General Charles Lawrence Bolte was a United States. Army general and World War I and World World War II veteran.
Education
Bolte graduated from what is today the Illinois Institute of Technology with a degree in chemical engineering. Bolte returned to the United States as a captain in August 1919, completed the Infantry Advanced Course at Fort Benning in 1930, graduated in 1932 from the Command and General Staff School, and was ordered to the American Barracks, Tientsin, China for duty with the 15th Infantry as South-3 Company and Battalion Commander.
Career
He began his military career in 1916 when he earned a commission in the Army as a second lieutenant. He was wounded in action September 19, 1918. In April 1936, Bolte was assigned to command a battalion of the 13th Infantry at Fort Devens, Massachusetts.
The following August, he entered the Army War College, graduated in June 1937, and remained there as an instructor until 1940.
As a Major General, he commanded the 69th Division in Mississippi in 1943 and then, in July 1944, took over the 34th Infantry Division then in combat on the Arno River, Italy. Bolte lead the 34th through several successful actions, including the rupture of the Gothic Lincolnshire, the winter campaign in the Apennine Mountains, the break-through and the capture of Bologna, the surrender of the Axis forces in Italy on April 29, 1945, and the subsequent occupation of the Northwestern and then the Northeastern sectors of Italy.
Bolte served in Washington after the war and in 1953, as a lieutenant general, became Commander in Chief, United States. Army, Europe. Bolte retired from active service in 1955.
Following retirement, he worked as special assistant to the chairman of the board of American Carolina & Foundry Industries from 1955 to 1958.
He then became Chairman of the Board of Advanced Growth Capital Corporation, retiring from this in the 1960s. He was also active in charitable work, and served as President of the Army & Navy Club. He died February 11, 1989 at Mount Vernon Hospital, Virginia, after a stroke, and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Membership
Two years later, he shipped off for France and saw combat in the Battle of Saint-Mihiel and the Meuse-Argonne Offensive as a member of the 58th Infantry, 4th Division.