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First Name: Tasker

Last Name: Bliss

Birthplace: Lewisburg, PA, USA

Gender: Male

Branch: Army (1784 - present)



Middle Name: Howard



Date of Birth: 31 December 1853

Date of Death: 09 November 1930

Rank: General

Years Served: 1875 - 1920
Tasker Howard Bliss

   
Graduate, U.S. Military Academy, Class of 1875

Engagements:
•  Spanish-American War (1898)
•  World War I (1914 - 1918)

Biography:

Tasker Howard Bliss
General, U.S. Army

Tasker Howard Bliss was born on 31 December 1853 in Lewisburg, PA, to George Ripley and Mary Ann Raymond Bliss. He attended Bucknell (then Lewisburg) University for one year before entering the U.S. Military Academy. At the Academy he excelled in languages, mathematics and tactics and graduated eighth in his class on 16 June 1875.

Upon graduation he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the 1st Artillery and performed routine garrison duties in Georgia and New York. On 14 September 1876, he was appointed to the Academy as an Assistant Professor of French until 1882. During that assignment he was promoted to First Lieutenant.

In late 1882 Bliss was assigned to Fort Mason, CA, and Fort Monroe, VA. In 1885 he was an instructor at the Naval War College where he was sent to England, Germany and France to study their military schools. The purpose of the trip was to determine if the U.S. military schools were teaching similar and relevant material. He returned to the U.S. and, on 16 May 1888, he was assigned to be Aide-de-Camp to U.S. Army Commanding General John M. Schofield. A concurrent assignment while Aide-de-Camp, was Inspector of Artillery and Small Arms.

While Aide-de-Camp, on 20 December 1892 he was promoted to Captain, Staff, Commissary of Subsistence and on 26 September 1895 he was assigned to special duty at the Office of the Secretary of War. On 4 March 1897 he was assigned as the Quartermaster and Commissary at Fort Monroe, VA. On 2 July 1897 he was sent to Spain as the Military Attaché to the U.S. Legation. When war was declared between Spain and the U.S., Captain Bliss was ordered to return to the U.S., via Paris, France, on 21 April 1898.

Spanish-American War

On 30 April 1898, Bliss was promoted to Major, Staff, Commissary of Subsistence and on 9 May to Lieutenant Colonel and Chief, Commissary of Subsistence, U.S. Volunteers. Lieutenant Colonel Bliss was then assigned to the 6th Army Corps as Chief Commissary, 23 May 1898 and then Camp George H. Tomas, in Chickamauga, Georgia until ordered to Santiago, Cuba and then Puerto Rico on 20 July 1898. Bliss arrived in Ponce, Puerto Rico in early August and was appointed as the Chief of Staff, 1st Division, I Army Corps, under Major General James H. Wilson. Concurrent assignments included being a board member to select camp sites in Cuba and Chief Commissary of the I Army Corps.

Cuba

Bliss was ordered to Havana, Cuba, on 15 December 1898, as Collector of Customs for the Island of Cuba and the Port of Havana. On 13 June 1899, Bliss received an honorable discharge from the U.S. Volunteers and returned to the Regular Army. While serving as Chief, Collector of Customs for the Island of Cuba and the Port of Havana, he was also the President of the Commission to Revise the Cuban Tariff Treaty in 1901 and was appointed to the Army War College Board as Special Envoy to Cuba to negotiate the treaty ratification in November and December 1902. The Treaty was ratified and signed on 17 December 1903.

General Staff (1st Tour)

Lieutenant Colonel Bliss was commissioned as a Brigadier General in the Regular Army by an Act of Congress under direction of the U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt. On 15 August 1903 Brigadier General Bliss was appointed a member of the General Staff, Chief, 3rd Division and President of the Army War College. In September 1904 he participated in the Manassas Maneuvers in Virginia.

Philippine Islands

On 7 June 1905, Bliss was ordered to the Philippine Islands to Command the Department of Luzon. On 9 January 1906, he was assigned as Commander of the Department of Mindanao and appointed Governor of the Moro Province. While still Governor of the Moro Province, Bliss was ordered to Command the Philippine Division on 14 December 1908. He relinquished all Philippine Islands commands on 6 April 1909, and returned to the U.S. after touring China and Manchuria.

General Staff (2nd Tour) and Pre-WWI

Bliss was assigned to the General Staff and President of the U.S. Army War College, on 19 June 1909. On 12 August 1910, he was assigned to Command the Department of California, in San Francisco, CA. On 13 August 1911, he was assigned as Commander, Department of the East, Fort Totten, NY, and subsequently assigned to Commander, Department of the South, Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX, on 26 February 1913.

WWI and Paris Peace Conference

On 13 February 1915, Bliss was detailed to the General Staff as Assistant Chief of Staff, Army until his promotion to Chief of Staff on 22 September 1917. He was promoted to Major General on 20 November 1915 and to four-star General on 6 October 1917. On 17 November 1917, he was assigned as the American Permanent Military Representative, Supreme War Council, concurrent with the Army Chief of Staff position.

Due to age limitations, General Bliss was forced to retire on 31 December 1917. But by order of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, he was recalled to active duty on 1 January 1918 and sent to Versailles, France, on 23 January to better carry out his duties on the Supreme War Council. He was relieved as U.S. Army Chief of Staff on 19 May 1918 and returned to the grade of Brevet General on 20 May 1918. After the signing of the Armistice ending World War I, on 11 November 1918, General Bliss held two titles, the American Permanent Military Representative, Supreme War Council, and also, Plenipotentiary at the Paris Peace Conference. This assignment was concluded on 10 December 1919.

Post-WWI

On 1 May 1920, Bliss was assigned as Governor of the U.S. Soldiers Home in Washington, DC. He retired from active duty on 1 May 1927. He was reinstated to the four-star rank of General, retired, on 21 June 1930.

Promotions

Bliss was never commissioned as a Colonel. He was promoted to Brigadier General from Lieutenant Colonel by an Act of Congress at the President's request.

Bliss was also never commissioned as a Lieutenant General (3-stars). He was appointed a General (4-stars) by the President under U.S. Code, Title 10, Subtitle A, Part I, Chapter 6, § 164.

Medals and Awards

Army Distinguished Service Medal
World War I Victory Medal
Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (UK)
Grand Croix Légion d'honneur (France)
Grand Cross Order of the Crown (Belgium)
Grand Cross Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (Italy)
War Cross (Italy)
Grand Cordon Order of the Rising Sun (Japan)
Polonia Restituta (Poland)
Medal of Solidarity, 1918 (Panama)

Honors

The USS Tasker H. Bliss was named for him.

Personal

Bliss married Eleanora Emma Anderson on 24 May 1882.

Their first child, Eleanor F. was born in January 1884. She attended Bryn Mawr Girls School and later married Adolph Knoff.

A son, Edward Goring Bliss, was born on 2 June 1892. He graduated from the USMA in 1916 and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Engineer Corps. He saw service in Siberia in 1918-19 and through World War II. He retired with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.

Death and Burial

General Tasker Howard Bliss died on 9 November 1930. He is buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, VA.



Honoree ID: 191   Created by: MHOH

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