Lieutenant
General John Twiggs Myers, who earned a permanent
place in Marine Corps history as commander of
the American Legation Guard at Peking, China,
during the Boxer Rebellion, died on April 17,
1952, at his home in Coconut Grove, Florida. A
veteran of 40 years as a Marine officer, he retired
from the Corps in 1935, after a career that included
the Spanish-American War; the Philippine Insurrection;
World War I service as Fleet Marine Officer of
the U.S. Atlantic Fleet; expeditionary service
in the Haitian, Santo Domingan, Cuban and Mexican
campaigns; and a total of nearly ten years of
sea duty.
General
Myers was a great grandson of General John Twiggs,
a Revolutionary War hero, and his father, Abraham
C. Myers, was a West Point graduate who fought
in the Seminole and Mexican Wars and later served
as Quartermaster General of the Confederate Army.
At the end of the Civil War, Abraham C. Myers
took his family to Weisbaden, Germany, where John
was born January 29, 1871. The family returned
to this country in 1876, and young John attended
public schools in Washington, D.C., and Wilkinson's
Preparatory School at Annapolis, Maryland, before
entering the U.S. Naval Academy in September,
1887. Graduating in 1892, he continued to hold
the rank of naval cadet until he was appointed
an assistant engineer in August, 1894. He was
transferred from the Navy to the Marine Corps
on March 6, 1895, and accepted appointment as
a second lieutenant the following day.
In
May, 1896, after completing the course at the
School of Application in Washington, D.C., and
studying ordnance at the Naval Gun Factory in
Washington, the general was ordered to the Naval
War College at Newport, Rhode Island, where he
completed his studies that September. He then
served briefly at the Marine Barracks, Boston,
Massachusetts, before joining the barracks detachment
at Mare Island, California, in November of the
same year. He left Mare Island May 7, 1898, to
join the Marine detachment aboard the USS Charleston,
which sailed a few days later to convoy six troop
ships to the Philippines. Enroute, the Charleston
stopped at Guam, and on June 21, General Myers
(as a second lieutenant) accompanied the captain
of the Charleston ashore as head of a landing
party of 16 sailors and 30 Marines, which disarmed
and made prisoners of the Spanish garrison on
the island.
After
that, the convoy moved to the Philippines, where
the general (by then a captain) was transferred
to the USS Baltimore in July, 1899. While attached
to that ship during the Philippine Insurrection,
he commanded a landing expedition which went ashore
under fire to capture and destroy an Insurrect
gun at Port Olongapo on September 23 and made
another landing under fire at Bacoor on October
2. He also commanded a 100-man landing force which
took over the naval station at Subic Bay on December
10, 1899, the day after it was captured by the
Army. On April 18, 1900, the general was transferred
from the Baltimore to the USS Oregon, and on May
24 of the same year he was detached to the USS
Newark. Meanwhile, a wave of violence, led by
an athletic society known as the Boxers, was erupting
in China, where a number of foreigners were killed
or subjected to gross indignities. The Imperial
Government, sympathizing with the movement, did
little to stop it, and the foreigners in Peking
were soon forced to the take refuge in the legations
there. On May 28, E.H. Conger, the American Minister
at Peking, telegraphed the Commander-in-Chief
of the U.S. Asiatic Squadron at Taku to send an
armed force for the protection of the legation.
The following day Myers set out for that city
as commander of a force of 48 Marines and three
sailors from the Oregon and Brooklyn. Along with
detachments of British, Russian, French, Italian
and Japanese Marines, they reached Peking at 11
o'clock on the night of May 31, just before the
city was encircled.
On
June 24 serious fighting broke out on the walls
of the legations as hordes of Boxers, armed with
swords, spears, clubs, stones, noise-makers and
several three-inch field pieces, attempted to
overwhelm the handful of foreign troops. A German
detachment repulsed the first attack and the Marines
hurled back a second, causing heavy losses amongst
the boxers. After that the Chinese changed their
tactics and began building a tower on the ancient
wall above the American Legation, only about 25
feet from the Marines' position. Since this would
have allowed the Boxers to fire at will on the
troops and civilians below, Minister Conger reported
this danger to the British Minister, Sir Claude
M. MacDonald, who had been picked by common consent
as commander of the international defense. He
agreed to the American's suggestion that an attack
should be made on the tower and the Chinese barricade
behind it.
Myers
was picked to head the attacking force, composed
of himself and 14 other American Marines, 16 Russian
and 25 British Marines. His plan was to have the
Russians hit the barricade from the North, while
the American and British Marines were to assault
the tower, then fight their way to the barricade,
along a sort of trench which ran from it to the
tower. At a signal from Myers, the attack began
about three o'clock on the morning of July 3.
The
Anglo-American force, with Myers in the lead,
found the tower empty when they reached it, then
proceeded along the trench, where they ran into
bitter, hand-to-hand fighting. Myers was badly
wounded by a spear during the action in the trench,
but the attack continued until the barricade was
in friendly hands. In addition to Myers, the allied
losses included two U.S. Marines and one Russian
killed and two Russian and three British Marines
severely wounded. Estimates of enemy losses ran
as high as 50 dead. The British Minister called
this action" one of the most successful operations
of the siege, as it rendered our position on the
wall, which had been precarious, comparatively
strong." Largely because of it, the disheartened
Boxers agreed to an uneasy truce on July 16.
Myers was brevetted major and advanced four numbers
in rank for his bravery, and in President McKinley's
message to Congress in February, 1901, he mentioned
the captain by name. British appreciation was
demonstrated a few years afterward, when a monument
to the Royal Marines was erected outside the Admiralty
in London, facing Buckingham Palace. One of the
bas-reliefs on that memorial shows Myers leading
the British Marines in the attack on the Boxers.
A
relief column finally reached Peking on August
14, and the following month General Myers, convalescing
from typhoid fever and the spear wound in his
leg, was ordered to the U.S. Naval Hospital at
Yokohama, Japan. From there he was a transferred
to the Naval Hospital at Mare Island, where he
was under treatment until March, 1901. After that,
except for a short time on Samoa as judge advocate
of a general court martial, he remained at Mare
Island until December, 1902, when he took command
of the Marine Barracks at Bremerton, Washington.
The
general left Bremerton in May, 1903, arriving
on the East Coast the following month to take
command of the Marine Detachment aboard the USS
Brooklyn. He held that command until April 1905,
then served at the Naval War College in Newport,
until he took command of the School for Non-Commissioned
Officers at the Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C.,
in October of the same year.
In May, 1906, he took command of the barracks
detachment there, serving in that assignment until
he left Washington that July. The following month
he returned to the Philippines, commanding the
1st Marine Regiment there until January, 1907,
when he was assigned to the USS West Virginia
as commander of its detachment and Fleet Marine
Officer of the Asiatic Fleet.
In May, 1909, General Myers was transferred from
the West Virginia to the USS Tennessee for duty
as Fleet Marine Officer, Pacific Fleet, but the
following month, because of a serious intestinal
infection, he was ordered once more to the Naval
Hospital at Mare Island. He was hospitalized or
on sick leave until January, 1911, when he entered
the Army Field Officers Course at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas.
Completing
that course in March, 1911, the general was stationed
briefly at the Marine Barracks, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, and on recruiting duty in Boston
before he entered the Army War College in Washington
that August. Graduating in July, 1912, he took
command of the Marine Barracks at the Washington
Navy Yard the following month. His service there
was interrupted by expeditionary duty as a battalion
commander with the 2nd Provisional Marine Regiment
off Santo Domingo in 1912 and with the 2nd Regiment,
2nd Provisional Marine Brigade at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, the following year. He left Washington in
April 1913, to serve for the next year as commander
of the Marine Barracks, Honolulu, Territory of
Hawaii.
In April, 1914, General Myers returned from that
assignment to take command of the 1st Battalion,
4th Marine Regiment, at Mare Island, sailing with
that unit for the west coast of Mexico later the
same month. The regiment remained aboard the battleship
South Dakota in Mexican waters during a period
of strained relations between the United States
and that country, but did not land. It returned
to this country in July and General Myers, still
commanding its 1st Battalion, was stationed with
it at San Diego, California, until February, 1915,
when that unit was assigned duty at the Panama
Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco,
California. The battalion was ordered to sea duty
with the Pacific Fleet in November, 1915, and
in February of the following year, after service
on the USS San Diego and USS Buffalo, it returned
to San Diego.
The
general (by then a lieutenant colonel) was detached
from the 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, in June 1916,
when he was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet as
Fleet Marine Officer and counter-intelligence
officer on the staff of its commander. Serving
in those capacities for most of World War I, he
was stationed aboard the USS Wyoming until October,
1916, and on the USS Pennsylvania from then until
August, 1918, when he took command of the Marine
Barracks at Parris Island, South Carolina. He
remained there until the war ended that November.
In January 1919, after a short time at Quantico,
Virginia, General Myers assumed command of the
Marine Barracks at Pearl Harbor, where he was
stationed until August, 1921.
He
was then named Adjutant and Inspector of the Department
of the Pacific, with headquarters at San Francisco,
California, serving in that assignment until May,
1924. After that, he commanded the Marine Corps
Base at San Diego from June of that year to November,
1925 when he sailed for Haiti to take command
of the 1st Marine Brigade.
The
general returned from that tour of expeditionary
duty in January, 1928, and the following month,
reported to Marine Corps Headquarters in Washington.
There, after serving on various boards, he was
named Assistant to the Major General Commandant
in April, 1930, serving in that capacity until
February, 1933. A month later he returned to San
Francisco, where he was Commanding General, Department
of the Pacific and Western Recruiting Area, until
he was placed on the retired list, February 1,
1935, at the statutory retirement age of 64. A
major general when he retired, he was promoted
to lieutenant general on the retired list in 1942,
when the law was passed authorizing such promotions
for officers who had been specially commended
in combat.
General
Myers' medals and decorations included the Marine
Corps Brevet Meal, Purple Heart, Spanish Campaign
Medal, Philippine Campaign Medal, China Campaign
Medal; Marine Corps Expeditionary Medal, Mexican
Service Medal and the World War I Victory Medal
with Armed Guard clasp.
The
general was survived by his wife, the former Alice
G. Cutts, of Mare Island, whom he married in 1898.
They had no children. He is buried in Arlington
National Cemetery.