnson Field. They married in Washington, DC on November 18, 1890, with the entire Supreme Court in attendance.

The Woods had three children:

  • Leonard Wood Jr. (1892–1931) was a Cornell University graduate who attained the rank of captain while serving in the Army during World War I, but was plagued by financial difficulties and ill health afterwards.
  • Osborne Cutler Wood (1897–1950) left Harvard University to serve in World War I, and attained the rank of lieutenant colonel after the war. After leaving the Army he relocated to New Mexico, where he was commissioned as a brigadier general and appointed as adjutant general of the New Mexico National Guard.
  • Louise Barbara Wood (1900–1960) served with Anne Morgan's American Friends in France relief organization during World War I. Louise Wood took an interest in preserving her father's legacy. In 1952, she attended the opening of a park in Cuba which included a plaque commemorating her father's Spanish-American War service and the shack in which Walter Reed conducted the research that proved mosquitoes are the cause of malaria.

Legacy

In 1925, Dorothy Wade, wife of the head doctor at the Culion leper colony, and fundraiser Perry Burgess created a charitable committee that after Wood's death became the Leonard Wood Memorial for the Eradication of Leprosy. The Wood Memorial supported leper colonies in Culion and Cebu, held the first international conference on leprosy in Manila in 1931, and helped support the International Leprosy Foundation. A statue of Wood was erected at Culion in 1931.

USS ''Leonard Wood'' underway off coast of California, April 28, 1944

In January 1941, the newly constructed Seventh Corps Area Training Center in Missouri was designated Fort Leonard Wood.

One of the U.S. Navy's World War II-era s, , was named for Wood.

Lake Wood near Mount Imbing in the province of Zamboanga del Sur in Mindanao is named for Wood.

Numerous streets are named after Wood, including roads in Baguio and Zamboanga City, Philippines. An elementary school in Mandaue, Philippines (inside the Eversley Childs Sanitarium compound) was also named after him. There are streets named for Wood at current and former military posts, including Fort Meade, Maryland and Sheridan Reserve Center (formerly Fort Sheridan), Illinois.

Wood was a Freemason; Leonard Wood Lodge No. 105 under the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the Philippines was named in his honor.

Honors

Honorary degrees

Wood received honorary degrees from many institutions of higher learning, including:

  • Harvard University (Doctor of Laws, LL.D., 1899)
  • Williams College (LL.D., 1902)
  • University of Pennsylvania (LL.D., 1903)
  • Pennsylvania Military College (Doctor of Military Science, 1913)
  • Norwich University (Master of Military Science, 1916)
  • Princeton University (LL.D., 1916)
  • University of Georgia (LL.D., 1917)
  • University of the South (Doctor of Civil Law, 1917)
  • University of Michigan (LL.D., 1918)
  • Union College (LL.D., 1919)
  • George Washington University (LL.D., 1919)
  • Wesleyan University (LL.D., 1919)
  • Lincoln Memorial University (LL.D., 1919)
  • Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (Doctor of Science, 1920)
  • University of the Philippines (LL.D., 1922)

Civilian awards

Wood received the Theodore Roosevelt Association's Theodore Roosevelt Distinguished Service Medal in 1923.

Military decorations and medals

  • Medal of Honor
  • Distinguished Service Medal
  • Indian Campaign Medal
  • Spanish Campaign Medal
  • Army of Cuban Occupation Medal (first recipient)
  • Philippine Campaign Medal
  • World War I Victory Medal
  • Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor (France)
  • Order of the Rising Sun (Japan)
  • Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (Italy)
  • Order of the Precious Brilliant Golden Grain (China)

Dates of rank

InsigniaRankDateComponent
[[File:Union army 1st lt rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Assistant surgeon5 January 1886Regular Army
[[File:Union army cpt rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Surgeon5 January 1891Regular Army
[[File:Union Army colonel rank insignia.pngborder75px]]Colonel8 May 1898Volunteers
[[File:Union army brig gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Brigadier general8 July 1898Volunteers
[[File:Union army maj gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Major general7 December 1898Volunteers
[[File:Union army brig gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Brigadier general13 April 1899Volunteers
[[File:Union army maj gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Major general5 December 1899Volunteers
[[File:Union army brig gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Brigadier general1 June 1901Regular Army
[[File:Union army maj gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Major general8 August 1903Regular Army
[[File:Union army maj gen rank insignia.jpgborder75px]]Major general15 October 1921Retired list

Head coaching record

Notes

References

Bibliography

Additional sources

  • Bacevich, A. J. Diplomat in Khaki: Major General Frank Ross McCoy and American Foreign Policy, 1898–1949 (1989), biography of Wood's principal aide.

References

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  8. (1937). "Historical Register of Harvard University, 1636–1936". Harvard University.
  9. (June 26, 1885). "The Army: Leonard Wood". [[Leavenworth Times]].
  10. (January 26, 1886). "Nominations: The President sent the following nominations to the Senate today". [[National Republican (newspaper).
  11. (July 28, 1886). "Long-Pending Promotions Confirmed". The Critic.
  12. U.S. Senate Committee on Military Affairs. (1904). "Nomination of Brig. Gen. Leonard Wood to be a Major-General, United States Army". US Government Printing Office.
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  14. (May 20, 1916). "Army Bill Joker Aims to Rob Wood of Honor Medal". [[The New York Times]].
  15. Pullen, John J.. (2017). "A Shower of Stars: The Medal of Honor and the 27th Maine". Stackpole Books.
  16. (August 21, 1886). "Appointments: To Be Assistant Surgeons, with the Rank of First-Lieutenant". The Medical Publishing Company.
  17. Mears, Dwight S.. (2018). "The Medal of Honor: The Evolution of America's Highest Military Decoration". University Press of Kansas.
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  19. Willbanks, James H.. (2011). "America's Heroes: Medal of Honor Recipients from the Civil War to Afghanistan". ABC-CLIO.
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  25. (August 5, 1892). "Military Notes". [[The San Francisco Call]].
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  27. Byrd, Joseph. (Spring 1992). "From Civil War Battlefields to the Moon: Leonard Wood". Georgia Tech Alumni Association.
  28. (2007). "Overthrow: America's century of regime change from Hawaii to Iraq". Times Books.
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  30. (August 17, 1902). "Corbin and Young Sail". [[Indianapolis Journal]].
  31. (November 1, 1902). "Naval & Military Intelligence: Gen. Leonard Wood". [[The Times]].
  32. Bell, William Gardner. (1999). "Commanding Generals and Chiefs of Staff, 1775–1995". Center of Military History, United States Army.
  33. (1911). "The Americana: A Universal Reference Library". Scientific American Compiling Dept..
  34. (August 2025). "Explains Killing of Woman". The New York Times.
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  36. Jones, Gregg. (2013). "Honor in the Dust: Theodore Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and the Rise and Fall of America's Imperial Dream". Penguin.
  37. (August 2025). "Fine, Cables Johnston, Answering Roosevelt". The New York Times.
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  39. (December 2, 1908). "People of the Day: General Wood of the Army". [[Champaign Daily Gazette]].
  40. "Will Succeed Bell: Gen. Wood Soon to Be Made Chief of Staff of Army". [[Public Opinion (Chambersburg).
  41. Cox, Hank H.. (2018). "The General Who Wore Six Stars: The Inside Story of John C. H. Lee". Potomac Books.
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  43. Clifford, John Garry. (2015). "The Citizen Soldiers: The Plattsburg Training Camp Movement, 1913–1920". University Press of Kentucky.
  44. (July 5, 1916). "Gardiner Heads Cincinnati: General Wood Is Made Honorary Member of Patriotic Organization". [[The New York Times]].
  45. Peck, Garrett. (2018). "The Great War in America: World War I and Its Aftermath". Pegasus Books.
  46. (1927). "Leonard Wood, Loyal Son of America". Outlook Publishing Company.
  47. "Valor awards for Leonard Wood".
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  63. (February 1, 1950). "Osborne C. Wood, Ex-Guard Chief, Dies In San Diego". [[Albuquerque Journal]].
  64. (November 28, 1960). "Death Notice, Miss Louise B. Wood". [[The Baltimore Sun.
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  77. "The White Healer on ''Death Valley Days''". IMDb.
  78. Lilley, Kevin. (May 20, 2017). "Tom Berenger talks 'Platoon,' 'Sniper' and more military movies in advance of GI Film Festival". Army Times.
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