Maj. Gen. George S. Patton, a career Army officer who served in the Korean and Vietnam wars and was the son of the legendary World War II general of the same name, has died. He was 80.
Patton suffered from a form of Parkinson’s disease and died Sunday in Hamilton, Mass., said his wife, Joanne.
In a four-decade military career, Patton twice earned the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation’s second-highest medal for bravery in combat. He also earned a Purple Heart for wounds received during one of his three tours of duty in Vietnam.
Born George Smith Patton IV in Boston, he legally changed his name by dropping the Roman numeral. Patton graduated from West Point and later earned a master’s degree in international affairs at George Washington University.
His father, also a West Point graduate, led U.S. troops in North Africa and Europe during World War II.
Father and son both commanded the Army’s 2nd Armored Division, the younger taking command at Ft. Hood, Texas, in 1975. The senior Patton commanded the 2nd Armored in North Africa during World War II. He was fatally injured in a traffic accident in Europe in 1945.
The younger Patton retired in 1980 and lived in Hamilton, northeast of Boston, where he established a farm that sold blueberries, strawberries and other produce. He named the fields after soldiers who died under his command in Vietnam.
“Although he was very proud of his father, he was also very, very sensitive to comparisons and always asked that any reference to his lineage be dropped from any reports written about him,” said his son, Robert, of Darien, Conn.
But as his father did, Patton once said he believed in reincarnation.
During a training mission in Germany, he found himself at a spot where a Napoleonic battle had been fought. He was overcome with a feeling, like the ones experienced by his father during World War II, that he had once been in combat there.
Besides his wife and son Robert, he is survived by two other sons; two daughters; six grandchildren; and a great-grandson. He will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery.