Arthur Trudeau
United States Army general and Ufologist

Arthur Trudeau

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
United States Army general and Ufologist
A.K.A.
Arthur Gilbert Trudeau
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
5 July 1902(Middlebury, USA)
Death:
5 May 1991(Chevy Chase, USA)
Star sign:
Education:
United States Military Academy
United States Army War College
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Early life and education Career Later life and death
The details
Biography

Introduction

Arthur Gilbert Trudeau (July 5, 1902 – June 5, 1991) was a lieutenant general in the United States Army. He is best known for his command of the 7th Infantry Division during the Battle of Pork Chop Hill in the Korean War.

Early life and education

One of Trudeau's last parades in Korea, for the first deployment of U.S. atomic weapons in Korea in 1958

Trudeau was born in Middlebury, Vermont, and entered West Point in 1920. He graduated in the Class of 1924 and later served in the 104th Engineers of the New Jersey National Guard.

Career

In 1944, Trudeau was promoted to brigadier general. Considered a specialist in amphibious warfare, he assumed command of a secret base in the Philippines in 1945, assisting in the preparation for an invasion of Japan that never eventuated. After the war, he served in Germany, before becoming deputy commander of the United States Army War College in 1950.

During the Korean War, Trudeau commanded the 7th Infantry Division. He received the Silver Star by personally leading a reconnaissance team to scout a strategic position, Pork Chop Hill, while it was under heavy enemy fire. He was named Chief of Army intelligence in October 1953, but was relieved of his command 20 months later when Allen W. Dulles, Director of Central Intelligence, sent a scathing memorandum of complaints to the Pentagon. Although the contents of the memorandum were not made public, Trudeau was noted for his vigorous anti-Communist statements, and he often clashed with other government officials over their differing views of communist intentions. He returned to Korea to take command of I Corps. On October 18, 1956, Trudeau was promoted to lieutenant general. In 1958, he returned to Washington as Director of Army Research and Development.

Later life and death

Upon retirement from the army in 1962, Trudeau went on to head Gulf Labs of the Gulf Oil Corporation in Pittsburgh until 1968. He then served as a special adviser to the chairman of Pittsburgh's Rockwell International aerospace firm until 1972.

Throughout his military service, Trudeau was an outspoken advocate of racial integration of the military. He also said it was in the nation's best interests that educational opportunities be provided for the disadvantaged so they could take advantage of new career openings. Trudeau is a member of the Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.

Trudeau died on June 5, 1991, in Chevy Chase, Maryland.