Nathan Bedford Forrest III

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Nathan Bedford Forrest III bigraphy, stories - U.S. Army Air Forces general (World War II)

Nathan Bedford Forrest III : biography

April 7, 1905 – June 13, 1943

Nathan Bedford Forrest III (April 7, 1905 – June 13, 1943) was a brigadier general of the United States Army Air Forces, and a great-grandson of Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest.

Forrest was born in Memphis, Tennessee, the son of Nathan Bedford Forrest II and Mattie Patterson (Patton). On November 22, 1930, he married Frances Brassler and, according to the Arlington National Cemetery website, he had no children, making him the final male Forrest in his great-grandfather’s direct line.

Dates of Rank

  • February 4, 1934, first lieutenant
  • June 16, 1938, captain
  • January 31, 1941, major
  • January 5, 1942, lieutenant colonel
  • March 1, 1942, colonel
  • November 2, 1942, brigadier general

Military service

Forrest graduated from West Point in 1928 and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the cavalry. In 1929, he transferred to the Air Corps and subsequently gained rank rapidly.

Promoted to brigadier general in 1942, Forrest was serving as chief of staff of the Second Air Force when he flew missions as an observer with the Eighth Air Force in England. He was reported missing in action when the B-17 Flying Fortress he was in, leading a bombing raid on the German submarine yards at Kiel, went down on June 13, 1943. The other members of the squadron reported seeing parachutes, and hoped that the general had survived. However, Forrest was found dead on September 23, 1943, when his body washed up near a seaplane base at Ruegen Island in Germany. He was buried on September 28, 1943 in a small cemetery near Wiek, Rügen.

His family was presented his Distinguished Flying Cross, which he was awarded posthumously for staying with the controls of his B-17 bomber while his crew bailed out. The plane exploded before Forrest could bail out. By the time German air-sea rescue could arrive, only one of the crew was still alive in the freezing water.

In 1947, two years after the war ended, his widow requested that he be returned to the United States and buried in Arlington National Cemetery. He was exhumed and reburied in Section 11 at Arlington on November 15, 1949.

Forrest was the first American general to be killed in action during the war in Europe.

In popular culture

In the alternative history series Settling Accounts by Harry Turtledove, Forrest serves in the administration of Jake Featherston. He attempts to overthrow Featherston, which is similar to the July 20 plot. As great-grandson of a popular Confederate hero and a capable military leader, he is Chief of Staff in the Confederate Army of the alternate 1940s.