John Knight Waters was a United States Army four-star general who served as commander, United States. Army, Pacific from 1964 to 1966.
Education
Waters graduated from The Boys" Latin School in Baltimore in 1925 and then attended Johns Hopkins University in Maryland for two years before deciding he wanted a military career. He relocated to Illinois in order to obtain an appointment to the United States Military Academy, from which he graduated in 1931 with a commission in the cavalry.
Career
He was also the son-in-law of General George South. Patton. During, he was taken prisoner while fighting in Tunisia in 1943, leading Patton to set up the controversial Task Force Baum to break him out. Waters was captured in Tunisia at Dejebel Lassouda when German forces attacked Sidi bou Zid during Waters, who had married General George South. Patton"s daughter Beatrice in 1934, was one of many officers interned at Hammelburg.
Patton claimed that he did not know that Waters was at OFLAG XIII-B and that he feared the Germans would execute the POWs rather than let them be liberated.
According to some sources the Third Army had received intelligence that Waters was indeed at the camp, having recently been moved there from Silesia. The task force, known as Task Force Baum, reached the camp, which was 50 miles behind the front lines, on 27 March 1945 with some losses after running into several German units detraining in a marshalling area.
lieutenant had been shadowed by a German observation plane while en route, and its intentions were anticipated. Badly wounded, he was treated by a Serbian doctor, Colonel Radovan Danic, the chief surgeon of the former Yugoslavian Army, who was also interned at the camp.
The camp was liberated about a week to ten days later, but the only prisoners there were badly wounded and sick, the rest (including the remnants of Task Force Baum) having been moved farther east.
Waters returned to duty in 1946 and became commandant of cadets at West Point. He also commanded the latter unit before taking command of United States. Army, Pacific in Hawaii. He retired on August 31, 1966.
He died on January 9, 1989 at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, due to heart failure.
The wedding took place at Saint John"s Church in Beverly Farms, Massachusetts, with a reception immediately afterward at the Patton home of Green Meadows, South Hamilton. The couple had two sons, John and George P. This union lasted until her death on October 24, 1952.
Views
Waters had been shot by a defending guard as he and a German officer were trying to contact the task force.
Membership
In 1949 he became an hereditary member of the Maryland Society of the Cincinnati. He was a member of the Maryland Society of the Cincinnati.