Lieutenant Colonel Paul L. Bates
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul L. Bates | |
---|---|
March 4, 1908 – 21 February 1995 (aged 86) | |
Place of birth | Los Angeles, California |
Place of death | Dunedin, Florida |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1941 - 1963 |
Rank | Colonel |
Commands held | 761st Tank Battalion (United States) |
Battles/wars | World War II |
Awards | Purple Heart Silver Star Bronze Star (2) Legion of Merit |
Paul Levern Bates (March 4, 1908 - February 21, 1995) served a distinguished and decorated career in the United States Army, which most notably included commanding the first black tank battalion to enter combat in World War II, however he also gained notoriety as the "white" Colonel who refused to court-martial future Baseball Hall of Famer Jackie Robinson.
Colonel Bates, who was born in Los Angeles, Ca., graduated in 1931 from McDaniel College (at the time named Western Maryland College), where he was a star football player and a member of the Reserve Officer Training Corps. He also worked as a high school football coach and a teacher before entering the Army as a First Lieutenant in February 1941. [1]
In January 1943, Colonel Bates took command of the 761st Tank Battalion, all of whose enlisted men were black. The unit, whose shoulder patch had a black panther, inflicted thousands of casualties on the enemy and captured, destroyed or liberated more than 30 major towns, four airfields, three ammunition-supply dumps, 461 wheeled vehicles, 34 tanks, 113 large guns and a radio station.
When the unit completed training in rigidly segregated boot camps in Louisiana and Texas, Colonel Bates refused a promotion from Lieutenant Colonel that would have separated him from what he regarded as one of the best tank battalions in the Army. He was eventually promoted to full Colonel.
While in Texas, Colonel Bates refused to court-martial a black officer who had refused to move to the rear of a bus at Fort Hood. That officer was Jackie Robinson, who was subsequently court-martialed for insubordination, but not convicted, and left the 761st before it went overseas. Praising Colonel Bates for his fairness and good judgment in his autobiography, Robinson would go on to break the color barrier in Major League Baseball by signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers. [2]
The 761st entered combat in November 1944 as part of General George S. Patton's Third Army and fought for 183 consecutive days without relief, according to David Williams, a battalion veteran and the author of the novel "Hit Hard." The battalion fought in France, then in Germany, where it pierced the Siegfried Line, and then in Belgium, where it fought the Nazis in the Battle of the Bulge. The 761st also fought in Luxembourg and Austria. In all, the 761st Tank Battalion went from Vic-sur-Seille, France, to the Enns River in Steyr, Austria, where it linked up with the Soviet Army.
Ironically, Colonel Bates was the first member of the 761st to be wounded. Among its 687 enlisted men and 41 officers, 276 received the Purple Heart for wounds in action and 36 died in combat. During World War II, Colonel Bates was awarded the Silver Star and two Bronze Stars, in addition to the Purple Heart. In 1963 he was awarded the Legion of Merit when he retired from the Army, having served in combat commands in Europe, at the Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and at the Pentagon.
In 1978, after a 33-year struggle by the unit’s veterans, President Jimmy Carter awarded the 761st a Presidential Unit Citation “for extraordinary heroism in action.”
Following his retirement Colonel Bates remained in close touch with the veterans of the 761st and their families, attending yearly reunions and establishing a scholarship at McDaniel College for lineal descendants of the battalion members who served the unit from August 1944 through April 1945. The Paul L. Bates Memorial Scholarship Fund was established in 1999 under the terms of his will, and is administered and maintained by the Board of Trustees of McDaniel College in Westminster, Maryland. [3]
In 1993, the 761st made news because of a PBS documentary, "Liberators: Fighting on Two Fronts in World War II," in which two of its former enlisted men said the battalion had participated in the liberation of the Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps. But Colonel Bates, along with other officers, noted that the unit was spread over a 50-mile front supporting the 71st Infantry Division at the time and would not confirm the claim. The unit did however liberate Gunskirchen, a subcamp of the Mauthausen complex.
Colonel Bates was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia on March 1, 1995 with full military honors.