| Coltautos.com Gun of the Month - April 2005 | 
| An exceptional Model M .380 pistol issued to Lt. General Marshall S. Carter - On
      April 8, 1947, he was appointed to the rank of Brigadier General and was
      presented his Colt 1908 .380 caliber sidearm, serial number 137666 on May
      5, 1948. The Certificate of Ownership for this pistol was later presented
      to Lieutenant General Carter on May 12, 1965, while stationed at Fort
      McNair, Washington, D.C. 
 
 
 
 Lieutenant General Marshall
      Sylvester Carter Marshall Sylvester Carter was born into a military family September 16,
      1909 at Fortress Monroe, located in Elizabeth City County, Virginia, to
      Brigadier General Clifton Carroll Carter[1]
      and Mai Coleman Carter[2].
      At age 2, when his father was assigned in Hawaii, a Japanese nurse began
      calling him "Pat," and he was known by that nickname for the
      rest of his life. General Carter attended West Point grammar school in West Point, New
      York (1922), Cornwall on Hudson high school in Cornwall on Hudson, New
      York (1926) and The Tome School, which was a preparatory school located in
      Port Deposit, Maryland (1927). 
 In 1934 he married Préot Nichols[3],
      his wife of 58 years. They had three children Josephine Stoney Carter (b.
      August 1, 1938), Marshall Nichols Carter (b. April 23, 1940) and Mary
      Coleman Carter (b. March 18, 1945). Upon graduation from the USMA, General Carter was assigned Special
      Liaison Duty as First Military Observer with the United States Naval
      Academy on the U.S.S. Wyoming from June 22 to August 26, 1931. From
      September 14, 1931 to April 11, 1932, he was a Battery Officer in the 12th
      Coast Artillery at Fort Monroe, Virginia. From Virginia, General Carter
      was next stationed as Battery Officer and Battalion Adj. for the 64th
      Coast Artillery, (Anti‑Aircraft) at Fort Shafter, Honolulu, HI from
      June 1, 1932 to March 23, 1935. While completing his Masters Degree at MIT
      on June 9, 1936, General Carter worked as an instructor in the Department
      of Natural & Experimental Philosophy at the USMA from April 21, 1935
      to July 9, 1939. He completed the Battery Officers Course at Fort Monroe, Virginia as a
      student officer at the Coast Artillery School from September 8, 1939 to
      February 1, 1940. Upon completion of this course, General Carter served as
      an instructor there from February 1940 to August 1940. Additionally,
      General Carter was a student instructor at the Stereoscopic Height Finders
      School detail through May 1940. In June 1940, General Carter was in
      Washington, D.C. attending the Student Naval Optical School. In August 1940, he went to Quarry Heights in the Panama Canal Zone and
      served as the Battery Officer for the 73rd Coast Artillery (Anti-Aircraft).
      In July 1941, while stationed at the Panama Canal Zone, General Carter
      became the Organizer and Director of the Enlisted Specialist School, a
      position he held until December 1941. In December 1941, he became
      Assistant ACofS, G-3 for the Panama Coast Artillery Command. Shortly after Pearl Harbor and for the duration of World War 2, General
      Carter was ordered back to Washington, D.C. where he was a Staff Officer
      assigned to the Operations Division War Department General Staff, (OPDWDGS),
      through June 1945. In the Spring of 1945, General Carter was in Paris, France for the
      celebration of V‑E Day. For a year and a half, from July 1945
      through January 1946, he was posted in Chungking and Shanghai, where he
      was Deputy and Assistant Chief of Staff (G-5) at China Theater
      headquarters. From January 1946 through March 1946, General Carter was stationed in
      Washington, D.C. as the Executive Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of
      War. Upon completion of this duty, he was appointed Special Representative
      for General George C. Marshall to "hold General Marshall's horse for
      the year he was in China[4]",
      while General Marshall served as a Presidential Messenger to China from
      March 1946 through January 1947. In the course of his military career, General Carter was a key
      staff assistant to General George C. Marshall, the Army chief of staff.
      He attended six major international conferences and accompanied
      Marshall to five of the six: the World War II Allied summit in Cairo,
      Egypt in 1943; the Council of Foreign Ministers in Moscow in 1947; the
      Inter-American Conference for Maintenance of Peace and Security in Rio de
      Janeiro, Brazil in 1947; the Second Session of General Assembly of the
      United Nations, New York, NY in 1947(without Marshall); the Ninth
      International Conference of American States in Bogotá, Colombia, in 1948;
      and the Third Session of the United Nations General Assembly in Paris in
      1948. He served as Marshall's special representative in Washington
      while Marshall was serving as special envoy in China. This position he held until named Special Assistant to the Secretary of
      State in January 1947 when General Marshall became Secretary of State
      after the war. Two years later, in March 1949, General Carter became
      Deputy to the Ambassador for Military Assistance Programs for Europe with
      station at the American Embassy in London. Concurrently, he served as
      Deputy Chairman, European Correlations Committee. In these capacities,
      General Carter held the personal rank of Minister. In March 1949, he went to London, England as Minister of the American
      Embassy, Deputy Chairman of the European Correlation Committee for
      Military Assistance to work on military assistance programs for Europe. He
      returned from Europe and became a Department of State student at the
      National War College from August 1949 to June 1950. Following a short tour as Commander of the 138th Anti-Aircraft Group in
      Japan, in 1950 General Carter was recalled to Washington by General
      Marshall, to become Director of the Executive Office of the Secretary of
      Defense. General Carter served in this capacity during the Korean War
      under General Marshall and his successor, Mr. Lovett until November 1952. From 1952 to 1955, General Carter was at Fort Richardson, Alaska as
      Deputy Commanding General of the 71st Infantry Division. His next post was
      Fort Sheridan, Illinois, where from June 1955 until June 1956, he was
      Commanding General of the Fifth Region, Army Anti-Aircraft Command. For the next five months, he served as Deputy Commanding General of the
      Army Anti-Aircraft Command in Colorado Springs, Colorado, leaving this
      assignment to become Chief of Staff of the newly formed Continental Air
      Defense Command at Ent Air Force Base from October 1956 until September
      1957. When this command was expanded into the North American Air Defense
      Command in September 1957, General Carter also became Chief of Staff of
      this two-nation unified command, the first command of this type in the
      United Stated. While serving there, he was a prominent member of an
      informal group called the Range Riders, whose members regularly rode
      horseback around Pike's Peak. He also enjoyed hunting, fishing, camping,
      ice skating and skiing. General Carter's final two assignments before his appointment as deputy
      director of the CIA in April 1962 were as Chief of Staff of the 8th Army
      in Korea from December 1959 to January 1961 and commander of the Army Air
      Defense Center and Air Defense School at Fort Bliss, Texas from March 1961
      to March 1962. The White House announced on March 9, 1962, that President John F.
      Kennedy had selected Major General Carter to be Deputy Director of the
      Central Intelligence Agency from 1962 to 1965. He was nominated by
      President Kennedy on March 12, 1962 and confirmed by the Senate on April
      2, 1962, with the rank of Lieutenant General. President Lyndon B.
      Johnson nominated General Carter to be Director of the National Security
      Agency, a position which he held from 1965 to 1969. General Carter was
      known in the military and intelligence communities as an efficient but
      relaxed and informal "feet-on-the-desk" type of officer with a
      vast and detailed knowledge of world figures and events. In 1969, after four years of service as director of the National
      Security Agency, General Carter retired from the Army. He had lived since
      then in Colorado Springs. From 1969 until 1985, he was president of the
      George C. Marshall Foundation in Lexington, Virginia. At the age of 83, Marshall Sylvester Carter, died of liver cancer
      February 18, 1993 at his home in Colorado Springs. His survivors include
      his wife, Préot Nichols Carter, whom he married in 1934, of Colorado
      Springs; three children, Stoney Carter of Colorado Springs, Mary Carter
      Nickerson of Denver and Marshall N. Carter of Boston; eight grandchildren;
      and a great-grandchild.  PROMOTIONS General Carter received the following promotions throughout his
      military career: 
 On April 8, 1947, he was appointed to the rank of Brigadier General.
      He was presented his Colt 1908 .380 caliber sidearm, serial number 137666
      on May 5, 1948. The Certificate of Ownership for this pistol was later
      presented to Lieutenant General Carter on May 12, 1965, while stationed at
      Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. DECORATIONS Lieutenant General Carter's citations and decorations included a
      Distinguished Service Medal with two oak leaf clusters, a Legion of Merit
      with one oak leaf cluster, a Bronze Star, Special Breast Order of Yun
      Hui(Cloud and Banner, Republic of China), Special Breast Order of Yun
      Hui(Second Award, Republic of China), and the Order of Orange Nassau with
      Swords, Commander(Netherlands Government). CITATION FOR DISTINGUISHED
      SERVICE MEDAL Colonel Marshall S. Carter, while serving as a member of the Logistics
      Group, Operations Division, War Department General Staff, from July 1942
      to June 1945, was charged with developing the troop basis for production
      requirements of the Army. As representative of the Operations Division in
      matters involving the Army Supply Program and as logistical policy advisor
      to the General Staff member of the Joint Logistics Committee and the
      Combined Alternative Committee, he made recommendations which virtually
      influenced the conduct of the war. He was selected by the Joint Logistics
      Committee to attend the Conference of Allied Leaders at Cairo, where his
      untiring energy and clear thinking were of great value. As a member of a
      special committee appointed by the Chief of Staff to revise the military
      program in the interest of higher combat efficiency and greater economy,
      he displayed a high degree of initiative, sound judgment, and breadth of
      vision. Through his leadership, tact and untiring energy Colonel Carter
      brought great credit to the military service and contributed in a high
      degree to the successful prosecution of the war. CITATION FOR LEGION OF
      MERIT Colonel Marshall S. Carter, 0-18359, General Staff Corps, Regular army,
      is awarded the Legion of Merit for exceptionally meritorious conduct in
      the performance of outstanding services during the period 7 July through
      11 August and 2 September through 15 December 1945. As Deputy to the
      Assistant Chief of Staff, G‑5 Headquarters, United States Forces,
      China Theater, Colonel Carter was directly responsible for the concept,
      initiation, development and implementation of all plans and policies
      concerning lend‑lease, procurement, civil affairs, and clandestine
      activities in the China Theater. He displayed exceptional force, great
      skill, clear understanding and sound judgment in guiding and controlling
      every major action of the G‑5 Section. By his ability to analyze,
      interpret and simplify complex issues, and his high quality of leadership,
      he eased and shaped the performance of difficult duties by all members of
      the G‑5 Section. His ready acceptance of responsibility, facility
      for solving emergency problems calmly and effectively, steadiness under
      continuous pressure, and capacity for working accurately and tirelessly
      resulted in relieving the Assistant Chief of Staff G‑5, of many
      delicate, difficult, and time consuming tasks. He also maintained close
      daily liaison with the highest Allied military and civil representatives.
      He demonstrated a high degree of tact and diplomacy in his dealings with
      these representatives and gained their complete confidence and genuine
      respect through his professional knowledge and expert counsel. As a
      result, he contributed immeasurably to the efficient and frictionless
      integration of the activities of the Chinese War production Board, Chinese
      Ministry of War, Chinese Executive Yuan, American Production Mission,
      Foreign Economic Administration, Foreign Liquidation Commission,
      Headquarters, China Theater, British Military Mission, French Military
      Mission, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, and the
      United States and other Allied Embassies. His exceptional ability to work
      successfully with these varied agencies on problems of paramount
      importance to the war effort attest to his outstanding qualities as a
      skillful and versatile planner, organizer, and negotiator. Colonel
      Carter's performance of duty during this period was in the highest
      traditions of the military service, was of inestimable benefit to the
      Republic of China and the United States, and reflects great credit upon
      himself and the Armed Forces of the United States. CITATION FOR BRONZE STAR
      MEDAL Colonel Marshall S. Carter, 0-18359, General Staff Corps, is awarded
      the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service and achievement during the
      period from 12 August 1945 to 2 September 1945. During this period Colonel
      Carter was directly charged with complete responsibility for the
      initiation, supervision, control and direction of all activities concerned
      with establishing contact and rendering emergency aid to Allied Prisoners
      of War and Civilian Internees under Japanese control in China Theater. In
      discharging this responsibility, he was required to make and implement
      decisions on behalf of the Theater Commander, in many cases involving
      direct action by and with the War Department, the Military Mission to the
      USSR., and Headquarters, Pacific Ocean Areas. In addition, he was the
      Theater Commander's personal representative in dealing with all United
      Nations Embassies in China on matters connected with this problem.
      Throughout this period, Colonel Carter demonstrated an exceptional degree
      of foresight, drive and clear judgment, working without regards to hours,
      under pressure at all times, but without detriment to the performance of
      his regular duties. As a result of this operation, the care and safety of
      Allied nationals in Japanese hands was assured well prior to the actual
      surrender, and their rapid evacuation to safe zones was immeasurably
      expedited. The complete success of the operation, and Colonel Carter's
      outstanding part in it, reflect great credit upon himself and the Armed
      Forces of the United States. The Washington Post, February 20, 1993, Saturday, Final
      Edition, Metro Section D6 General Marshall S. Carter Dies at 83; Leading
      Intelligence Official in '60s, Bart Barnes, Washington Post Staff Writer. [1] Brig. Gen. Clifton Carroll Carter was born in Lexington, Kentucky on July 12, 1876. He was a graduate of the USMA Class of 1899. [2] Miss Mai Coleman was born in Baltimore, Maryland on November 2, 1876. She was known as "Aunt Mai" to thousands of graduates between 1914 and 1940. [3] Miss Préot Nichols was born in Fort Totten, NY on November 5, 1912. She and Gen. Carter were wed on July 14, 1934. 
          [4] Quote from The Twenty-fifth
          Anniversary HOWITZER of The Class of Nineteen Hundred and Thirty One. | 
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