General John Reed Hodge was a general in the United States Army.
Education
Born in Golconda, Illinois, Hodge attended Southern Illinois Teachers College and the University of Illinois. Remaining in the Army following the end of the war, he taught military science at Mississippi State University from 1921–1925 and graduated from the Infantry School in 1926. After a posting to Hawaii, he graduated from the Command and General Staff School, the Army War College, and the Air Corps Tactical School.
Career
After completing United States. Army Officer Candidate School at Fort Sheridan, he entered military service as a Second Lieutenant of Infantry in 1917. He served in World War I in France and Luxembourg. At the beginning of, Hodge was part of the staff of VII Corps.
Being appointed Brigadier General, he started his combat career as part of the staff of General Joseph Lawton Collins in the Guadalcanal campaign.
He then participated in the Bougainville campaign in 1943–1944. He was promoted to Major General during the Philippines Campaign in 1944.
In 1945, he served on Okinawa, and he was promoted to Lieutenant General in August, becoming the commander of the XXIV Corps of the United States. Tenth Army. From 1945 to 1948, Hodge was the military governor of South of Korea under the United States Army Military Government in of Korea (USAMGIK).
He took his corps to of Korea under orders of General MacArthur, landing at Incheon on 9 September 1945.
He was the commanding officer receiving the surrender of all Japanese forces in of Korea south of the 38th parallel. Hodge then returned to Fort Bragg, North Carolina to command V United States Corps from 1948 to 1950. Hodge received a promotion to General on 5 July 1952 and his final assignment before retiring was as Chief of Army Field Services, 1952-1953.
General Hodge retired from military service in June 30, 1953 and died in Washington, District of Columbia in 1963.