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Frank W. Coe

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Years of service
  
1892–1926

Service/branch
  
United States Army

Rank
  
Major General

Frank W. Coe httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
November 27, 1870 Bowling Green, Missouri (
1870-11-27
)

Buried at
  
Arlington National Cemetery

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Battles/wars
  
Spanish–American War Pancho Villa Expedition World War I

Awards
  
Distinguished Service Medal Order of St. Michael and St. George (Britain) Legion of Honor (commander) (France)

Died
  
25 May 1947, Washington, D.C., United States

Place of burial
  
Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, United States

Award
  
Distinguished Service Medal

Battles and wars
  
Spanish–American War, Pancho Villa Expedition, World War I

Commands helds
  
United States Army Coast Artillery Corps, First United States Army

Frank W. Coe (November 27, 1870 – May 25, 1947) was a major general in the United States Army. He is notable for having served as the Chief of Coast Artillery.

Contents

Early life

Frank Winston Coe was born in Manhattan, Kansas on November 27, 1870. He attended Kansas State Agricultural College for three years, and graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1892. Coe was appointed a second lieutenant of Field Artillery.

Start of career

Coe's initial assignments with the 1st Field Artillery included Fort Hamilton, New York and Fort Monroe, Virginia.

Spanish–American War

During the Spanish–American War Coe served at Key West Barracks, Florida, where his unit was responsible for the defense of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet.

Post-Spanish–American War

Coe's post-war assignments included: instructor in Mathematics at West Point; adjutant of the School of Submarine Defense at Fort Totten, New York; adjutant at West Point; adjutant at Fort Monroe; assistant to the Chief of Coast Artillery; director of the Coast Artillery School at Fort Monroe; and Coast Artillery postings at Governors Island and Fort Totten, New York, and Fort Kamehameha, Hawaii. In the years immediately prior to World War I he served as Del Rio, Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition, and in San Francisco, California on the staff of the Army's Western Department.

World War I

During World War I Coe served initially as chief of staff of the 1st Division in Saint-Nazaire, France. He was then promoted to brigadier general, and commanded the 1st Separate Coast Artillery Brigade, which was subsequently reorganized as the 30th Coast Artillery Brigade and then the Railway Artillery Reserve, First United States Army. He was succeeded by his brother in law, Brigadier General William Chamberlaine, as commander of the Railway Artillery Reserve.

For his World War I service Coe received the Army Distinguished Service Medal; the British Order of St. Michael and St. George, and the French Legion of Honor (commander).

Chief of Coast Artillery

In June 1918 Coe was promoted to major general and assigned as Chief of Coast Artillery. He served in this post until retiring in 1926, when he was succeeded by Andrew Hero, Jr.

In 1920 Coe received the honorary degree of LL.D. from the Kansas State Agricultural College.

Retirement and death

Coe resided in Washington, D.C. after his retirement from the Army. He died at Walter Reed Army Medical Center on May 25, 1947 after several years of ill health and complications brought on by a broken hip. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, Section 3, Site 1868A.

Family

Coe was the son of Manuel A. Coe and Mary Caroline Winston Coe. In 1895 he married Anne Chamberlaine of Norfolk, Virginia, who was the sister of Coe's West Point classmate William Chamberlaine. Frank and Anne Coe had one child, William C. Coe, who served in the Army and was the longtime secretary of the Army and Navy Club in Washington, D. C.

After the death of his first wife, Coe married Martha Pratt, daughter Brigadier General Sedgwick Pratt.

References

Frank W. Coe Wikipedia